Manifestation Mastery

The Law of Attraction & Conscious Creation
09 20th, 2008

If you were alive in the 1970s, or if you just like the Beatles, you’ve probably heard of Transcendental Meditation or TM, which was popularized by the Fab Four after their trip to India and their involvement with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi got them interested in Hindu meditation and Indian religious practices. Transcendental Meditation is one of the better known methods of meditating with a ‘mantra’. A ‘mantra’ is a word or nonsense syllable that helps the person meditating bring his or her attention back to the act of meditation and away from thought and outside distraction. By chanting or concentrating on the mantra, the person practicing the meditation learns to detach from his or her ego self and become pure awareness, which is a function of the higher Self. Often, when you read about the self in meditation texts, the ego self is talked about with a small ’s’ and the higher self with a capital ‘S’. Buddhists also sometimes refer to the ego self as ‘monkey mind’, because it is the thinking, restless ego that is always jumping around and flitting from this or that object in the external world, unaware of the pure awareness, or higher Self, that supports it. One of the most common mantras is the Sanskrit work ‘Om’, which is the sound the Universe makes by itself. For more about using mantras in meditation practice, visit www.tm.org.

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09 19th, 2008

One of the simplest and oldest forms of meditation involves simply focusing on each and every breath. In some forms of meditation practice, the instruction is to focus only on the out breath. The reason for the out breath focus is that when people first sit down to meditate, they often become so relaxed they nod off. By focusing only on the out breath, attention is drawn back again and again to the breath itself. This added concentration helps the meditating person to stay awake and stay in the moment. Try it for a just five minutes: You will see that it is more challenging that it sounds initially. You don’t have to adopt a full lotus position or get into any special clothes or situation. Start by just sitting with good posture in a comfortable (but not too comfortable!) chair. Take ten deep in and out breaths to relax your body, then begin to simply notice your out breath. If thoughts come into your mind, let them, but try not to analyze or identify with them, just let them float through your mind like clouds float through a clear sky. Continue to focus lightly on your out breath only. You can close you eyes but you do not have to close them. In fact, in some ways it is better if you keep them slightly open. This will prevent you from drifting off to sleep. For a good basic primer on this technique, check out Bodhisattva Mind by the first American Buddhist nun, Pema Chodron.

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