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To: K-list
Recieved: 1999/06/06 14:06
Subject: [K-list] On getting my head together..............
From: Raymond Wand


On 1999/06/06 14:06, Raymond Wand posted thus to the K-list:

Friends,
I found this in my newspaper today.
I thought it might help someone out there.

Love and Hugs,
Raymond

MEDITATION CANNOT be taught I know this. I learnt transcendental meditation
as an undergraduate. A group of us paid 50 quid apiece. The bloke told us
he'd studied for years in India with the Maharishi. It looked authentic. In
my ear he whispered my very own mantra that I was never to tell anyone in
case I discovered that it wasn't personal at all.
We attended four long sessions. We were told to devote at least 20 minutes
twice a day, or it wouldn't work. Of the six of us, maybe one was still
going two weeks later. I couldn't bear to. Whenever I closed my eyes in a
darkened room, I saw the string of saliva that was perpetually strung
between my TM teacher's upper and lower lip.
It was stories like these that prompted Zen Buddhist monk Clark Strand to
write a no-nonsense guide to meditation. He reckons you don't need to spend
three years with a Chinese hermit.
He wondered, "Was there a way for people to slowdown and experience
themselves ... without adopting a new religious or philosophical ideology?"
He admits that by writing a book he is in some way part of the problem. "The
only choice left was to write a book of my own and be sure to include a set
of matches, hoping the fad might catch on."

Meditation made even simpler:
1. Meditation should be a hobby There should be no six-month schedule for
reduced blood pressure. You should not be thinking, "Are all the others
doing it better?".
2. Make sure the room is dark. Wear loose clothing. Put on an Enya CD ...
spot the deliberate mistakes? It's all needless. Stop looking for a set of
rules, you uptight old Brit.
3. That said, a good way to empty the mind is to focus on breathing. Count
one to four with each inhalation. Strand adds: "As golf pro Harvey Penick
said, Whatever you do, do not try to relax'."
4. Sit comfortably. Clark Strand tried the lotus position and permanently
lost the feeling in the top of his big toes. Just keep the back straight,
eyes horizontal and nose vertical.
5. Where should you meditate? None of this dark silent room nonsense. Just
do it.
6. The keys to meditation are with you. But it's like your house keys: you
know where they are but you can't find them. Calm down. Look again and there
they are.
7. When you try to lose yourself in the present it normally proceeds thus.
You managed it for about 0.01 seconds before you think "Ooh, I did it!",
then you do it again. Then think "Ooh!" again. This phenomenon is called
"The Watcher". Don't worry about it.
8. Meditation is about letting go and seeing that the world does not
collapse when we stop paying attention.
9. Once you can do it, you will probably get bored because there is nothing
to it. The benefit is also the problem. You need to stop needing to do
something. This is self-contradictory, obviously.
10. And what's the point? While gurus hesitate to evince anything as shallow
as purpose, ignorant Life Doctors can say you wlll be calmer, more
confident, less bogged down, more aware of the bigger picture. All that kind
of stuff. This being a post-modern column I would say that the film City
Slickers had meditation summed up. While the woman doing her TM on a rock
was oblivious to the cattle stampede, Curly the Cowboy, who told Bllly
Crystal that city folk "worry about a lot of s**t", was truly relaxed. It
backfired a little. They thought he was so chilled he slept on a rock with
his eyes open. In fact he was dead. Watch for that.

'The Wooden Bowl: Simple Meditation for Everyday Life' by Clark Strand,
price £8.99.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0717128725/qid=928703271/sr=1-2/026
-8848276-0247039

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