Sam Harris

Waking Up: A Guide to Spirituality Without Religion

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  • Sanzhar Surshanovhas quoted10 years ago
    How to Meditate
    1. Sit comfortably, with your spine erect, either in a chair or cross-legged on a cushion.
    2. Close your eyes, take a few deep breaths, and feel the points of contact between your body and the chair or the floor. Notice the sensations associated with sitting—feelings of pressure, warmth, tingling, vibration, etc.
    3. Gradually become aware of the process of breathing. Pay attention to wherever you feel the breath most distinctly—either at your nostrils or in the rising and falling of your abdomen.
    4. Allow your attention to rest in the mere sensation of breathing. (You don’t have to control your breath. Just let it come and go naturally.)
    5. Every time your mind wanders in thought, gently return it to the breath.
    6. As you focus on the process of breathing, you will also perceive sounds, bodily sensations, or emotions. Simply observe these phenomena as they appear in consciousness and then return to the breath.
    7. The moment you notice that you have been lost in thought, observe the present thought itself as an object of consciousness. Then return your attention to the breath—or to any sounds or sensations arising in the next moment.
    8. Continue in this way until you can merely witness all objects of consciousness—sights, sounds, sensations, emotions, even thoughts themselves—as they arise, change, and pass away.
  • Usoroh Paiushas quoted2 years ago
    What did I care if my friend was better looking or a better athlete than I was? If I could have bestowed those gifts on him, I would have.
  • Despandrihas quoted3 months ago
    In fact, I’ve forgotten most of what has happened to me over the course of my life, and my body has been gradually changing all the while.
  • Kirill Kirillovhas quotedlast year
    The problem is not thoughts themselves but the state of thinking without knowing that we are thinking.
  • Kirill Kirillovhas quotedlast year
    Being mindful is not a matter of thinking more clearly about experience; it is the act of experiencing more clearly, including the arising of thoughts themselves.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    If you can do that, you have already solved most of the problems you will encounter in life.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    According to the Buddhist view, by seeing things as they are, we cease to suffer in the usual ways, and our minds can open to states of well-being that are intrinsic to the nature of consciousness.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    Your mind is the basis of everything you experience and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. Given this fact, it makes sense to train it.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    The near goal, therefore, is to have an increasingly healthy mind—that is, to be moving one’s mind in the right direction.
  • Despandrihas quoted2 years ago
    The traditional goal of meditation is to arrive at a state of well-being that is imperturbable—or if perturbed, easily regained.
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