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Author Topic: Meditation podcasts
Candol
Noone Going Nowhere
Posts: 717
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Post Meditation podcasts
on: March 25, 2012, 02:54
Quote

DAna is there any chance that you could make meditation podcasts and post them on the homepage like you do a text?

If you could them in real time it would be nice.

Though one thing i would say as a request. Some people when the lead a guided meditation talk almost constantly with no space between instructions or ideas. To give time to hte listener/meditator to absorb the idea, or try out the instruction, it is really important - in my view - to give them plenty of time between sentences - unless the idea being shared requies a few sentences.

One of the best guided meditators that i have ever experienced was a yoga teacher i had for a short while. he was excllent at that too but unfortunately i stopped going because of some dodgy mental fabrication that i had.

Anyway at that time i had never done meditation before. In his talk he told us how to breathe - as they do in yoga and i am not suggesting you do this. He also would tell us to do things like "relax your tongue" "relax your jaw". BEfore he did this it had never ever occured to me in my life before to do some thing like that. I learnt a valuable skill from these 10 minute sessions at the end of his class. I still regret leaving. Alas his retreats which are far away cost a fortune now. .

so anyway that was just blather - reminiscence - but what i'm getting at is timing is important. and i would really appreciate it if you were able to do some meditations in podcasts for us because i have trouble doing it from reading a text. I have trouble internalising this approach which i like and which my zen teacher uses but i just haven't been able to take it in.

I know the theory. I just know the questions to ask or how to look at htings when they happen during meditation. I can never think of what i should be doing so i end up just going back to the breath without having done anything else of interest or value when i get distracted.

Dana-
Nourie
Administrator
Posts: 437
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Dana Nourie
Post Re: Meditation podcasts
on: March 25, 2012, 06:57
Quote

It's already there:-)

Look in the right navigation on every page. There is a box called Popular Topics, click on the word meditation. You'll get every meditation related on the site.

Dana Nourie
All Around Geek Girl

Candol
Noone Going Nowhere
Posts: 717
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Post Re: Meditation podcasts
on: March 25, 2012, 21:38
Quote

No its not dana. When i clicked on meditation, i got taken to the podcast talk page. That's not what i was asking for. I was asking for podcasts of the meditations that you have written about. REcordings of guided meditations along the lines of your texts. Podcasts that one could meditate to.

Dana-
Nourie
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Posts: 437
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Dana Nourie
Post Re: Meditation podcasts
on: March 25, 2012, 22:46
Quote

Ah, I see what you're saying. At this point, we don't have any guided meditations. I know many people like them, but the reason I have not recorded the Weekly Practices is because it's really important to be mindful of whatever arises in one's experience while trying to focus on the breath to increase concentration. A voice telling you what to do can distract from the breath, or a thought that might arise.

Each week there is new food for thought, new areas to explore, in the Weekly Practices but meditation itself, I feel, needs to be organic without a lot of interruption. I also think it's important not to guide a person's experience.

So, that's why I say in each practice, read that one practice each day before your meditation, just so you have a few things to watch for, but keep your concentration on your breath during meditation. Then later reread the practice for reflection and ruminating on. Each day the practice will emerge in your meditation a bit more.

All that said, you bring up a good topic, and this is worth discussion. I sure don't want to dictate whether or not people should or shouldn't use guided meditations. Perhaps you could bring this topic up in the Meditation discussion area. It's an interesting topic, and sounds like one that is important to you. I'm certain open to ideas about, but wanted to share the thoughts I've had previously. Maybe it is something we can provide.

Thanks!

Dana Nourie
All Around Geek Girl

Candol
Noone Going Nowhere
Posts: 717
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Post Re: Meditation podcasts
on: March 26, 2012, 05:27
Quote

Its too hard what you are asking me to do. I can't do it.

And it doesn't matter if one listens to a guided meditation occasionally. My thought is that a combination of text and guided meditaiton with clear instructions will teach best.

I can't do the text version. Did you have to learn from a text when you learnt? How did you learn?

In a guided meditation if the guide talks too much its a problem. What works well is for some verbal instruction then some silent time to try it out. Then some more talk or a gentle reminder to look at htis or that as you go along. It doesn't matter if whilst listening the meditaiotn is interrupted. Its about learning how to do it. Its a learning tool, not an ongoing practice tool.

Look i'm only raising this as a suggestion because most meditaiton instruction i've been exposed to isn't teaching me what to do.

The only person i've been able to learn anything from is goenka. And that's because his instructions were clear, well timed, simple and straightforward.

The texts you are writing are similar in content to what my zen teacher is giving us when we do a group meditation (we haven't had any since last year though as he's away for a few months). I like his timing but he tells us to do too much all at once and i never remember anything. If i had them taped i could learn. Same for you. If yours were taped, I could learn. I believe.

The texts are important. But it requires painstaking effort and a lot of time.

I've got mindfulness in plain english which is a veyr good book. Its pretty good but i think i am ready for the next step up. Certainly i have no problem ever wtih the breath and concentrating on my breath. Taht much i can do.

Its the questioning techniques that i am having trouble with. I can't seem to make myself understood. Is everyone else that much smarter than me? Does everyone forget what it was like to learn or did they just have a different type of learning context (ie such as monastery wiht regular one on one instruction from a teacher, or goenka's highly clear and perfectly timed incremental instruction. )

Look i understand the theory (though i think i'm fast forgetting it ) but i can't think of any questions i should be forumulating to interrogate my experience of the kind that you are writing in your texts.

I know you wish you could thump me right now. But i am telling you how i am experiencing this problem. maybe most others on here already knwo how to do all this. Or maybe they have other supports.

Re goenka - i have noted elsewhere that i don't like his technique so i don't want to do that.

Dana-
Nourie
Administrator
Posts: 437
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Dana Nourie
Post Re: Meditation podcasts
on: March 26, 2012, 08:31
Quote

Candol, everyone develops at a different rate in different ways. I read every book, took classes, followed guided meditations, unguided meditations, etc. It wasn't until after about 6 years that I said screw it all. I stopped reading the books, following guided meditation, and I just sat. I developed mindfulness, and then it all started making sense. The practice is sitting, developing mindfulness, and paying attention to how we behave. That's it! BUT it takes time for us to develop mindfulness.

There is no magic way of knowing what is going to help any particular person.

As far as questioning, I've always been a natural questioner, so that part wasn't difficult for me. My expectations of what the answers should be what were getting in my way. Maybe you can take just one of those questions, and roll it around in your mind every day for a few weeks and see what you discover. It really is about slow discovery.

Understanding the theory only helps so much. It's seeing the processes at work that will make it all come together, and you can only see them at work by paying attention to how you flow through your day. It's really as simple as paying attention to your thinking, to how you react.

You are not alone. I think most people feel similar to you.

For meditation, you are right. You shouldn't be doing too much. All you should be doing is sitting and concentrating on the breath. If you can do that much, that is what you should keep doing.

I think you may be misunderstanding the question a bit. There is no technique. There is no right question. Those are just suggestions, ways are exploring your inner landscape. It's really just about being curious as to how we operate in the world. Instead of just accepting, I have this thought so it must be right, question it. Just because you're feeling a powerful presence of self, question it. What is this feeling really?

The answers are simple. Everything just is. That's it!

Dana Nourie
All Around Geek Girl

Candol
Noone Going Nowhere
Posts: 717
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Post Re: Meditation podcasts
on: March 26, 2012, 21:12
Quote

You are not understanding me. Nevermind. I'll let it go.

Ted-
Meissner
Administrator
Posts: 359
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Ted Meissner
Post Re: Meditation podcasts
on: March 27, 2012, 10:14
Quote

I think I have some idea of what you're talking about, Candol. The problem is that we're doing everything you see here entirely out of our own personal time -- we're already at critical mass, and just don't have the ability *yet* to provide recorded, guided meditation practice that would help many people in their practice.

That being said, you may be happy to hear that our friend Dave Smith is recording his class that's going to be starting soon on secular Buddhism, and a component of that might be a guided meditation. We're very interested in providing that resource, recorded meditations, but it's just not something we've been able to get to quite yet. We'll get there, but again, this is a volunteer activity, and just doing the podcast (let alone all of the site work Dana does) takes up the amount of time I have to dedicate to this effort.

Mark-
Knickelbin-
e
Noone Going Nowhere
Posts: 301
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Post Re: Meditation podcasts
on: March 27, 2012, 12:57
Quote

Candol, if you haven't found it yet, dharmaseed.org, has lots of guided meditations that, in my experience, are totally woo-free. Quality varies but they have so many I'm sure you'll find a teacher who paces things right for you. I've also been enjoying the guided meditations on the Insight LA website -- Christina especially paces things so there's plenty of space between instructions.

Candol
Noone Going Nowhere
Posts: 717
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Post Re: Meditation podcasts
on: March 29, 2012, 17:03
Quote

Thanks Ted and Mark.

Ted, i'm glad you understand me. Certainly i appreciate that you may not have the time. That is a better reason not to do what i am requesting than any aforementioned reasons. I am sorry i am not able to contribute myself to your cause. I've got time but no money.

Maybe the next person you can recruit would be a fundraising person so you can develop the site a bit more.

For my idea about meditation spaces, i'm willing to go and get involved in fundraising but then i do have time to do that.

Yes Mark i will look at those sites you suggest. I was only suggesting it to dana because its a style of meditation in her written posts that i like. I will try again to listen to other guided meditations i can find.

Maybe you know, if dana did have the time to do some good guided meditation recordings, you'd have a product that you could sell through the site and in shops etc. I think most meditation CDs are of the simple relaxation type but i should go and have look. My suggestion would be to do a whole series and sell it as a box of recordings. If there's nothing else like it on the market, you could make a small packet. And a big one if you market it right.

Ted-
Meissner
Administrator
Posts: 359
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Ted Meissner
Post Re: Meditation podcasts
on: March 29, 2012, 17:17
Quote

Candol, one thing that may help is the understanding that we have no interest in making money from this effort. It is not about making money, it's about helping others find this practice. So when the talk goes to things like marketing and business ideas -- it's lost me. This just isn't the place for that topic, we're not about that. Fine if others want to pursue it, but it's not what SBA is for.

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