You create a sense of ease in body and mind, a sense of harmony. When the mind is at peace, there’s a sense of well-being. When you can keep this well-being going, then you’re acting from a sense of well-being.
"Each time you breathe in, think of the body as a clean slate. The
breath can go everywhere, anywhere, all at once. It can go in strange
directions and do all kinds of things, whatever is needed to keep the
body feeling buoyant.
An important point to notice here when you
breathe out is that you not breathe out too long. The more you breathe
out long, the tighter things become in the body. So allow the breath to
go out just right, then breathe in again, breathe out again, breathe in
again, and allow the breath to dissolve anything that seems
uncomfortable, that seems blocked.
After you’ve played with the
breath like this for a while, ask yourself what feels right, what feels
balanced in the body, in terms of the breath. Are things too light? Too
heavy? Too warm? Too cold? See if you can use the breath to bring them
into balance.
In doing this, you create a sense of ease in body
and mind, a sense of harmony, so that the peace that you feel inside is
palpable. It’s not just an idea. It’s a visceral sense of well-being. In
Thai they have the compound, santi-sukh, which means peace and
happiness, peace and ease. The two go together. When the mind is at
peace, there’s a sense of well-being. When you can keep this well-being
going, then you’re acting from a sense of well-being. The things you
say, the things you do as you’re dealing with the world outside come
from a better place, from a stronger place."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "Peace on Earth"
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