Dream Yoga Basic Skills: Lesson #1
Dream Yoga Basic Skills: Lesson #1: Sensory Awareness Meditation
Welcome to the first lesson of the Dream Yoga class! If you have not done so yet, then please read the intro thread and post there if you are interested. Everyone can now start workbook in this sub-forum and start posting questions and homework there. The workbook name can be creative, but should include your user name and the word yoga.
So, here we are at the beginning! Where to go from here? I want to take an approach in which I will assume everyone here, can benefit by going over the basic concepts of everything, as if they were beginners. So, if you are already pretty advanced with meditation and dreaming, please bare with me. We will get to some advanced stuff eventually.
Ok, lesson #1. What do I mean by “Sensory Awareness Meditation”? This is a meditation in which you become hyper-aware of the real physical world around you. They can vary in the methods used, and in fact I will want the students to invent an example on their own. This class of meditation involves developing an awareness for how your brain is always limiting and filtering the sensory stimuli that actually ends up being perceived.
Why have I chosen to start with this subject? Often when people first learn about meditation, they are told to hold still and stop thinking. Not only is this instruction vague and hard to follow, it leads to something that is not really very exciting. While training the brain to such a point as being able to suspend thought, is impressive and at some point very useful, it is really not for beginners, as it is very advanced and not very interesting. I want to start with some skills that are fun and easy, yet will quickly start enhancing one’s self awareness and developing new portions of the brain. All animals and humans process the incoming stimuli and pick and choose what stimuli will be part of the conscious experience. This is done all the time and on average only about 5-10% of external stimuli will be perceived. If you think about this, it is a needed coping mechanism. The amount of impulses at any given moment is just too huge to take in. These meditations are designed to bring the student a first hand awareness of how this filter system works. By developing an awareness of how one can increase the amount of stimuli experienced, one can then more easily learn to limit the stimuli, when later trying other meditations.
I will break this meditation into 3 versions, each with increasing steps of difficulty. I would like each student to spend days on each step if needed, before moving on. The first step will be so simple that everyone will have success, but I will add enough steps, that even advanced meditaters may be challenged.
You must find a comfortable and some what quiet place to sit. The place does not have to be completely silent, but should be free from screaming children or a television that is loud. I am not strict on how a student should sit or anything like that. For these meditations you can be in any comfortable position, even lying in bed.