Sitting in Silence

Some thinking on paper about my upcoming silent Vipassana meditation retreat. Why sit in silence paying attention to the breath for 10 days? My answer emerges from a long history of inquiry into the nature of “reality.”

 I didn’t realize that my 46-year meditation practice was actually inquiry into the nature of reality until recently. Transcendental Meditation (TM) was the first form of meditation I practiced. It’s based on concentration on a mantra. I thought of it as a way to reduce stress and get hold of my thoughts. I explored Yogananda’s Self-Realization approach, also mantra-based, which was pitched in Westernized terms to be a way to “find God.” The Buddhist path, which resonates the most with me, points to the end of “suffering,” the illusion of a separate “self” and the impossible-to-satisfy desire for peace and happiness the ego craves. Most recently, I’ve come to appreciate the integrated way of understanding conscious experience explained by Sam Harris in his “Waking Up” book and meditation/teaching app. Incorporating his Dzogchen training, he offers “pointing out” instructions like “Look for who’s looking” during the meditations. He hits my sweet spot with neuroscience, incorporating insights gained through dual and nondual traditions, psychedelic drugs and plain old rigorous philosophical examination of what we notice.

 My practice has enabled me to live with general awareness that:

  • There is no “self” within me.

  • Thoughts (whatever their precise energetic explanation might be) spontaneously arise from consciousness. They are not “my” thoughts. I just become aware of them – until they fade away.

  • My “reality” is the brain-manufactured summation of electrochemical responses to sense organ reactions to external stimuli that appear in consciousness. Sounds, smells, colors, tastes and tactile sensations do not exist independently. They are created and interpreted in my mind.

  • Consciousness is the foundational/only reality. It’s getting close to the whole “god” thing that we’ve invented because we have no idea how things really came to be and work. There is no such thing as “my consciousness.”

  • Space and Time do not exist independently. They are the logical framework of the brain that enable us to understand the reality that we have chosen to create. This statement is probably inaccurate and is based on the mind-blowing implications of quantum theory and biocentrism. The enduring and ancient point, though, is that the past and future are unreal mental constructs. The only reality is the present moment.

 Meditation is a practice during which these insights become more clearly perceived because we are seeking to perceive them (actually ceasing to focus on the thoughts that get in the way of perceiving them). As the experience of daily living as a human transpires, it’s easy to “forget” the truth, to become identified as an ego with thoughts separate from consciousness. The whole point of a meditation practice is to make realization of how we experience the world a part of every moment. The whole point is to be able to experience the world not as a separate self, but as consciousness. I believe I’m well on the way to being there.

 So the point of the retreat is to begin again, to consider all I’ve come to understand as interesting and nothing more. It is to explore without interruption the nature of my experience and evaluate it with the benefit of 2,500-year-old traditional teaching methodology. If I emerge with renewed confidence in what I already come to believe, that will be great. If I emerge questioning everything I’ve ever believed to be true, that will be great, too. I am not trying to achieve a goal. I am going to be a conscious participant in whatever might unfold. We’ll see…

Dying Jay Moving On

Out for a walk this early morning, just steps from the beginning of the brook loop path by our home, Marley and I found a fledgling Blue Jay on the ground. It seemed somehow impaired. Its feet were clutching at pine needles and it was slumped onto its side. Showing no fear, it accepted my picking it up. It looked at me and heard the encouraging words I offered it. It nestled its beak under my thumb and closed its eyes. I watched its breath, calm and slower than I would have expected. I gave it a brief examination, detecting nothing wrong. It gave out a little coo, though as I shifted it from one side to the other. I brought it up to our porch and sat with it, gently offering words of reassurance. It looks skyward, nestled in, and breathed its last. 

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Such a perfect creature! I took the opportunity to study it some, marveling at its new young feathers and how they were arranged; at its lightness and aerodynamic exquisiteness. Wishing its spirit well, I tossed it into the brook so the dogs wouldn’t find and eat it or do whatever it is that dogs would do with dead baby birds. The current took it and I followed it a brief way. Completing my walk around the trail, I remembered that the Jay was me. All of this was me. I was all of this. I noticed joy and gratitude, then moved on with the morning.


Notice for a moment how you reacted to this telling. What did you feel? How would you have been in the same situation? Could joy and gratitude have been takeaways for you? Is that weird? What we bring to every situation shapes our experience of that situation. As you consider your answers to these questions, notice how  your experience and beliefs may have affected how you reacted. Are birds sources of germs? Is death a tragic thing? There’s no right or wrong here, but there is power in seeing how our thoughts, biases, beliefs, and needs shape who we are in each moment. Whether it’s by the brook with a dying bird or in the boardroom delivering hard news, recognize that your perspective is only yours and everyone else’s will likely be quite different, each shaped by the lens through which we see the world. Be curious about what yours might be and ever vigilant of how others’ may differ. 


Pete Colgan works with sales and marketing professionals who want fulfillment so they can manage stress, build thriving business and create successful, happy lives. Consider investing in yourself to truly understand what brings you joy and how you can use that awareness to increase revenue and kick your life and career into high gear. Whether through one-on-one coaching, or a cost-effective group coaching program, what you discover will help the work you do feel effortless! Click here to learn more.

Near Death, Fearless Living

Near Death, Fearless Living

I never felt more alive that morning I almost died during the summer of 1983. I had driven from Columbus to Ocoee, Tennessee with a buddy from the ski shop where we both worked. We were stoked to participate in the Ocoee River Rodeo, the whitewater event where freestyle kayaking was born. …Ron and I planned to run the river not in kayaks, but in a tandem open canoe. We wore helmets and PFDs, had two throw lines and inflatable flotation to displace the water that would inevitably get in over the gunwales. Each of us had decent whitewater experience, but neither of us had tried anything as beefy as what we were about to attempt.

Time

Time

And yet time is free. It has been given to us with no strings attached. We spend it willingly, sometimes without thought or effort and sometimes hurriedly, afraid that this might be the day that it will be snatched away. That day, we know with certainty, is coming, and our anonymous benefactor will surely, we believe, become the reaper. So, really, is time valuable?

Spring, Rebirth and Other Nonsensical Stories

Spring, Rebirth and Other Nonsensical Stories

Spring’s rebirth is a story we tell ourselves. Like spring, our uniqueness, suffering, inadequacy, death limitations are all stories we believe to be true. They are true for us by choice, but nothing could be farther from Truth. What is Truth? Ha! A topic for us to discuss over beers or tea, perhaps. I can share, though, what might change if you change the stories you believe about what is true. Everything. Everything will change.

Happiness on Steroids?

Happiness on Steroids?

This exploration of the neuroscience of happiness and creating results brought me to the deepest of questions. I was totally not expecting that! But it happened as I began to see and feel the connection between inner peace and “outer” happiness. Learning techniques and practices to enhance how happy we feel was great. Understanding the neuroscience made these seemingly “wacky” ideas scientifically valid. As they melded with my lifelong meditation practice, tough, I realized that much of my own happiness was coming from…

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