De-perception by Thanissaro Bhikkhu (extract)
"Begin with the task of trying to get the mind to stay comfortably
focused for long periods of time on the breath — and right there you run
into two operative assumptions: What does it mean to breathe? What does
it mean to be focused?
It’s common to think of the breath as the
air passing in and out through the nose, and this can be a useful
perception to start with. Use whatever blatant sensations you associate
with that perception as a means of establishing mindfulness, developing
alertness, and getting the mind to grow still. But as your attention
gets more refined, you may find that level of breath becoming too faint
to detect. So try thinking of the breath instead as the energy flow in
the body, as a full body process.
Then make that experience as
comfortable as possible. If you feel any blockage or obstruction in the
breathing, see what you can do to dissolve those feelings. Are you doing
anything to create them? If you can catch yourself creating them, then
it’s easy to let them dissolve. And what would make you create them
aside from your preconceived notions of how the mechanics of breathing
have to work? So question those notions: Where does the breath come into
the body? Does it come in only through the nose and mouth? Does the
body have to pull the breath in? If so, which sensations do the pulling?
Which sensations get pulled? Where does the pulling begin? And where is
the breath pulled from? Which parts have the breath, and which ones
don’t? When you feel a sensation of blockage, which side of the
sensation are you on?
These questions may sound strange, but many
times your pre-verbal assumptions about the body are strange as well.
Only when you confront them head-on with strange questions can you bring
them to light. And only when you see them clearly can you replace them
with alternative concepts.
So once you catch yourself breathing
uncomfortably in line with a particular assumption, turn it around to
see what sensations the new assumption highlights. Try staying with
those sensations as long as you can, to test them. If, compared to your
earlier sensations associated with the breath, they’re easier to stay
with, if they provide a more solid and spacious grounding for
concentration, the assumption that drew them to your attention is a
useful new tool in your meditation. If the new sensations aren’t helpful
in that way, you can throw the new tool aside.
For example, if
you have a sense of being on one side of a blockage, try thinking of
being on the other side. Try being on both. Think of the breath as
coming into the body, not through the nose or mouth, but through the
middle of the chest, the back of the neck, every pore of your skin, any
spot that helps reduce the felt need to push and pull.
Or start
questioning the need to push and pull at all. Do you feel that your
immediate experience of the body is of the solid parts, and that they
have to manage the mechanics of breathing, which is secondary? What
happens if you conceive your immediate experience of the body in a
different way, as a field of primary breath energy, with the solidity
simply a label attached to certain aspects of the breath? Whatever you
experience as a primary body sensation, think of it as already breath,
without your having to do anything more to it. How does that affect the
level of stress and strain in the breathing?
And what about the
act of staying focused? How do you conceive that? Is it behind the
breath? Surrounded by breath? To what extent does your mental picture of
focusing help or hinder the ease and solidity of your concentration?
For instance, you may find that you think of the mind as being in one
part of the body and not in others. What do you do when you focus
attention on another part? Does the mind leave its home base — say, in
the head — to go there, or does the other part have to be brought into
the head? What kind of tension does this create? What happens if you
think of awareness already being in that other part? What happens when
you turn things around entirely: instead of the mind’s being in the
body, see what stress is eliminated when you think of the body as
surrounded by a pre-existing field of awareness.
When you ask
questions like this and gain favorable results, the mind can settle down
into deeper and deeper levels of solidity. You eliminate unnecessary
tension and stress in your focus, finding ways of feeling more and more
at home, at ease, in the experience of the present."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "De-perception"
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