The Tim Ferriss Show - #787: How to Be in The Present Moment — Guided Meditation with Zen Master Henry Shukman
Episode Date: January 13, 2025This episode is a new experiment called Meditation Monday. The teacher, Henry Shukman, has been on my podcast twice before. He is one of only a few dozen masters in the world authorized to te...ach Sanbo Zen, and now, he’ll be your teacher.In addition to my long-form interviews each week, every Monday I’ll bring you a short 10-minute or so meditation, which will help you for the rest of the week.Over this four-episode series, you’ll develop a Zen toolkit to help you find greater calm, peace, and effectiveness in your daily life.Henry’s app, The Way, has changed my life since I first started using it. Unlike other meditation apps, where you’re overwhelmed with a thousand choices, The Way is a clear step-by-step training program guided entirely by Henry. Through a logical progression, you’ll develop real skills that stick with you.I’ve been using it daily, often twice a day, and it’s lowered my anxiety more than I thought possible.As a listener of my podcast, you can get 30 free sessions by visiting https://thewayapp.com/tim and downloading the app.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of The Tim
Ferriss Show. This episode is a brand new experiment called Meditation Monday. That means in addition
to my long form interviews each week, every Monday I will be bringing you a short 10 minute or so
meditation which will help you for the rest of the week. Over this four episode series, you'll
develop a Zen toolkit specifically to help you find greater calm, peace, and effectiveness in your
daily life. The teacher, Henry Shuckman, has been on my podcast twice before. He is one of only a
few dozen masters in the world authorized to teach what is called Sambo Zen. And I have found this
particularly interesting and effective, and now he'll be your teacher. I've been using Henry's
app, The Way, once, often twice a day for the last few months, and it has lowered my anxiety
more than I thought possible. As a listener of the show, you yourself can get 30 free sessions
by visiting thewayapp.com slash Tim. So if you like what you hear in these meditations,
which will be valuable in and of themselves, you can get 30 free sessions by going to thewayapp.com
slash Tim. And for the time being, please enjoy this
Meditation Monday with Henry Schuchman. Hello, welcome to Meditation Monday. I'm Henry Schuchman.
I'm a Zen master, a meditation teacher, a poet, an author. I've been meditating a long time since
my mid-twenties. And it's been the most important thread in my life
in terms of not just sort of self-care and maintenance
and generally being much happier
than I might otherwise have been,
it's also been a journey of incredible discovery.
I think the most crucial, vital, beautiful discovery
of a lifetime in a certain sense,
because it can show us stuff about who and what we really
are and what our true relationship with this world actually is. But the most important initial
foundational function of meditation for most of us is going to be just in getting more present, more grounded, more centered, and less stressed. It's a great intervention
for nervous system regulation. And you know, the whole modern mindfulness, exponential
spread of meditation as a practice has been centered around that stress reduction.
of meditation as a practice, has been centered around that, stress reduction.
And that's great, that's definitely great.
And it is what we all need to start with
and regularly come back to.
But I do wanna just note that there is the other side too,
that it can be such an extraordinary journey
of existential discovery.
In this little series, we're gonna be exploring both sides,
but we're gonna begin be exploring both sides, but we're going to begin again
and again with arriving, getting grounded, getting centered, more balanced, more present.
And in this first meditation that we're about to go into, I'm going to be basically teaching a way that we can again and again come back to the here and now through
getting more aware of our body, of our body sensation and the experience that our body
is actually having right now.
They say the mind is a time trave traveler, goes to the past, goes to
the future, quite often a lot, but the body doesn't do time travel. And if we can just
get connected with our body again, we come back into the present moment, into right here,
right now, and in a slightly unexpected way when we're really here, present,
somehow it always seems to dial down our stress, our suffering. It just takes the edge off it,
just to be more immediately present now. And weirdly that even works when we're in a stressful present. There's
something about being present with this body here and now that seems to give us
more of a sense of peace and safety automatically even when things are tough.
Okay so let's go into our first meditation. I'm gonna suggest
that you get seated comfortably. In this process of coming into our body
experience, it's really helpful that you can find your way to a setup with your body, a posture, where you can be comfortable.
You know, 99% of meditation teaching suggests sitting.
There's good reasons for that, which I won't go into now.
But you can, of course, recline if that's what you would rather do.
But I'm going to assume that most of us are sitting and if you're sitting
with your back being supported then really relax into that support. If you're
sitting like I am with your back unsupported then it's important to be
balanced. We want the ears over the shoulders, the shoulders over the hips. As we come into body experience, we want to be
coming into this comfort in the body that allows the body to relax. Okay so
now I'm going to invite you to either close your eyes or if you prefer you can just lower your gaze.
But no need to be looking at anything.
If you're lowering your gaze, don't be looking particularly at anything.
Just kind of switch off the pointer in the eyes, the looker.
Just let that go. If your eyes are closed gaze into the kind of gray scale behind
the closed eyelids. Let's just allow ourselves to let go just briefly just
for this little period of time of whatever's come before, whatever our cares and concerns are this day,
just for now you can put them on the shelf
and just come into the experience of being here quietly,
somewhat still,
somewhat still, and not needing to do anything right now. You can actually leave the tasks, the to-do list, outside the door, just for a moment,
just for now.
And think of this as a time of coming back to you, coming back to something a bit more
essential about you and your life. I'm going to give some pointers now around experience of the body and relaxing the body.
Let your jaw relax.
Let your jaw actually sink a millimeter or two and feel what it's like to let the jaw go.
Many of us carry tension in the jaw.
Just let it become slack.
Just let it become slack. Now let the throat relax.
Be soft.
Let your shoulders settle.
Let your arms and hands and fingers become limp.
Let them go slack like old rope.
Lovely. Lovely, now let your chest, your whole rib cage become warm.
Let it become like soft wax, warm wax. Sense the belly now.
Let it too become warm and soft.
Sense the seat beneath you.
Let your sitting bones, your buttocks just kind of melt down into the seat.
Let upper legs become warm and soft and loose.
Let lower legs also become warm, soft, loose.
Let the ankles and feet relax, let go. Now can you get a kind of snapshot in your mind of the whole body as you're sitting here?
as you're sitting here.
No worries if you can't, that's not not needed, but see if you can somehow sense
a warmth perv through your body?
In meditation we never need to do things perfectly, there is no perfection, it's really a practice
of imperfectionism.
We just experience what we experience and we let that be enough.
So whatever you're experiencing, can you let that be enough for right now? Many come to meditation thinking they've got to somehow do it very well or kind of even perform it well.
But that's not needed here at all. It's about coming back to you. You having a chance just to be you.
It's like having a little respite, a little shelter or refuge from the turbulence of our lives. a strange kind of shelter that we can find within.
Coming back to a place of ease
that's always actually here for us within.
Place of rest.
You know, our bodies know how to do it.
Our nervous systems know how to do it.
Just takes a little bit of intention and some tools.
Let yourself rest for a moment. kind of in the heart of your own life, your own living-ness. Yeah, okay.
Yeah, great.
And that's it.
That's meditation. It's so natural. It's just being still, being quiet,
kind of just being ourselves. And it's weird that it seems like sort of a big thing, I'm
going to do this thing called meditation. Really's almost like when we're not actually doing anything we're just stopping we're
ceasing from our restless round of doing just for a little bit just a few minutes
ten minutes a day is definitely enough actually to make a real difference in our lives.
So I hope you've enjoyed this and had some taste of stillness, maybe of peace.
I'd like to encourage you to try through your days, every so often,
you can just kind of hit pause mentally and for 10 seconds, no more,
just be still, sense your body, however it's showing up for you, right then, just
sense it and carry on with your day. So that's the first tool in the Zen toolkit
for everyday life that we're kind of assembling here.
I'm really honored to be able to offer these to you. Thank you very much for
joining and I'll see you next Monday for the next session of Meditation Monday.