A Month of Meditation: The Proof is in the Sitting

Note this is a follow up to my initial Meditation post you can check out here.

Obvi but necessary disclaimer: No guru here, just a student of life interested in sharing what he’s gathered from multiple sources and experiences.

December seemed an ideal time to escape the holiday crazy train, look inward and prepare myself to best deal with the added end o’ year excitement. I’d also just gotten married (woo hoo!), traveled to South America for our honeymoon, was visiting family across the country for the holidays, and was getting ready to move cities… all exciting changes, but a lot of change, nonetheless.

The first few days of sitting to meditate were rough… I caught myself checking the time like a man on death row and realizing I’d been following a runaway train cruising off into some remote region of thought, including meta thoughts about the experience and what I’d write about it (d’oh) before nudging myself (more of a mental headbutt) back to focusing on the meditation guide’s voice. Day 7 was first day I made it through a session without once checking the time remaining – woo hoo!

What did I do right?

I found a great free beginners’ course on the Insight Timer app (with whom I have no affiliation) that had me looking forward to my sessions. I continued with guided meditations vs. freeform—meditating silently or to some ambient sounds—as it keeps me more focused. I learned tips and heard affirming messages–e.g. an orchestra of monkeys is banging their cymbals inside other people’s heads too–from the guides that helped make the process enjoyable and productive.

What did I do wrong?

I let the holiday/travel craziness influence the timing of my practice, meditating at different times of day. It worked for December since I’d been applying Dojo-like diligence to fitting it in, but I need to be more consistent for sustainability going forward. Ended up missing a day (d’oh) though learned to be more compassionate with myself with minor setbacks like this. After all…

“Better a diamond with a flaw than a pebble without.’

-Confucius

Final Meditations

The combination of this experiment along with two books I was reading at the time, Daily Stoic, and 10% Happier, has made another noticeable change to my outlook. There was a piece in Daily Stoic suggesting that our devastation is directly related to how likely we believe an event is to occur. You shouldn’t be (that) devastated about having to file your taxes this year because we accept and expect tax season to come every year. Along these lines, imagine your favorite mug already broken. If at some point, it gets knocked off the coffee table by your dog’s overactive tail—a likely scenario for me—you will be less bummed because you’ve made yourself conscious that this could easily happen at any moment and that you should appreciate having it until that point. Similarly, if, hypothetically speaking, you expect a president to sputter an endless stream of ridiculous, selfish, and inaccurate remarks, you may be slightly less enraged when his actions are fully in line with your expectations. Expect to be unexpectedly and inconveniently caught in traffic and understand it has nothing to do with you—no one is conspiring against you to make it happen—and it will lessen the blow a bit.

(I recommend both of the above books, especially Daily Stoic for those who appreciate the manageability of literally having just one page a day to read.)

Finally, I’ve concluded that meditation is like running and eating salads. I know it’s good for me and that I usually enjoy the experience more than expected but I sometimes struggle to take the first step/bite/breath. Just like setting out clothes the night before a morning run or buying the tastiest salad ingredients (yes to avocado and pepitas, no bitter greens or raw red onions, thank you) and finding an ideal time, comfortable spot, and tool to help simplify (ahem, Insight Timer) will reduce the friction to building good habits. Starting with guided meditations of 5-10 minutes and eventually building to 10-15 minutes work well for balancing benefits with compliance. Again…

“Perfect is the enemy of good.’

-Voltaire

I’ve carried my practice into 2019 with me and look forward to continuing it, knowing it ain’t gonna be perfect, but it’s gonna be good.

Leave me a comment with any experiences you’ve had with meditation, tips to share, or what you think my next experiment should be:

  1. Daily Intermittent Fasting (restricting eating to 8-12 out of 24hrs)
  2. CrossFit 3x/week
  3. Sensory Deprivation Therapy (Float Tank) 1x/week
  4. Daily Journaling
  5. Your suggestion?

As always, any other feedback is welcome.

In the meantime, I’ll be training for and competing in an insane, unsanctioned ultra relay race experiment called The Speed Project with some badasses from Electric Flight Crew.

Peace!

A Month of Meditation: Moving from Glorified Naptime to Centered Practice

Intro: Flirting with Meditation… My first exposure to meditation came from Shirley the Loon on Tiny Toon Adventures levitating cross-legged and chanting her mantra, “Ohm, what a loon I am.” Fast forward a few years [ahem, decades]… With the constant inflow of emails, texts, beep-boop-beeps, deliveries, ads, and phone calls—which ironically have become the least problematic among these—I’m often operating in a semi-distracted state. In the past, I’ve dabbled with meditation and while not a cure-all, it’s like a little natural Adderall for the monkeys playing bumper cars in my mind.

My history with practicing meditation started off decently. I first used Headspace’s free Take 10 program, which involves 10ish-minute guided meditations narrated by founder Andy Puddicombe, with his soothing voice and delightful English accent. It’s highly beginner-friendly… I mean, there are animated cartoons to go with the sessions. I would highly recommend this as an intro to meditation.

While I loved the intro program, I opted not to continue with the paid version. The frugal gene I inherited from my wonderful parents questioned the need to spend any money on something I could easily do for free. The amount of money I spend on running each year tells another story. Don’t worry about that…

Next, I joined a series of group meditation sessions via Google Hangouts led by my friend Jess. This was both the best experience I had and the least practical to recreate. It was the best because Jess provided direction and she and the group added accountability with a side of solidarity. However, varying schedules alone make a group virtual session the least likely to be sustained—for me, at least.

Finally, I started using guided meditations on the excellent, free Insight Timer app. However, things deteriorated from there. While I continued to use the app nearly daily, it was to put on the soothing ambient sounds for 10-15 minutes of naptime. This has its own benefits, but meditation it is not.

 

Ok, so why… You’ve probably heard about the many benefits of meditation, like stress management, improved immune system, better sleep, improved happiness, and a better Uber rider score (ok, maybe not directly, but indirectly…). The main benefits I’ve experienced when I’ve practiced for multiple consecutive days are a calmer presence and ability to keep the little things in perspective, e.g. accepting that not everyone handwashes their dishes the second they finish eating and uses the dishwasher as a big, fancy drying rack like I do or that when our dog has a big accident downstairs, it’s usually just that. I would like to achieve these again and to be more present in each activity I’m doing and most importantly in my interactions with others.

Uh oh… How many times has a doctor, trainer, or Oprah suggested we just start simple habit X that will only take us 10 minutes of our day? It’s easy to say, “yeah, I’m gonna start doing that… not today, or tomorrow, but oh boy starting next month…” at which point, after 1,000s of emails/texts/ads/shows have throttled and distracted our mind, we’ve conveniently forgotten about it. There are often good (and seemingly good) reasons to make an exception and skip following through with the new habit but with good prioritization, you can make it happen.

About that… It’s been nearly 30 years since I could comfortably sit cross-legged. So, I will either sit cross-legged with a rolled-up yoga mat under my butt for support or sit up straight (without being too rigid) on a couch for the meditations. For the 1st couple weeks, I’ll use the guided meditations on the Insight Timer app, since the app was never the issue—just my use of it as a nap soundtrack. I’ll then decide whether I want to try freeform meditation, with just the ambient sound playing… but sitting up, not lying down… we know what that leads to.

I betcha… I’m confident I’m going to enjoy and appreciate the benefits of this experiment. Finding the optimal time and location and eliminating distractions will be the keys to keeping this as a daily practice.

Leave me a comment with what you think my next experiment should be:

  1. CrossFit 3x/week
  2. Sensory Deprivation Therapy (Float Tank) 1x/week
  3. Daily Journaling
  4. Daily Intermittent Fasting (restricting eating to 8-12 out of 24hrs)
  5. Your suggestion?

As always, any other feedback is welcome. Namaste, y’all!

Grayscaling