Podcast and IRL pause

Over the past few months, and particularly the last few weeks, the podcast has been reimagined. Writing is happening, and if it can get into good enough shape, it will be relaunched. For anyone who has listened or watched this space over the years, do send a message through the contact form if there is something in particular you would like to hear more about. Now is a great time to weigh in, as multiple episodes are being developed. The current feedback is mostly that hearing anything meditation related would be pleasing. For those with a more specific taste, philosophy and context has a slight edge over how to.

IRL meditation sessions have been on pause mainly because of scheduling. The hope is to restart in early 2024. If you are in the 5 boroughs of New York City and interested in what is essentially a meditation meetup, send along days/times that would work best for your schedule.

You can send a message through the contact page here, or you can link up with the Instagram page @sit_quietly and DM there.

Newsletter repost

Below is the text from the most recent newsletter, Leaning on Nature :

These days, the concept of connecting a meditation practice to nature can sound cliché if not downright hippie or New Age. But there are solid practical reasons to do so, regardless of your comfort level with energy or metaphysics. There isn't a tradition I'm aware of that doesn't have at least one holiday connected to the moon in some way. It's obvious, then, that our forebears saw value in that connection. We need not know what value they saw unless we wish to learn the specific techniques within a tradition. Nature can still be leaned on to at least steady our practice and help us keep perspective.

The moon cycle represents one of the simplest ways to connect your practice to nature. Full moon days are good days to do some extra meditation. That can be taken a step further by designating the full moon in July, say, as a cue to take a couple days to focus just on your meditation practice. We can see the benefit of regularity, of a semi-predictable structure, when looking at the tides, day and night, the seasons, etc. These things combine to promote the growth of living things. Hooking our practice to a natural cycle can help us grow our practice in a similarly regular and sustainable way.

Beyond creating a simple structure, maintaining an awareness of the natural cycles can also help us step back from ourselves and the fixations of daily life by seeing ourselves as within a much larger context. Doing so is simultaneously a step towards getting in touch with the sense of peace we hide within ourselves. It is hidden by precisely the thoughts and individual fixations we carry. When we look at the vast and relentless ocean, it is easy to feel a thrill of humility, to feel pleasantly and properly small, and thus to see our cares as a little less urgent. Giving them up, even a little, makes the peace more obvious.

Systems that attach specific practices to specific times of year generally operate on some version of the principle that it is easier to swim with the current than against it. Over the millennia, the natural "current" of a given season or other event was gleaned through observation and direct experience. Practices evolved to make catching that current easier. Put differently, it takes less energy to make ice in cold weather. We can utilize the cold weather to make a job easier.

For those who wish to learn techniques developed in such a way, the Taoist tradition is a good place to start. To get a hands-on feel, I recommend trying out Grandmaster Nan Lu's offerings. He is one of the great Taoist teachers, and offers seasonal qigong "intensives" designed to fit into your regular schedule and requiring no prior experience. The next one is in July. As ecosystems intertwine, so do the practices within systems such as this one, so it is best to stick with one system rather than cherry picking.

Until next time, happy practicing!

From Yoga Vasishta Sara

from Chapter 4: Dissolution of the Mind

1. Consciousness which is undivided imagines to itself desirable objects and runs after them. It is then known as the Mind.

5. The idea of Self in what is not the Self is due to incorrect understanding. The idea of reality in what is unreal, O Rama, know that to be the mind.

7. It is the nature of the mind to accept certain things and to reject others; this is bondage, nothing else.

13. When one knows the real truth about acceptance and rejection and does not think of anything but abides in himself, abandoning everything, mind does not come into existence.

19. The only god to be conquered is the mind. Its conquest leads to the attainment of everything. Without its conquest all other efforts are fruitless.

21. Association with the wise, abandonment of latent impressions, self-enquiry, control of breathing — these are the means of conquering the mind.

24. When the mind dissolves, whatever is dual or single is dissolved. What remains after that is Supreme Brahman, peaceful, eternal and free from misery.

The translation quoted is published by the Sri Ramanasramam

Quotes from Ramana

“Guru is said to be external for the seeker. The inward turning of the mind is brought about by the Guru. Since the seeker is outward-bent, he is advised to learn from a Guru whom he will in due course find to be the Self.”

Instagram profile up

The Sit Quietly Instagram page is up. Follow @sit_quietly for all things social media. There may be stuff in the stories that doesn’t make it into a podcast episode. Meditations irl will be posted there. And of course all my fave pics of the lineage etc. go follow and say yo!

Life from a Safe Place

Some of us come to meditation for health. Some because we want secret knowledge/superpowers. Others at the recommendation of a friend, or maybe idle curiosity. There’s really no difference when it comes to the main process: you meditate a little every day and whatever you wanted out of it will be made more clear. That clarity doesn’t happen without consistent practice over the course of years, though other nice things happen well before then.

In an on-demand, instant results, productivity-is-god world, this idea of tectonic change is anathema. And since we tend to luxuriate in our own bullshit, we want change without changing, we become suspicious of things that genuinely do us good. If we try something to make ourselves feel better and it doesn’t work right away, we conclude it must not work at all. The trick with meditation is that it “works” right away, but we lack the conscious awareness to feel it usually. It is more commonly a water effect. The more steadily we drip our practice into the jar of our life, the fuller it becomes with the part that “works”: our feeling of peace or No Homework that I mention in the Start Here episode of the podcast series. If we stick with it, we eventually are able to discern between things we merely want, and things that do us genuine good.

This inside out process then creates the foundation for the rest of our lives. Modern science says that mammals usually learn their world by venturing out from and returning to the safe space they experience with the mother. With meditation, even if we don’t have this experience with our literal mother, we learn to create and maintain this safe space within ourselves. From there, we can go out to the work of the world from a more easeful place. If we continue the jar analogy, our practice can gradually shift and dissolve whatever we may be keeping in our jar that blocks our feeling of safety, making life feel more manageable.

A foundation like this takes time to build. In the meantime, many world traditions give us guidelines regarding things we can do that are genuinely good for us. I’m referring to the Eightfold Path in Buddhism, Raja Yoga, and similar solutions worldwide. These are outside in activities- things that don’t address the root issue, but support our work to that end. I sometimes refer to these as plugins. Plugins aren’t required- we don’t actually need anything but our meditation practice. It is the practice that enlivens them, but they can help us to stay on our path, make it easier to give our practice pride of place. And until we know what will genuinely do us good, they can be vital guideposts. Further, they can connect us to a tradition, bolstering our sense of security, and they often take into account whole health in a much more far-reaching way than modern materialist approaches. My teacher says: “Be Good. Be good for your health and be good for society.” Plugins give us the trustworthy tools with which to implement this advice, while meditation gives us the stable underpinning.

When we establish daily meditation first, then add plugins, we create a positive feedback loop. Our practice feeds our life which feeds our practice. Then we have started down a path where we learn to operate from our internal safe space. In this way, I disagree with the idea that “life begins outside your comfort zone”. So much better, to my mind, to have a place of safe retreat within you. Then nothing is outside your comfort zone, and you begin to learn how to be good.