On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 2:51 PM, Share Long sharelon...@yahoo.com
[FairfieldLife] <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:

>
>
> Richard, I find "following" my breath excellent for settling my energy
> body outside of TMSP. It's like they say, "Let's all just take a breath."
> But I don't try to slow my breath or deepen my breath. I simply follow it
> for 5 counts. Usually by #4, it's slower and deeper all by itself. And my
> energy field feels more settled too.
>
>
*There is a revealing Tibetan saying, "Gompa ma yin, kompa yin,' which
means literally: "Meditation' is not; 'getting used to' is.' It means that
meditation is nothing other than getting used to the practice of
meditation. As it is said, 'Meditation is not stnving, but naturally
becoming assimilated into it.' *
>

>
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>   On Thursday, September 18, 2014 2:46 PM, "Richard Williams
> pundits...@gmail.com [FairfieldLife]" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
> wrote:
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> On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 1:08 PM, Share Long sharelon...@yahoo.com
> [FairfieldLife] <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
>
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>  Richard, I'm really glad I practice TM. Mindfulness seems like a heck of
> a lot of work, tracking the rising and continuing of thoughts!
>
> >
> You may way too advanced for a simple breathing technique - that's for
> beginners in order to calm the mind. It's just like when MMY told us to
> "feel the body as a whole."
>
> You are already practicing the advanced techniques such as seeded
> meditation using sounds In which the true nature of mind is pointed out by
> the guru.
>
> *"So take care not to impose anything on the mind or to tax it. When you
> meditate there should be no effort to control and no attempt to be
> peaceful. Don't be overly solemn or feel that you are taking part in some
> special ritual; let go even of the idea that you are meditating. Let your
> body remain as it is, and your breath as you find it."* - Sogyal Rinpoche
>
>
>
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>   On Thursday, September 18, 2014 1:04 PM, "Richard Williams
> pundits...@gmail.com [FairfieldLife]" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
> wrote:
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> On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 12:55 PM, Share Long sharelon...@yahoo.com
> [FairfieldLife] <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
>
>
>  Richard, I don't use focusing on the breath to calm the mind. I use it
> to settle the physiology. Then the mind calms down all by itself.
>
> >
> *So, I mentioned this because some of the informants seem confused. The
> use of mindfulness is to gain insight into the impermanence of the
> self-view. Instructions for simple "vipassana" mindfulness meditation:*
>
>
>    - Sit down in a comfortable position, on the floor on a cushion or in
>    a chair.
>    - Rock from side-to-side slowly a few times and feel the body as a
>    whole.
>    - Close your eyes and relax into thought - don't try to control your
>    thoughts.
>    - Being mindful of each thought - how it arises and it's duration.
>
>
>
>   On Thursday, September 18, 2014 11:47 AM, "Richard Williams
> pundits...@gmail.com [FairfieldLife]" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
> wrote:
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> On Thu, Sep 18, 2014 at 10:38 AM, curtisdeltabl...@yahoo.com
> [FairfieldLife] <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
>
>
>  L:
> Research will furnish answers, I am sure, but in the meantime, anyone who
> says that TM leads to the same place as mindfulness and concentration is
> full of it...
>
> M: You bring up a valid point about the difference between subjective
> experience and research. I guess the next question would be to get behind
> the terms we are using like "mindfulness" which is not taught in the same
> fixed way TM is. Are you confident that you know what I am doing under the
> umbrella of the term mindfulness and that it is the same thing as what was
> studied by other people who took completely different paths to their
> practice?
>
> >
> According to Harris, vipassana or "mindlullness" is simple concentration
> on the breath with the goal of calming the mind. The emphasis is on the use
> of mindfulness to gain insight into the impermanence of the self-view.
>
> In contrast, Adyashanti's meditation is based on the Mahayana Zen practice
> of *"shikantaza"*, or just sitting and allowing everything to be as it
> is. This "just sitting" IS enlightenment.
> >
>
>
> I am also open to the realiy that I will never experience mindfulness
> without my long association with the conditioning of my TM practice.
>
> I once "checked" the mindfulness practice of a friend to see if I could
> discern any differences in the answers he gave from checking TM. I
> couldn't. When he described his practice as we would do in 3 days checking
> I couldn't figure out how we might determine if his internal experience was
> different from TM people's. The language is too imprecise to make these
> distinctions.
>
> I don't know if the distinctions discovered in the research on particular
> types of mindfulness practices apply to mine. So without standardization I
> am left to draw my own conclusions from what I experience. TM and
> mindfulness practice lead me to a similar internal experience. YMMV and I
> agree that research will help us sort out the differences in brain states.
>
> But it is gunna take a while for the very young science of neuroscience as
> a whole to describe what these states mean with close to the same
> confidence you and most TM affiliated researchers put behind your theories.
> I think your confidence in your interpretation comes from TM triumphalist
> bias. Time will tell.
>
>
> ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <LEnglish5@...> wrote :
>
> MIndfulness and concentrative practices disrupt the Default Mode Network
> of the brain, which is highly involved with self-referral processing and
> sense-of-self.
>
> In fact, long-term practices lead to a new style of functioning of the
> nervous system where the original functioning of the DMN, complete with
> relaxed, mind-wandering alpha, starts to become a thing of the past.
>
> TM, on the other hand, enhances the functioning of the DMN and enhances
> the brain circuits associated with sense-of-self.
>
> Which is better?
>
> Research will furnish answers, I am sure, but in the meantime, anyone who
> says that TM leads to the same place as mindfulness and concentration is
> full of it...
>
>
> L
>
>
> ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <noozguru@...> wrote :
>
> My experience has been that  "I" don't exist.  It just seems that "I" go
> through the week as someone just doing something. And it's not weird at
> all.  Like you say it may be a little difficult to fathom intellectually
> especially if some people have had few experiences even of  transcending.
> It's just at some point you no longer "come out" of meditation and it's not
> "spaciness" either an issue that David Frawely has tackled in some of his
> writings about "false" enlightenment.  Just do some grounding things and if
> the experience remains it isn't spaciness.
>
> On 09/17/2014 08:47 AM, fleetwood_macncheese@... [FairfieldLife] wrote:
>
>
> It is an automatic process, Richard. The Self begins to witness in every
> moment, so that rather than having any attention, on giving up anything, it
> actually becomes impossible to be attached to anything. This can't be
> understood in the waking state. Once a person lives in freedom, a person
> can tackle any situation successfully. Life becomes as simple as we want it
> to be. Attachment is impossible, so even the most joyful and the most
> painful moments will pass. Contrary to what the rational mind may think,
> the witness capability, is not some sort of anesthetic. As Ann and I were
> discussing, life is so visceral, sensual and alive within itself, that even
> the witness revels in fullness. Everything is uncovered and seen for what
> it is. The inside and outside are balanced. Attachment, and its consequent
> delusion, are impossible, in a life lived in eternal freedom. No need
> whatsoever, to think about non-attachment. It is automatic, after awhile.
>
> -
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