I'm having a week off of school and find no purpose in my free time. I really just want to use that time to learn to meditate. Hence, I'll be actively monitoring this thread and coming up with ideas really to justify for myself how I see meditation.
 Originally Posted by snoop
Does repeating something over and over actually quiet your mind? Aren't you keeping your mind from being quiet by repeating a mantra in the first place? I'm by no means an expert or even a reliable authority on anything regarding meditation, but what is the difference between thinking about not thinking, and repeating a mantra? If one wishes to truly quiet their mind, would they not simply recognize that one's mind is not quiet, and simply allow any intrusive thoughts to fade away upon this realization?
If your mind is quiet, and suddenly you start thinking about what to have for dinner, what would you do? Wouldn't thinking "stop thinking about that right now, you are meditating" be something you wouldn't want to do? It is defeating the purpose of the exercise. Likewise, wouldn't repeating a mantra be the exact same thing? It is a thought that you are actively thinking. Even if you can more or less place it on the back-burner, so to speak, wouldn't it still be classified as a thought? Again, I'm no authority on this subject. It has merely always been my understanding that the goal is to recognize what is going on, and simply let it go. Each time thoughts start taking place, you let them go the instant you realize what's happening. I don't mean to be picking on your method. I am asking a legitimate question to which I am unsure of the answer.
AW don't worry Snoop! You ask so politely, how could one mistake that for a personal attack! I'll give you my 2cents.
I think that a mantra that is repeating without conscious thought is different from a thought that comes up. A mantra has an intent. It serves a purpose. A thought that comes up has a different intent and purpose from the mantra that you are reciting. I think that when you are doing a mantra. You can still have thoughts. In silence you can do a lot of things with ur mind. It's just something you can come back to and re-align with when you get lost in 'daydreams or what's for dinner this evening. Chicken, beans, maybe some fries. When that happens that's okay but that's not the point of meditation . We can think about what's for dinner without meditating. So that's not the point of why we meditate. Our mantra can help us return to the broader mind-state that helps us be aware of contents of our mind that we miss in daily life. I'm not sure what exactly is achieved with meditation. I think that's different for everybody. I think the goal is to uncover the nature of our self. And silence is a prerequisite. A mind that wanders is more of an obstacle than a mind that is focused. I admit, keeping the focus on any one point is sometimes detrimental to insight into other parts of self. See it more as an anchor. Such is my uneducated advise.
I'm reminded to a forceful psychedelic experience.. Ye.. With dmt. In this trip I quickly found myself in something resembling a box with 4-dimensional objects, as you do in hyperspace. Somewhat of a closed and small space yet with an 'infinite?' amount of folds. While this occured around me, for some odd reason, and I still have no idea why; I found myself sitting in lotus position and reciting a mantra; "I exist, that I know. I exist".. Around me I saw shadows flying around me like bats, dozens of them, to the point of almost touching me so I could feel winds rushing by. I saw stairs and corridors appear, expand wherever I focused my attention. All the while this Mantra was just there in the back-burner. Keeping me sane somehow.
I think the bats represent un-intergrated parts of the psyche and the stairs represent un-charted territory. Its quite easy to get lost in a vision I think. I didn't get a chance to really engage with it, but I can definitely see the mantra being quite useful to come back to and remember that there's more out there when you zoom out from the vision/thought/energy that you are currently engaged into.
That's that, lol.
Breathing meditation is something that I personally do and helps tremendously in silencing internal chats. Simply focusing on the breathe without controlling the breathe is a tremenduous task! It helps me with anxiety too... This task is so monumental and keeps me busy. (really, I haven't gotten longer than seconds of concentration) That is enough to clear out anything else alone. Outside of the confines of sitting meditation this has helped me be more mindful during all parts of living. It has helped me think. People still catch me off-guard.
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