Learning to live in the moment is when you can bring your
mind to attend to that moment and not to your worries or your fears.
Whenever I share this perspective with people
they immediately equate it to their experiences with meditation which they must
have tried at some point or the other. And they quickly conclude that because
they do not do meditation anymore, they continue to struggle with their lives.
Or there are others who say they struggle despite meditating for an hour
daily!
Conceptually, there is a problem here. You
don’t schedule a mediation. It is not a session. You just meditate. Meditation
is just mindfulness. Awareness. Alertness. Just being. When you have reached
the point of staying in the now, doing whatever you are doing, consciously,
then you have begun meditation. It is the ability to be present. Because the
present moment is all that you have. Meditation need not be done at a particular
time of the day or at a particular venue. It is the continuous, conscious
feeling of being in the present. If you are peeling onions, do it with full
awareness. Then you are meditating. If you are drawing up an excel sheet and
crunching numbers for tomorrow’s meeting, you are meditating. Now, that’s the
quality you have to bring into every living moment – which is, immersing
yourself in whatever activity you are doing without letting your mind wander.
This also applies to tasks you have to do, even though you don’t like doing
them much. For example, I don’t like book-keeping and accounts. But I have to
do it. There’s no one I have who can help me with that. I postpone it all
month. Then, one day, I just do it. Fully. Without hating it. I love it the day
I do it. And then I feel liberated. That’s the power of living in meditation.
I learnt this technique through the practice of
‘mouna’ or silence periods. I began
by first practicing it at a particular time each day. But over years of
practice, now I can slip into ‘mouna’,
anywhere, anytime __ even at a busy traffic intersection or in a crowded
airport or in a boring meeting. I trigger my awareness by slipping into my ‘mouna’ spells. I choose to be silent at
these times and it floods me with a sublime energy instantaneously that helps me
see each situation or circumstance in which I am placed with amazing clarity.
Often when my mind works up to worrying, my auto-pilot, the ‘mouna’ switch embedded in my mind, gets
self-activated and awareness steps in to remind me to let go of my ruinous
emotions and focus on the miracle of the moment. To meditate is to learn to
live meaningfully all the time.
Here’s a Zen story illustrating the same point.
A Japanese warrior was captured by his enemies and thrown into prison. That
night he was unable to sleep because he feared that the next day he would be
interrogated, tortured, and executed. Then the words of his Zen Master came to
him, "Tomorrow is not real. It is an illusion. The only reality is
now." Heeding these words, the warrior became peaceful and fell asleep.
Now, many of us will have a problem with this story and its lesson. Some will
say, that it is defeatist. Others will say that it is impractical. How can you
sleep soundly with an impending catastrophe tomorrow? That really is the
problem. When you think of a past that is over, and of a future that is yet to
arrive, then, you are really not present in the moment. All your Life’s
challenges, fears and insecurities come to torment you only because you are
absent from the now. Just learn to do one thing at a time. As an old Japanese
saying goes, if you try to catch two rabbits at the same time, you will get
none. If you want to worry, worry incessantly. Then don’t aspire for peace. If
you want to fear the future, then fear totally. Don’t hope for that fear not to
come true. But if you want to be happy, drop the worry,
stop fearing and just be. That really is what meditation is all about.
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