Three points to keep in mind when you try to acquaint yourself with these breath energies.
"So when you try to acquaint yourself with these [breath] energies, there are three points to keep in mind:
1) You’re not concerned with your breath as it might be observed by a doctor or a machine outside you.
You’re concerned with your breath as only you can know it: as part of
your direct experience of having a body. If you have trouble thinking of
these energies as “breath,” see if thinking of them as “breathing
sensations” or “body sensations” helps — whatever enables you to get in
touch with what’s actually there.
2) This is NOT a matter of trying to create sensations that don’t already exist.
You’re simply making yourself more sensitive to sensations that are
already there. When you’re told to let the breath energies flow into one
another, ask yourself if the sensations you feel seem unconnected to
one another. If they do, simply hold in mind the possibility that they
can connect on their own. This is what it means to allow them to flow.
3) These energies are not air.
They’re energy. If, while you’re allowing the breath energies to spread
through the various parts of the body, you sense that you’re trying to
force energy into those parts, stop and remind yourself: Energy doesn’t
need to be forced. There’s plenty of space even in the most solid parts
of the body for this energy to flow, so you don’t have to push it
against any resistance. If there’s a sense of resistance to the energy,
it’s coming from the way you visualize it. Try to visualize the energy
in a way that can slip around and through everything with ease.
The
best way to get in touch with these energies is to close your eyes,
notice the sensations that tell you where the different parts of your
body are, and then allow yourself to view those sensations as a type of
energy. As you get more sensitive to those sensations and see how they
interact with the energy of the in-and-out breath, it will seem more and
more natural to regard them as types of breath energy. That allows you
to get the most use out of them."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "With Each & Every Breath: A Guide to Meditation"
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