Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - How Not to Feel Like You Suck at Meditation | Bonus Meditation with Joseph Goldstein
Episode Date: December 31, 2021The three most important words in mindfulness are "simply begin again." This meditation focuses on the key to all meditation techniques.About Joseph Goldstein:Joseph is one of the most respec...ted meditation teachers in the world -- a key architect of the rise of mindfulness in our modern society -- with a sense of humor to boot. In the 1970's, he co-founded the Insight Meditation Society (IMS) alongside Sharon Salzberg and Jack Kornfield. Since its founding, thousands of people from around the world have come to IMS to learn mindfulness from leaders in the field. Joseph has been a teacher there since its founding and continues as the resident guiding teacher.To find this meditation in the Ten Percent Happier app, you can search for “Simply Begin Again,” or click here: https://10percenthappier.app.link/content?meditation=fa2ec8eb-0480-4328-b0bd-0cbedbd86c0b.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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What does it even mean to live a good life?
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This is the 10% Happier Podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hey, everybody.
Happy Friday.
If you've been listening this week, you know that we are
midway through our special two week series, which we're calling Getting on Stuck, which
is designed to help you head into the new year with some tools for breaking through whatever
inertia might be holding you back to that end. We've got a super simple stuckness, busting
meditation for you today, led by my friend and teacher Joseph Goldstein.
In today's practice, Joseph is going to share three of the most useful words in meditation.
They are simply begin again. No matter how many times you get distracted in meditation,
or no matter how many times you get stuck in your life, you can always start again.
As I like to say,
it's like a golf game with a million Mulligans. Joseph needs no introduction, but I'll give you a
little one anyway. In the 1970s, he co-founded the Insight Meditation Society alongside Sharon
Salisburg and Jack Cornfield. He continues at IMS today as the resident guiding teacher. He's also my meditation teacher and a guiding teacher
on the 10% happier app.
Speaking of the app, one quick order of business here.
Next week in the app,
we're kicking off our annual New Year's Meditation Challenge,
which this year we are calling the Getting Unstuck Challenge.
It's a free 14 day challenge,
which will feature daily videos and guided meditations designed to help you deepen your learnings from right here on the podcast.
As you know, we often pursue a kind of lecture lab model here.
The lecture is the podcast and the lab where you can try this stuff out is the app. Your home base for the getting unstuck challenge is the 10% happier app, download the app wherever you get your apps,
to join the getting unstuck challenge for free. Okay, enough out of me. Let's get started here with
Joseph. The most important words in mindfulness meditation are simply begin again.
You give the mind a simple object of meditation, like the breath.
Then we find before too long, our mind gets lost in thoughts, fantasies, or daydreams.
This is not an unusual phenomenon.
We hop on these trains of association.
And often we don't know that we've hopped on the train,
we have no idea where the train is going.
And then sometime later it may be a minute or two,
it may be five minutes, maybe ten minutes,
we wake up to the fact that we're thinking,
because if we hop off the train,
in that moment of becoming a weather we lost, we can actually delight in that moment
of awareness of remembering rather than judge ourselves for having been lost. And in that moment,
we recollect the breath and simply begin again.
We'll begin this meditation by again, sitting in an upright posture, the back erect, but not stiff or tense, gently closing the eyes, softening and relaxing the eyes, relaxing the shoulders, softening
the belly, settling into the awareness of the body and the body posture,
to sit and to know that we're sitting.
And as we're aware of the body posture as we've settled into the body,
you will become aware of the sensations of
the body breathing.
Connect with the sensations of the breath and whatever place in the body you feel it most
clearly.
Again, it might be the sensations of the breath at the nostrils,
or the sensations of the movement passing the nostrils, you can use a soft mental Out, in, out.
If you're feeling the sensations of the breath in the rise and fall of the abdomen or the chest,
you can make the soft mental note of rising, falling, rising, falling. If you've noticed that the mind has hopped on trains of association, gotten lost in a train
of thought, as soon as you become aware, the mind is thinking, notice that, reconnect Reconnect with the breath and begin again. Staying aware of the body posture, and become aware of the sensations of your body breathing.
Feeling the sensations of the air passing the nostrils or the sensation of the movement,
the chest or abdomen,
breathing in, know your breathing in,
breathing out, know your breathing out. When you notice that the mind has wandered, it will gotten lost in a thought.
Simply reconnect with the feeling of the breath and begin again. And when you're ready, you can slowly open your eyes and reconnect with the world around
you.
In this meditation, we've practiced the art of mental noting.
This is using a soft word in the mind, a soft mental label, to acknowledge what the present
moment experiences.
So for example, if we're being mindful of the breath, we might make a soft mental note
along with each breath in, out, in, out. The note should be done very
softly. It's almost like a whisper in the mind. But the note can help to frame the object
so that we can be mindful of it more clearly.
Many people have found this tool extremely helpful to strengthen the continuity of mindfulness moment to moment. Others may find that the simple awareness
without the note serves just as well.
Thanks again to Joseph. We'll be right back here on Monday with a brand new episode with the great Tara Brock.
In the meantime, happy new year.
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