Tara Brach - Meditation: Breath by Breath (2017-11-29)
Episode Date: November 30, 2017Meditation: Breath by Breath (2017-11-29) - Our breath can be a home base that allows us to meet life with a relaxed, wakeful presence. This meditation helps us calm and settle the mind with long deep... breathing, and then establishes a mindful presence with our natural breathing. When distracted, we learn to relax back again and again, learning the pathway of homecoming to the aliveness, openness and mystery that is always Here. Your support enables us to continue to offer these talks freely. If you value them, I hope you will consider offering a donation at this time at www.tarabrach.com/donation/. With gratitude and love, Tara
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The following meditation is led by Tara Brock.
To access more of my meditations or join my email list,
please visit tarabrock.com.
We open our meditation in a simple way
by reflecting on what matters to us,
what your intention is for being right here, right now,
what your deepest or most sincere intention is.
So sensing what your heart cares about.
feeling your sincerity
will be chanting together
from this place of caring and sincerity
a universal mantra
oom
the sound current of connectedness
you might want to bring the palms together
gently in front of the heart
as a way to really collect your attention
center yourself
and projecting from that
heart space will chant three times
the mantra oom
You might start by inhaling deeply.
Become aware of this body sitting here and breathing.
Then extending the breath so that the in-breath is long and full and deep.
And letting the out-breath again be slow, slow, even.
So the in-breath and the out-breath are matched about five counts, a slow, long-deep in-breath,
a slow release, letting go with the out breath.
Inhaling slowly about five counts.
A slow release.
Continuing in this way with a long, deep in breath.
Without a pause in between, matching the out breath and length,
letting the breathing be smooth,
continuing with this conscious breathing.
If it feels like a strain, then it's fine to have it,
the breath be a little shorter, maybe four counts, or if it feels like slowing down can work,
you can make it six counts. With the breath, long, deep, smooth in breath, slow release with the
out-breath. Now discontinue any controlling of the breath. And notice what it's like to let the
breath, breathe itself, totally naturally, a relaxed attentiveness.
As you attend to the breath you might notice where it's easiest to feel the breath or
maybe most pleasant.
Might be at the nostrils, the inflow outflow there.
It might be a rising, falling sensation at the chest or maybe the expanding and deflating
at the belly.
You might prefer feeling the whole body breathing, like inflating and expanding with the in-breath,
even in a cellular way and relaxing, settling with the out-breath.
Wherever you find the breath easiest or most pleasant to detect,
rest with the breath there, sense the possibility of relaxing with the movement of the breath.
It's very natural that the mind will drift away.
not a problem.
When that happens, it's just an invitation to practice arriving again.
When you notice you're often thoughts, you can even mentally note that.
Oh, thinking, thinking, and gently relax back,
shepherding the attention to the next in-breath or out-breath,
rising breath, falling breath.
Since the breath is a home base, breath can be at the center of your attention, still aware
of the background of sound, aware of the background of sensation throughout the body, feelings,
letting your attention be to notice when the mind wanders, and then to relax back again.
Let the breath help you to know that you're right here.
You might even mentally whisper the word here.
And sense the immediacy and aliveness of presence.
Breath by breath, a relaxed, interested attention.
If something arises in this heerness that's intense or challenging, strong physical discomfort,
difficult emotion, fear, sorrow, anger.
And you can let the breath recede into the background, still feeling it perhaps, but let
what's here be in the foreground, offering a gentle attention to the life that's presenting.
If there's fear you can keep breathing with it, perhaps mentally note, oh, fear.
Okay, fears here.
So you're saying yes to whatever arises,
including it in this open presence.
And when it no longer calls your attention,
coming back to a full presence with the breath,
you can begin fresh in any moment.
Feel free to start again,
re-relaxing a bit through the body,
maybe letting go in the shoulders,
softening, relaxing the hands, softening the belly, relaxing your heart, taking perhaps a few
full breaths, collecting the attention, and then resting, relaxing with the breath,
wherever you find it easiest or most pleasant to be with.
If the mind is off in thoughts, let this be,
a moment of reawakening.
Just notice the thinking
and sense the possibility of relaxing back again.
There of the sounds around you,
of the sensations in your body,
the in-flow and outflow of the breath.
Notice the difference between this
aliveness and presence
and any thought you might be inside of.
Can you sense the moment?
mystery and vividness of being right here, right now.
By breath, relaxing, resting in presence.
We close by bringing the feeling of the breath and that gentle presence to the region of
the heart, breathing in and out of the heart.
And since whatever wish or blessing you'd like to offer to your own being,
what do you wish for yourself right now?
They bring to mind someone who's dear to you, someone you care about, and hold them in your
heart.
Sense what your wish is for that person.
Mentally whisper your wish with the person's name.
Sensing the heart boundless and open, including all beings on this earth, all beings everywhere.
your wish for the well-being, the happiness, the peace and the freedom, may all beings everywhere
awaken and be free.
Namaste and thank you.
