How To Meditate Daily

“What you think, you become. What you feel, you attract. What you imagine, you create.” – Buddha

I realized that I write so much about spirituality, mindfulness, and meditation in my blog posts but I never answered the “why” or “how” of it.

Mindfulness practice has been a key savior in my life and I don’t intend to stop practicing meditation, the reason behind mindfulness and a calm state of mind.

Even if just for 7 minutes, just sitting back and closing my eyes and resting my body (when I’m sitting) or just losing myself to nature (when I’m walking) helps a great, GREAT amount. It serves the purpose of peace and oneness.

So this post is specially written to address the “how” and “why” of meditation.

The habit of meditation is one of the most powerful things I’ve ever learned.

Amazingly, it’s also one of the most simple habits to do — you can do it anywhere, any time, and it will always have immediate benefits.

How many habits can you say that about?

While many people think of meditation as something you might do with a teacher, in a Zen Center, it can be as simple as paying attention to your breath while sitting in your car or on the train, or while sitting at the coffee shop or in your office, or while walking or showering.

It can take just one or two minutes if you’re busy. There’s no excuse for not doing it, when you simplify the meditation habit.


♥♥♥♥♥ I’d love for you to subscribe to my mailing list! It’s different than following my blog. On there, I’ll be sending out personal email-only love notes. Now along with following my blog (which btw, I can’t thank you enough), you’ll be able to interact with me on a personal level too. You just need to enter your email address. Thanks!

Subscribe to Aishwarya’s Newsletter for your chic dose of Self-Help!

 


Meditation is certainly not a religion, cult, or spiritual path: it’s actually a very basic practice to reduce stress. – Donovan

Why Meditate?

Why create a small daily meditation practice? There are countless reasons, but here are some of my favorite:

  • It relieves stress and helps you to relax.
  • When you practice mindfulness, you can carry it out to everyday life.
  • Mindfulness helps you to savor life, change habits, live simply and slowly, be present in everything you do.
  • Meditation has been shown to have mental benefits, such as improved focus, happiness, memory, self-control, academic performance and more.
  • Some research on meditation has indicated that it may have other health benefits, including improved metabolism, heart rate, respiration, blood pressure and more.

Actually, some of the best benefits of meditation are hard to define — you begin to understand yourself better, for example, and form a self-awareness level you’ve never had before.

Most simply, sitting for just a few minutes of meditation is an oasis of calm and relaxation that we rarely find in our lives these days. And that, in itself, is enough.

Meditation is the soul’s perspective glass. – Owen Feltham

Screenshot_20181117-030738-01.jpeg

How to Do It Daily

There are lots and lots of ways to meditate. But our concern is not to find a perfect form of meditation — it’s to form the daily habit of meditation. And so our method will be as simple as possible.

1. Commit to just 2 minutes a day. Start simply if you want the habit to stick. You can do it for 5 minutes if you feel good about it, but all you’re committing to is 2 minutes each day.

I’m not religious, but I do pray. It’s 60 seconds of meditation, visualizing myself, looking at myself, and being conscious of my own consciousness. That will align me for the rest of the day. – RuPaul

2. Pick a time and trigger. Not an exact time of day, but a general time, like morning when you wake up, or during your lunch hour. The trigger should be something you already do regularly, like drink your first cup of coffee, brush your teeth, have lunch, or arrive home from work.

3. Find a quiet spot. Sometimes early morning is best, before others in your house might be awake and making lots of noise. Others might find a spot in a park or on the beach or some other soothing setting. It really doesn’t matter where — as long as you can sit without being bothered for a few minutes. A few people walking by your park bench is fine.

I’d like to be more patient! I just want everything now. I’ve tried to meditate, but it’s really hard for me to stay still. I’d like to try to force myself to do it, because everybody says how wonderful meditation is for you, but I can’t shut my mind up. So patience and learning is the key. – Ellen DeGeneres

4. Sit comfortably. Don’t fuss too much about how you sit, what you wear, what you sit on, etc. I personally like to sit on a pillow on the floor, with my back leaning against a wall, because I’m very inflexible. Others who can sit cross-legged comfortably might do that instead. Still, others can sit on a chair or couch if sitting on the floor is uncomfortable. Zen practitioners often use a zafu, a round cushion filled with kapok or buckwheat. Don’t go out and buy one if you don’t already have one. Any cushion or pillow will do, and some people can sit on a bare floor comfortably.

5. Start with just 2 minutes. This is really important. Most people will think they can meditate for 15-30 minutes, and they can. But this is not a test of how strong you are at staying in meditation — we are trying to form a longer-lasting habit. And to do that, we want to start with just two minutes. You’ll find it much easier to start this way, and forming a habit with a small start like this is a method much more likely to succeed. You can expand to 5-7 minutes if you can do it for 7 straight days, then 10 minutes if you can do it for 14 straight days, then 15 minutes if you can stick to it for 21 straight days, and 20 if you can do a full month.

Meditation is painful in the beginning but it bestows immortal Bliss and supreme joy in the end. – Swami Sivananda

6. Focus on your breath. As you breathe in, follow your breath in through your nostrils, then into your throat, then into your lungs and belly. Sit straight, keep your eyes open but looking at the ground and with a soft focus. If you want to close your eyes, that’s fine. As you breathe out, follow your breath out back into the world. If it helps, count … one breath in, two breath out, three breath in, four breath out … when you get to 10, start over. If you lose track, start over. If you find your mind wandering (and you will), just pay attention to your mind wandering, then bring it gently back to your breath. Repeat this process for the few minutes you meditate. You won’t be very good at it at first, most likely, but you’ll get better with practice.

And that’s it. It’s a very simple practice, but you want to do it for 2 minutes, every day, after the same trigger each day. Do this for a month and you’ll have a daily meditation habit.

Some people awaken spiritually without ever coming into contact with any meditation technique or any spiritual teaching. They may awaken simply because they can’t stand the suffering anymore. – Eckhart Tolle

Screenshot_20181026-142034-01.jpeg

Expanding Your Practice

Sitting and paying attention to your breath is really mindfulness practice. It’s a way to train yourself to focus your attention. Once you’ve practiced a bit while sitting in a quiet space, you can expand your mindfulness practice:

  • When you feel stress, take a minute to pay attention to your breath, and return your mind to the present moment.
  • Try taking a walk, and instead of thinking about things you need to do later, pay attention to your breath, your body’s sensations, the things around you.
  • When you eat, just eat, and focus your attention on the food, on your feelings as you eat, on the sensations.
  • Try a mindful tea ritual, where you focus your attention on your movements as you prepare the tea, on the tea as you smell and taste it, on your breath as you go through the ritual.
  • Wash your dishes and sweep your floor mindfully.

This, of course, is just a start. There are many ways to practice mindfulness, including with other people, while you work, and so on.

Total relaxation is the secret to enjoying meditation. I sit with my spine upright, but not rigid; and I relax all the muscles in my body. – Thich Nhat Hanh


Feel free to ask any questions or share your ideas in the comment section below. Alternately, I’d really appreciate for you to share this content on your social media platform if you found it useful so that others can benefit from it too. If you have any doubts or want a personal clarification, send me an email on eclipsedwords@gmail.com. For more inspiration, fun, and smiles, follow me on Instagram

Happy Blogging! ♥♥♥


Thank you for reading. Love you for that! ♥

—–Have Hope. Keep Faith—–

Copyright. All rights reserved. ©

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.


Follow & Support Eclipsed Words on these social platforms. It’s a great way of showing your love and support.

It only takes one click!

INSTAGRAM

FACEBOOK

TWITTER

PINTEREST

Any Inquiries/Say Hello – eclipsedwords@gmail.com


ECLIPSEDWORDS BY AISHWARYA SHAH | NOVEMBER’2018 | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ©

31 thoughts on “How To Meditate Daily

  1. Very dense and yet a practical insight. A very useful perspective for the seekers. I really appriciate your effort in portraying as well as demystifying one of the very natural elements of life. Keep the audience enriched with your experiences and learnings with same motto! All tee best.

  2. Thank you for your meditation post. I am a practicing meditator–have been, sporadically, for forty years. I first became interested in it through Transcendental Meditation, introduced through our college back when it was brand new and carried the endorsement of the Beatles. It was fun with all the flowers and hoopla, but it always niggled me a bit that I had to pay (at the time $15) for my personal mantra–delivered very dramatically under the emotional duress of having it whispered in my ear and being given the staunch warning that I must not tell it to a soul … and if I forget it, I can never retrieve it again.

    My new wife and I struggled mightily not to disclose our mantras to each other. It seemed such a violation of marital trust. Now I can laugh about it and all the hype that surrounded Transcendental Meditation. Don’t ask me for my mantra though. It’s been a secret for all those 40 years.

    It’s refreshing to read of your approach. Just do it. Don’t worry if you’re doing it right. Just do it. And do it daily. Sitting is fine. Standing is fine. If your nose itches, scratch it. Just Meditate. Meditate!

    Thanks again, Aishwarya. It’s a good thing you are doing.

    If you have a chance,swing by my http://septuagenarianjourney.com/blog/ and see what we’re doing.

    Jay

    1. I love how you shared your journey through words here. I absolutely admire the connection and effort. Thank you so much. I’ll definitely check out your blog. Wish you the best on your journey and in life.
      love and hugs,
      Xoxo ❤ ❤ ❤

    1. It’s absolutely fine, but a disciplined time is the key to success. It’s okay until you do it with all your heart. Wish you the best! 💜

  3. Then She said, “Dad, I am not scared when you cry, nor disoriented or lost. Simply, I love that you cry and want to see more of your tears in life. I want to know you in all the ways you are light and dark. I love you, and that is why I cry with you, “Dad..””

  4. Great post! Mediation is allowing your mind to hover upon the deep at the creation. Before the word of God can produce the miraculous, it must moves from information to revelation though the power of meditation.

  5. I make sure to do it as frequently as I can. I helps with keeping my mind clean and thoughts without obstructions from unnecessary worrying. Luckily enough for me, I have a stand up desk at my work and am positioned in a corner location. In this space, I have the opportunity to sit under my desk on my knees and just meditate for a few long needed minutes. 🙂

  6. I absolutely love this as I’ve been trying to mediate for a bit now, but I’ve been struggling, trying to make it more complicated then it needs to be. I’ll follow your advice here and start with the 2 minutes (I’ve been trying 10) and then build from there.

Leave a Reply