The School of Greatness - 594 Meditate on Your Joy with Light Watkins
Episode Date: January 28, 2018THE E.A.S.Y. MEDIATION TECHNIQUE. On this episode of 5 Minute Friday I wanted to bring you something a little different. Something that you can actually do, right now. I want you to participate in thi...s meditation from a previous video I made with Light Watkins, an amazing meditation teacher and friend of mine. He just released a new book on his simple and accessible meditation techniques and we did a YouTube Live to test them out in person. This meditation is a great way to assess your body and be aware of everything happening within yourself. Download this episode and take the time to sit down and learn this meditation technique on Episode 594.
Transcript
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This is Five Minute Friday!
Part of me wants you to just do a lead of meditation.
Yeah, we can do that, totally.
Just for, you know, people watching.
So walk us through it.
Let's do a simple one for people watching.
So the technique in the book, I call it the EASY technique.
EASY is an acronym for how we want to interact with our mind during the meditation. So E is for embrace,
A is for accept, S is for surrender, and Y is for yield, yield to. So what are we embracing,
accepting, surrendering, and yielding to? Basically anything that you would be otherwise resistant towards,
which are your thoughts, your noises, being itchy, any of those kinds of things.
So in other words, if you're sitting in meditation and your shoulder starts itching,
you can go ahead and scratch it.
So you just yield it to that.
You don't have to power through.
Grunted, like that itch on my face. No. You don't have to power through. No, you don't have
to power through anything. And same with even your sitting position, you're going to just ease into
that. So the more, and again, there's different ways to approach this, but the more relaxed your
physical nervous system is, the more settled your mind can become in the meditation so let's start with
just sitting comfortably and closing the eyes right and so naturally your mind is
going to be doing whatever it's doing which means you could be thinking about
how you feel you'd be thinking about whatever's going on around you, or you could be
thinking about the past or the future, right? So the first thing I recommend doing is just to
get as physically comfortable as possible to scan through the entire body, starting with the toes,
working your way up through the top of the head and whatever you can relax to relax that part of the body. Sometimes, you know, we're just really tense and we're really
anxious and trying to relax can be stressful because the body's not wanting to relax
in this moment. So just whatever you can relax, go ahead and relax, especially those little tiny little muscles, you know, like your fingers
and like your tongue and your brow and all of those little things that you can relax. And also,
this is an opportunity to make some micro adjustments to situate yourself in any way,
meaning if you have a pillow that you need to put behind your lower back because there's some
little tenderness there, or if you feel like, oh, it's a little bit chilly in here, maybe I'll take this throw or this shawl and put it over my legs.
The beginning of the meditation is really good for just assessing where you are, what's going on, and what your needs are.
Now, again, some meditation practices, there's breath awareness. With this meditation practice, we're not going to be concerned so much with how we're breathing so long as we're breathing naturally.
You can breathe through your mouth.
You can breathe through your nose so long as you're breathing naturally.
So if your nose is a little bit blocked up, go ahead and just open your mouth and breathe through your mouth.
And now we're in what I call the simplest form
of awareness. So you're not holding any specific position. You're not trying to focus on anything
in your mind. And you're not trying to control the breathing. That's your simplest form of awareness.
form of awareness. Now I'm going to suggest that you scan your mind and I want you to bring your attention to a thought or a word or a sound that brings you joy. Whatever that is. It could be a song, could be a line from a poem,
could be your child's name someone used before, which I liked. It could even be an image,
some moment in time in your past that brought you joy, right? Without too much judgment around,
is this the best thought or the best image? Just any thought or image in this moment
that when you experience it, it makes you feel happy.
happy. Okay, so now that you have your happy thought, the meditation is going to be very,
very simple. And it's basically going to comprise of you sitting here in your simplest form of awareness with no expectation around what you think should be happening, right?
And what will start to happen is eventually your mind is going to start meandering away from this moment.
And you may find yourself thinking about, again, something in the future or something in the past
or thinking about something from your to-do list for today.
And when that happens, you're going to just very, very innocently return your awareness
to your happy thought, your happy word, or your happy image.
happy word or your happy image. And we're just going to do this for a couple minutes just to get a taste of what it feels like to operate from the
simplest form of awareness. I'm going to stop talking for a moment just so you're
not having to hear my voice while you're going through this process. And then I'm going to interject a couple of times with some prompts to help you.
And then after that, I'll bring you back out. So just remember it's okay to shift, to scratch, to cough, to clear your throat.
You don't need to be a frozen statue in the meditation. You want the
process to be very organic and fluid the entire time. I also want to invite you to see your mind not as the enemy or the obstacle to this process.
Instead, look at your mind as the ally, as your friend.
And so that includes all of the thoughts.
That includes all emotions.
It includes anything that can be
interpreted as a thought sensations feelings and when you become aware that
you're sitting in your meditation after your mind has been meandering somewhere
else there's no need to judge your experience there's no need to
interpret the experience all you're going to do is just very innocently return your awareness
to your happy thought and just resting the awareness there for however long it stays there
and eventually you will start to lose that awareness and begin meandering And now I want you to let go of the happy thoughts and just bring your awareness back
into your whole body.
And then over the course of five or ten seconds, just very, very gradually begin to slowly open the eyes.
So that's basically the foundation.
You can meditate like that for, again, 10, 15, 20 minutes.
I recommend a minimum of 10 minutes.
Love it, man.
Make sure you guys get the book, Bliss More, How to Succeed in Meditation Without Really Trying.
Make sure you pick it up. It's out right How to Succeed in Meditation Without Really Trying.
Make sure you pick it up.
It's out right now.
You can go to blissmore.co, Amazon, Barnes & Noble,
anywhere else books are sold, I'm assuming.
Did you do an audiobook for this too?
I did, yeah.
I've read it.
It's great. You read it?
It's challenging, right?
Is that an audible?
It's on audible, yeah.
My mouth has never been more tongue-tied than reading an audiobook.
It's challenging.
It took me four and a half days of my life.
Make sure you guys get it on Audible if you want to listen to it,
if you like the soothing sounds of light's voice,
which put me into a trance state.
Make sure to check it out.
Hey, man, I appreciate you having me on and spreading the message.
Of course, man.
Appreciate you.
Absolutely.
Thanks, brother.
All right. man yeah yeah absolutely thanks brother all right