In
the midst of the scurry of the past couple of weeks, I
was especially aware of
how precious each morning's meditation was to me.
Sitting here at this aging MacBook Pro, I
take a long, deep conscious breath. Feet firmly on the floor, sitting
relatively erect, I take a full conscious breath. My belly expands,
then my rib cage. Then, as I continue to inhale, my attention rises
to my heart center -- and my awareness expands beyond the sensations in
my body into the gracious spaciousness of Open Awareness.
Here, I rest in the still, silent, expansive presence of the present moment.
Breath continues to breathe. Bodily
sensations arise. Eyes see. Ears hear. Thoughts emerge. My fingers
tap dance on the keyboard. Letters appear on the screen. I return to
my breath, the sensations of my body and senses. The spacious silence
that exists within each moment reappears.
In
my mind's eye, an image emerges. I
can see the light at the end of the tunnel. At age 80, I have now entered my ninth decade of life on this planet. (Yikes. I feel even older conceptualizing it like that. I best just settle in with saying that I'm 80 years old. LOL)
However I choose to hold it in my mind, it's clear that in the long haul of human life, I'm
somewhere in the
final lap. I've got more many more yesterdays in my pockets than
tomorrows. I know that I'm not getting out of here alive.
Taking another full, conscious breath, continuing to relax into an open-hearted presence,
the tunnel and the light dissolve into the clear, expansive, luminous brilliance
that is beyond endings and beginnings. I'm at peace.
Once again, I know. Home is where the Heart is.
Touching
this silent stillness, even for a few brief moments, is like feeling
the warm glow of a fireplace, snuggling at home on a
snowy evening peering through the window at the moon. Paradoxically, touching this silent stillness is also like sipping
clear, crisp spring water on a steamy summer day. In Stillness, a
Presence emerges. In a silent whisper, it sings of the Ineffable, an infinite space where the fundamentally mysterious and completely ordinary meet
to form the fabric of Life itself.
Simply Sitting Still
Although
I use a variety of meditation techniques, have an active prayer life,
and practice a set of daily spiritual rituals, the foundation of my
personal practice for decades has been shikantaza. I simply sit still with what Zen
teacher Norman Fischer calls "the basic feeling of being alive." (An article on Shikantaza by Suzuki Roshi)
Sometimes, it may take awhile for the dust to settle. Yet,
often enough, I can Simply
Sit Still and allow the restless energy embedded in my body and mind to
dissipate. I can relax into the embrace of the expansive spaciousness
of
what contemporary spiritual teacher Eckhart Tolle calls the Eternal Now. Resting in the spaciousness of open awareness, a subtle, yet very real, healing emerges.
Of course, this is often easier said than done.
Conditioned as we are in this society, our attention is usually drawn
into the thoughts, images, memories, and daydreams cascading
through our mind. Rather than
sitting still, observing the experience of the present moment with a
relaxed open gaze, we find ourselves lost in thoughts and images of the
future or the past.
Yet, the moment I simply notice this, a moment of Practice
emerges. If that noticing is precise, clear, open, calm, and non-judgmental, I
have engaged Mindfulness. It is a qualitatively different mode of consciousness. There I approach the Gateless Gate to our True Nature.
At times, it is just that simple. Yet, simple doesn't necessarily mean easy.
Why?
Without Practice, moment to moment, how we experience our lives, is
mostly just a bad habit. The way we see and react to our experience, is primarily a result of our conditioning. Thoughts and feelings arise, unbidden, to dominate
our attention. Most the time, we don't choose to think what we are thinking or to feel
what we are feeling. It just bubbles up from our subconscious.
Without
a conscious commitment to put in the time and effort
to discover what so often remains beneath the threshold of our
awareness, we are held in bondage by our past. Creatures of habit, we
are likely to create a
future that contains the same old, same old. We continue to experience the
suffering that
characterizes much of the human condition.
Thankfully, there is Practice.