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| Why Try Meditating Outside? |
by Steve Gillman
Meditating outdoors? Does it really matter where you meditate? I think
it can. For some of us, being outside makes for not just a different
meditation experience, but a more profound one. There are some good
reasons for this.
Perhaps meditating in a quiet room with no sounds and nothing to
distract is the easiest way, especially for beginners. It's hard enough
to quiet your mind without constant input from your surroundings. On the
other hand, life is constant input, so if you want the peacefulness that
comes from meditation to enter your life beyond your practice, perhaps
learning to meditate despite surrounding sounds and movement is just
what you need.
Meditating Outdoors
There's a high bank on a river where I lived years ago. It was a
five-minute walk from the house. There's a level grassy spot at the top,
looking down on the water fifty feet below. That is where I would go to
sit. Often there was a breeze I could feel on my skin and hear in the
surrounding trees. I also heard the water as it strained through some
dead trees near the river bank. I smelled the dirt around me, and the
odor of fish coming up from the water.
Meditating there wasn't only pleasurable because of the environment, but
also different from meditating in the silence of my home. There was more
of a sense of experiencing the world without thought, without
over-analyzing. Why? Perhaps simply because there was more to
experience. There were the sounds, which included birds, and the
occasional splashing of some animal in the river. There were things to
smell and the feel of the grass.
I usually close my eyes when I meditate, because I am a very
visually-oriented person, and find it easier to meditate this way. When
I finished my meditation by the river, I would open my eyes, of course,
but what I saw was always different from what was there when I started.
Of course it was the same, but I was seeing it differently, as if for
the first time. While difficult to explain, this is easy to recognize if
you have had the experience.
It's wonderful to look around as if seeing for the first time. You are
seeing without preconception. I might see a deer on the opposite bank of
the river, but the thought "deer" wouldn't cross my mind, meaning it
wouldn't cloud my vision with any ideas about what a deer is or should
be. The sounds and sensations were also "new." I think this more direct
experience of life is a profound demonstration of how much we normally
"live" through our thoughts, somewhat detached from reality.
If you haven't already tried it, why not get outside for your next
meditation? Sit on a hill or in front of a garden, or try standing in
front of a lake or pond when you meditate. The view will be wonderful
when you open your eyes. There is nothing quite like meditating outdoors.
About the Author
Steve Gillman has meditated and studied meditation for over twenty
years. You can find a good mindfulness
exercise and subscribe to The Meditation Newsletter at: http://www.TheMeditationSite.com.
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