Body Sensation

If you have trouble with meditation but know how
beneficial it can be, a body scan might be a good way to start. Putting
attention on body sensation can be used at any time to bring you back to the
present moment. Practice with this technique helps us to realize that
sensations, thoughts and feelings do come and go. An itch, which would
normally seem unbearable can be seen in a different way. It becomes a
pulsating sensation that quickly fades away when we pay attention to the
sensations involved.
How to Practice
Sit or lay down in a comfortable position. Take a few
breaths to relax. Then start scanning or sweeping your body. Bring your
attention to any sensations in the top of your head. Then the scalp, cheeks,
around the eyes, the jaw line. Continue to your neck and shoulders, arms and
hands and fingers, chest and back, your belly and pelvis, thighs and knees,
calves and shins, ankles, feet and toes. Once complete, scan the body as a
whole. Then reverse the process, sweeping the body with your attention, from
your toes to the top of your head.
Take your time with this. The idea is to note any
sensation or lack of sensation in each of these places. Don't make up a
sensation that isn't there. Just move on. Don't make up a story or worry
about a sensation. It's the process of observing that is important.
Remember that sensation is not opinion. For example,
while our opinion of pain may be that it is "unbearable" and our fear of
pain may be that it will never ease, the actual body sensation may be a
sensation of cold, or heat, of pulsation or vibration or pulling or weight.
When the sensation is fierce, if we can stay with it, we may notice it
changing in intensity as we watch.
In itself this exercise can be used for relaxation or as
a preliminary to deeper meditations. It's a good everyday practice under
almost any circumstance, for it helps us to see how fluid and changing life
is. It helps us to move into life's flow.
Notes:
After some practice, you may discover that emotions such
as anger or fear can also be felt as body sensations. For me, anger feels
like a heat creeping up my back. Mild fear feels like a buzzy sensation just
above the surface of the skin of my arms especially.
Thoughts can also be felt as body sensation. As you get
more accustomed to noticing sensation, you can begin to make correlations
that you may not have been conscious of in the past. You may also discover
that body sensations that seem unexpected or disconnected from your current
experience may not even belong to you. Psychic energy sometimes can take a
while to dissipate. So that sudden stab of pain in your arm as you are
walking down a street may actually be a recent injury felt by a
passerby.
If you want to know more about this type of practice, I
recommend the book, "Radical Acceptance" by Tara Brach. Guided meditation
tapes are also available for a modest fee. Look for "Guided Mindfulness
Meditation", series 1, by Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn.
Variation:
A variation of this meditation is to pay attention to
contact sensations. Pay attention to the sensations of touch - your hands
against your legs or each other, your clothing against your skin, the
pressure of your bottom against the cushion or chair, the sensation of your
feet against the floor and the air against your skin.
Final Notes:
There are no right or wrong ways to do a meditation. The
instructions are guidelines; adapt them to who you are and to your needs at
that particular time. Be curious about the process itself.
Remember most meditations become richer the more you
practice them. They reveal more of themselves. It can take practice to
remember to do a meditation when you need to, and it can take practice to go
through the steps. But that's why it is called practice, and for most of us,
we practice for the rest of our lives.
Meditations like these are a regular feature of my free monthly Ezine, Starry Night.
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