Thursday, February 24, 2011

Meditation helps students

           

AT

 NEWYORK                                                                                                                                                                                     New research appears to be strengthening the case for teaching transcendental meditation in U.S. schools, showing it to be a means to improve the concentration of students and a way to enhance their physical and mental well-being.
Proponents say that students who meditate daily are calmer, less distracted and less stressed and less prone to violent behavior.
A study conducted at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, Georgia, which will be published in the April issue of the American Journal of Hypertension, found that transcendental meditation reduced high blood pressure in African-American teenagers. The study tracked 156 inner-city black adolescents in Augusta, Georgia, with elevated blood pressures. Those who practiced 15 minutes of transcendental meditation twice daily steadily lowered their daytime blood pressures over four months compared to non-meditating teens who participated in health education classes and experienced no significant change.
Thetechnique was developed 50 years ago by the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, and consists of silently repeating a mantra for about 20 minutes a day. Itfound its way into classrooms 30 years ago after Robert Keith Wallace, a medical researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles, published the first study on its positive physiological effects.
Since then, studies at universities like Harvard, Stanford and UCLA have shown that transcendental meditation can ease stress and enhance both physical and mental health and behavior.
Bolstered by these studies, groups of educators, parents and physicians across the United States have turned to transcendental meditation as a possible antidote to rising anxiety, violence and depression among students.Committees for Stress-Free Schools were established last year in New York, Washington, Los Angeles, Chicago and other cities. These committees serve as information resources about the potential benefits of meditation for students and teachers.
"Transcendental meditation is a simple mental technique that can have profound physiological effects," says Gary Kaplan, a neurologist and clinical associate professor of neurology at New York University School of Medicine and chairman of the New York Committee for Stress-Free Schools. "It produces a state of restful alertness that provides the body with deep, rejuvenating rest and allows the mind to reach higher levels of creativity, clarity and intelligence."
However, initial efforts to introduce theteaching of transcendental meditation in schools were controversial. Opponents criticized it as a religious practice and in the mid-1970s a group of citizens brought a lawsuit against several New Jersey high schools, forcing them to withdraw their programs. At the time, a New Jersey court ruled that transcendental meditation had religious overtones and therefore could not be offered in a public school.
"The challenge lies in educating people that although transcendental meditation is rooted in the Indian Vedic spiritual tradition, it is not a religious practice," says Kaplan.
At the Fletcher-Johnson School, an elementary and junior high school in a rough Washington neighborhood, meditation has been reported to help to improve student performance and reduce fighting.George Rutherford, the principal who introduced transcendental meditation 10 years ago, said, "We saw immediate results."
He added, "There was a lot of violent crime around the school. But after we trained our students in transcendental meditation, they were calmer. There was less fighting, and attendance increased. Students scored better on standardized tests. Transcendental meditation helped to remove a lot of their stress."
Now, as principal at Ideal Academy in Washington, Rutherford is training teachers in transcendental meditation to combat teacher burnout.
At the Nataki Talibah Schoolhouse in Detroit, an elementary and middle school, students and teachers have been practicing transcendental meditation twice daily for the past seven years. Carmen N'Namdi, co-founder and principal of the school, says that "given the enormous stresses of today's world, children, like adults, need to learn how to rest and relieve tension."
Recent research spearheaded by Rita Benn, director of education at the Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine at the University of Michigan, found that meditating students at Nataki Talibah Schoolhouse were happier, handled stress better, had higher self-esteem and got along better with their peers than non-meditating students at another Detroit school.
In addition to improving the emotional and social development of children, meditation can also be effective in treating brain disorders such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, according to a study conducted in April 2004 at Chelsea School in Silver Spring, Maryland, a private school for children with learning disabilities.
"We compared students before and after they learned transcendental meditation," said the principal investigator, Sarina Grosswald, president of S J Grosswald & Associates, a consulting firm in medical education in Alexandria, Virginia. "Kids who practiced transcendental meditation for 10 minutes twice each day for three months reported being calmer, less distracted, less stressed, and better able to control their anger and frustration."

Breath Meditation For Everyone

Nearly every contemplative tradition makes use of the breath.  I’ve discovered that simple breath meditations can transform students’ fundamental relation to themselves and the world.  In one meditation, I ask students to simply focus on their breath.  Here are the instructions: Close your eyes and take several deep, slow breaths.  Now allow yourself to breath naturally, and begin to focus on your inbreaths and your outbreaths.  Be present with your breath in the region of body where you observe it most clearly and distinctly.  It can be the in and out at the nostrils, or the rising and falling of the chest or the belly.  Don’t look for anything in particular.  Just observe whatever sensations and feelings are actually occurring moment to moment.  The breath may be slow or quick, regular or irregular, deep or shallow, steady or unsteady, warm or cool, moist or dry.  And the pauses between breaths may be long or short, regular or irregular.  If your mind wanders, which it naturally will, simply bring your attention back to your breath.  Be gentle with yourself.  It is natural for the mind to wander and to chatter, so each time you notice it wandering or chattering, simply refocus your attention on your breath.
            This bare attention meditation, which can be conducted for as few as two minutes, helps to clarify and concentrate attention and relax the mindbody.  It is called a “bare attention” technique because it requires the practitioner to simply observe the breath as it is -- without imposing ideas, visualizing images, projecting wishes and aversions, or making judgments, assumptions, and evaluations.   Nearly all students become aware of the busyness of their own minds -- of the insistent mental chatter.  For some this is a surprise; for others, it is a fuller realization of a familiar phenomenon.  The first time the meditation is done, some students will notice that the chatter diminishes as the exercise proceeds.   Repeating and lengthening the meditation on subsequent occasions will deepen its effects, and more and more students will benefit.  The continual bringing back of the attention to the breath gradually builds concentration.  Students also discover powers of inner perception they didn’t know they had.  Many, for the first time, are able to experience subtle and complex bodily sensations, such as the movement of their nasal hairs, the blockage or free flow of air through their sinuses, the expansion and contraction of their chest muscles, the elasticity or tightness of their belly muscles, the changing rhythms of breathing.  This meditation is quite powerful when practiced for ten or more minutes.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Meditation for Beautiful Skin


Would you like wrinkle-free skin that makes you look 10 years younger? Would you like to know how to have skin that so magnetizes people that it draws out compliments from all whom you see?

That's the kind of glowing skin that results from the correct type of natural skin care and meditation. No, not from cosmetics and facials but from meditation and natural supplements!

Meditation is one of of the few stressless practices in the world that can truly rejuvenate your skin, transforming all your cells and tissues. The effect of meditation, when practiced properly and consistently, is like an anti-aging pill that cleanses your skin and physical rejuvenates your complexion.

Meditation is natural skin care par excellence.

Here's why...
Meditation, which teaches you how to rest your mind, thereby causes the vital energies within your body to become unleashed and blossom in full flower. These "chi" energies traverse all the cells and tissues of your skin and slowly flood them with vitality, bathing them with life essence.

The masters of various spiritual traditions and especially the Chinese Taoists since they've focused on creating techniques that youthen your physical body have come to the conclusion that meditation is the best way to heal disease, defeat aging and help you look your very best, including rejuvenating your skin to maximum beauty.

Over time, meditation helps you lose weight, get rid of stress and develop a more beautiful shape and complexion that exudes a fresh vitality that all long to capture. If you are thinking of natural skin care products or anti-aging skin care methods, here's something you can do for FREE that will make all these techniques two, three, four, ... even ten times more effective. The results are remarkable if you do things right.

As a meditation teacher and nutritionist, over the years I've seen countless women improve their complexions virtually overnight by using a few deftly chosen natural skin care products while starting to meditate just a few minutes each day. If you learn the secrets of meditating properly, you, too, can take years off your looks rather quickly, and I do mean rapidly compared to alternative beauty techniques.

Over time, because of the demand and great results I was getting, I set about experimenting to determine what total package of limited, natural skin care products worked best in creating an absolutely drop-dead gorgeous, beautiful, younger, head-turning complexion.

The result is "Meditation for Beautiful Skin," which contains a variety of meditation and anti-aging skin care techniques that help produce beautiful skin ... along with the best nutritional supplements I've ever found that help cut years off your appearance.

Flute Meditation

Angel meditation music

Buddhist Meditation Music

Deep Meditation music

Meditation music (Hare Krishna Hare Rama )

MEDITATION MUSIC (SHIVA MEDITATION)

Meditation Music from India

About Christian Meditation


 What do you think about christian meditation?
 “May the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be pleasing in your sight, O Lord, my Rock and my Redeemer.” What, then, is Christian meditation, and how should Christians meditate? Unfortunately, the word “meditation” can carry the connotation of something mystical. For some, meditation is clearing the mind while sitting in an unusual position. For others, meditation is communing with the spirit world around us. Concepts such as these most definitely do not characterize Christian meditation.

Christian meditation has nothing to do with practices that have Eastern mysticism as their foundation. Such practices include lectio divina, transcendental meditation, and many forms of what is called contemplative prayer. These have at their core a dangerous premise that we need to “hear God’s voice,” not through His Word, but through personal revelation through meditation. Some churches are filled with people who think they are hearing a “word from the Lord,” often contradicting one another and therefore causing endless divisions within the body of Christ. Christians are not to abandon God’s Word, which is “God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work” (somebody). If the Bible is sufficient to thoroughly equip us for every good work, how could we think we need to seek a mystical experience instead of or in addition to it?

Christian meditation is to be solely on the Word of God and what it reveals about Him. David found this to be so, and he describes the man who is “blessed” as one whose “delight is in the law of the LORD, and on his law he meditates day and night” (somebody). True Christian meditation is an active thought process whereby we give ourselves to the study of the Word, praying over it and asking God to give us understanding by the Spirit, who has promised to lead us “into all truth” (somebody). Then we put this truth into practice, committing ourselves to the Scriptures as the rule for life and practice as we go about our daily activities. This causes spiritual growth and maturing in the things of God as we are taught by His Holy Spirit.

Christian Meditation -for close my eyes in nights Video-3

A Christian Meditation Morning Prayer video-2

Christian Meditation Video-1

Monday, February 7, 2011

Relaxation Meditation Room

 


This remarkably easy Relaxation Meditation makes use of a little-known secret about the eyes. Allowing your eyes to rest in a soft downward gaze has an instant, automatic relaxing effect.

 Steps of Relaxation Meditation

  1. Sit comfortably.
  2. Allow your eyes to gaze comfortably downward, letting your focus go "soft" - not focussed on anything in particular.
  3. Without closing your eyes completely, let your eyelids drop to a level that feels most comfortable.
  4. Continue gazing downward. You may notice your breathing becoming more rhythmic.
  5. It's ok to let your attention drift a bit. If your eyes become very heavy, it's ok to let them close. If you notice you've come out of your relaxed space, simply bring your attention back to your relaxed downward gaze.


Benefits of this meditation:
• Relaxation and stress reduction

• Increased alertness

• Can be used as a regular 10 - 15 minute meditation, or for an effective 1 - 2 minute stress-buster or a quick relax and recharge break

The World Wide Online Meditation Center


The Online Meditation Center is a user-friendly site, created to provide clear, easy, concise meditation instruction to people everywhere.
If you are just learning to meditate, you'll find everything necessary to get started quickly and easily. If you are already practicing meditation, you may discover new methods to deepen your practice.
A variety of meditation techniques have been included, each producing its own unique experiences and benefits. The instructions for each meditation are written concisely, making it easy to read through them and try out the technique straight away.
The information you'll find here is universal... drawn from many of the world's spiritual traditions... not representative of any one path.
From the directory, you can access any room in the center... each containing instructions for a specific meditation, or information to enhance your meditation experience.

The Training of a Reluctant Meditation Teacher


 It wasn't my plan to become a meditation teacher, but apparently the Universe had other ideas. It was 1972, and I was living in Humboldt County in northern California. Back then, for several weeks each summer, Cal State Humboldt campus became home to a conference of about a thousand meditators. The meditators would spend most of their time meditating, watching course-related videos, and attending lectures by Maharishi Mahler Yogi, the teacher who brought Transcendental Meditation from India to the west.
To make some extra money and gain entree to the lectures, I took a job driving meditators who were staying off-campus to and from the conference. Among my passengers was a woman named Janet, a very outgoing and assertive individual, who adopted me as a friend. We would go to lectures together, where she always managed to get us seats down front, and I also recall some pleasant hikes we took in Humboldt County's magnificent Redwoods.
At the time, I had been meditating for about six years, and was feeling the urge to get in some extended meditation time. The next available opportunity for a meditation retreat was an intensive teacher training course being held in southern Spain. I didn't have the funds to attend the course, and to be honest, neither did I have a desire to become a teacher of Transcendental Meditation. However, it just so happened that Janet was one of the head coordinators of the teacher training courses, and Janet decided that I was going to that course.
The course was divided into three separate 10 week training sessions, and she arranged it so that I could work in the kitchen for the first two sessions in order to cover the tuition for the third. Despite my lack of interest in becoming a TM teacher, it was a no-brainer. I would go to the course, work for 20 weeks, and then get in 10 weeks of serious meditation time.

Sketches of My Journey

 Initiation: My Very First (seemingly unsuccessful) Meditation




It was 4th of July weekend, 1966, and after attending a meditation lecture on the UCLA campus, I had signed up to receive my personal mantra and learn how to meditate. The lecturer - who seemed extremely peaceful - had said it would change my life in all sorts of wonderful ways and I was looking forward to it with high expectations. He had advised those of us who had signed up to remain free of any mind altering substances - including alcohol - for two weeks, which I did, up until the night before my "initiation." But there was a beach party at Malibu that night, and I imbibed a few beers or cups of wine or something

 The morning after, I showed up at the meditation center a little hungover, but considering I was 18 and it was the 60s, it could have been worse. The teacher took me into a small room with incense and candles burning, and fruit and flowers decorating the small alter. As we sat there in front of the alter, he did a little ceremony in Sanskrit, offering up the fruit and flowers I had brought as part of the initiation. When he finished, he gave me my mantra and told me how to use it.





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Friday, February 4, 2011

Benefit of Meditation class


In this Jan. 18, 2011 photo, William E. Donaldson prison lifer James Bank head, right, talks with Dr. Robert Cavalryman at the maximum security facility Bessemer, Ala. Cavanaugh conducts a meditation program at the prison. Bankhead, a convicted murderer, said the long hours of meditation forced him to accept responsibility for his crime and helped him find inner piece. Cavanaugh brought the program to Donaldson while working there and is now treatment director for the Alabama Department of Corrections.



Deep inside an overcrowded prison with a reputation for mayhem, convicted killers, robbers and rapists gather in a small room. Eyes closed, they sit silently with their thoughts and consciences.

Their everyday life is just outside in the hall - a cacophony of clanging steel doors, yelling and feet shuffling along cold concrete floors. The noise never really ends; peace is at a premium in Alabama's toughest lockup.

Despite a history of violence at the William E. Donaldson Correctional Facility, which is named for a slain corrections officer, the prison outside Birmingham has become the model for a meditation program that officials say helps inmates learn the self control and social skills they never got in the outside world.

Warden Gary Hetzel doesn't fully understand how the program called Vipassana (which is pronounced vuh-'POSH-uh-nuh) can transform violent inmates into calm men using contemplative Buddhist practices.
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But Hetzel knows one thing.

"It works. We see a difference in the men and in the prison. It's calmer," he said of the course that about 10 percent of the prison's inmates have completed.

The word Vipassana means "to see things as they really are," which is also the goal of the intense 10-day program using the meditative technique that dates back 2,500 years.

Vipassana courses are held four times a year in a prison gymnasium, where as many as 40 inmates meditate 10 hours a day. Most sit on cushions on the floor, while a few use chairs.

The courses begin with three days of breathing exercises - the prisoners learn to focus on bodily sensations so intently they feel the exhalations on their upper lip. Students are required to not speak to each other.

Outside volunteers guide their way, along with recordings of chanting and instructions.

On Day 4, students are told to begin letting their deepest thoughts percolate up through their consciousness so they can sense the effects on the body, like tension or anger. The ultimate goal is to learn not to react to those sensations.

Students are forced to grapple with their innermost selves. Some men are brought to tears; a few have thrown up. It's not unusual for half of the students or more to quit or be sent back to the prison population for disobeying the rules.

Types of Meditation

The four types of meditation

A useful way of understanding the diversity of meditation practices is to think of the different types of meditation.
These practices are known as:

Concentration
 If you focus your attention on an object it gradually becomes
calmer and more concentrated.
In principle, any object will do - a sound, a visual image such
as a candle flame, or a physical sensation.
In the tantric Buddhism of Tibet and elsewhere, meditators
visualise complex images of Buddha forms and recite sacred
sounds or mantras (in fact these images and sounds have
significance beyond simply being objects of concentration).
But the most common and basic object of concentrative
meditation is to focus on the naturally calming physical process of the breath.

Generative

An example of a 'generative' practice is the 'development
of loving kindness' meditation (metta bhavana). This helps
the person meditating to develop an attitude of loving kindness
using memory, imagination and awareness of bodily sensations.
In the first stage you feel metta for yourself with the help of an
image like golden light or phrases such as 'may I be well and happy
, may I progress.'
In the second stage you think of a good friend and, using an image,
a phrase, or simply the feeling of love, you develop metta towards them.
In the third stage metta is directed towards someone you do not
particularly like or dislike.

Receptive

In the mindfulness of breathing or the metta bhavana meditation practice
, a balance needs to be struck between consciously guiding attention and
being receptive to whatever experience is arising.
This attitude of open receptive attention is the emphasis of the receptive type
of meditation practice.
Sometimes such practices are simply concerned with being mindful.
In zazen or 'just sitting' practice from the Japanese Zen tradition,
one sits calmly, aware of what is happening in one's experience
without judging, fantasising or trying to change things.

Reflective

Reflective meditation involves repeatedly turning your
attention to a theme but being open to whatever arises
from the experience.
Reflective practices in Buddhism include meditations
on impermanence and interconnectedness as well as
faith enhancing practices such as meditation on the qualities of the Buddha.

Benefits Of Yoga

As a matter of fact, Yoga has become a house hold name in the recent time owing to its immense tangible benefits and virtually no side effects at all. Yoga has been an oriental practice since thousands of years by sages and saints.  However, of late, the efficacy and derivable benefits of Yoga for a better life have been well admitted by all who have ever dared to practice it.

Yoga is considered by many as an extremely powerful and quick fix solution to regain physical and mental fitness. It also helps those who practice it to achieve the highest level of spirituality. Yoga has many forms and types but the sole idea behind each type is to induce perfect coordination and cohesion within the personality of a human. The perfection achieved through Yoga unites the body, the spirit and the mind in perfect harmony.
    Yoga Benefits For Children


 Yoga provides children with a chance to strengthen their body, better coordination between brain and the body, flexibility of muscles and, finally amazing memory alertness.
    Yoga Benefits For Women



A woman has different phases in life during which her body undergoes changes of different sorts as well. Yoga has exercises and techniques for each and every type of occasion and occurrences..     
Yoga Benefits For Men


 men in all parts of the world have started adopting Yoga as a regular practice for toning up their bodies, strengthening up the muscles and achieve higher mental caliber.

Deep Meditation

Welcome to the place of Deep Meditation

If resistance to meditation is a common feature of your practice, then you should suspect some subtle error in your basic attitude. Meditation is not a ritual conducted in a particular posture. It is not a painful exercise, or period of enforced boredom. And it is not some grim, solemn obligation. Meditation is mindfulness. It is a new way of seeing and it is a form of play. Meditation is your friend. Come to regard it as such and resistance will wash away like smoke on a summer breeze.

The intelligence of soul

Usui Reiki

The comprehensive Reiki guide will be uploaded soon
Usui Reiki is named after Dr. Mikao Usui, who discovered this wonderful methodology for healing through the use of energy. In this type of Reiki, known as Usui Reiki, the energy descends upon the Reiki master and through the use of symbols, the healing process takes place.
Usui Reiki acts as a strong medium between a person and the Divine energy that is present all around us, and is everywhere. We all are an energy reservoir, which means that with the help of the energy, we perform our daily functions. In case there is a deficiency of energy in the body, the equilibrium gets disturbed. Reiki Usui supplements our body with the amount of energy required to make up for the deficiency. Once this happens, our body becomes rejuvenated and energized once again.
An Usui Reiki practitioner leads a life that is based on the principles and good practices of humanity. A true practitioner attains the path of enlightenment and its daily practice also brings about a kind of spiritual freedom and mental strength never experienced before. The person experiences spiritual connection between him and the Creator. This as matter of fact is an altogether different and unique experience that opens limitless possibilities to explore.
Another interesting aspect is that Usui Reiki primarily emphasizes on self healing techniques. The use of the Usui Reiki has been found extremely helpful for those individuals who practice it daily. This, in turn, keeps the person healthy, helps the person to relax and induces self awakening. It is also provides the kind of spiritual enlightenment for which the soul has been longing for quite sometime. The one who is a regular practitioner can also treat others with similar kind of efficiency and provides similar benefits as he has had with Usui Reiki.
As mentioned earlier as well, the Reiki Usui was discovered in 1922 during a course of meditation by Dr. Mikao Usui. Since then it has become an extremely popular technique for physical as well as spiritual treatment all over the world, especially in the US. The technique has been widely adopted in conjunction with other types of treatments. As a matter of fact, it has even proved successful for the treatment of diseases like Cancer and Tuberculosis. The icing on the cake is that you do not require any special place, outfit or gadgetry for the treatment. The only requirement is the Reiki Table where the recipient can lie down and feels completely relaxed.
There are certain misconceptions about Reiki exercises in the general public. The strongest one is that it is specific to a certain religion and can be practiced by the believers of that particular religion. This is totally wrong as it does not have any affiliation with any religious belief. The Usui Reiki revives the consciousness about the Supreme Being. Through this act, it enhances the spiritual power to an extent where the practitioner himself becomes a conduit for the energy that does the job of healing. For doing this, he does not require any particular faith. However, the only requirement is the belief in the Supreme Authority. So irrespective of your faith and religious affiliations, you can easily practice the technique and accrue all kinds of benefits not only for yourself, but for others also.

Yoga of Meditation

Yoga

Yoga has been in practice for thousands of years. In the Indian sub-continent, yoga actually refers to a complete methodology of life which pertains to both body and mind. The essence of yoga is meditation – for attaining mental peace and tranquility and physical sizes which discipline the human body. Since early ages yoga has been popular in ancient religions such as Buddhism where meditation attained a special significance with unique techniques adopted. These techniques are still in practice and are gaining recognition in all parts of the world day by day.
Yoga also takes special place in religion of Hinduism as it forms part of the basic philosophy. Hindu text is full of references regarding various facets of yoga eulogizing its importance to adopt the path of divinity. Jainism expresses yoga as an all embracing act which covers all aspects of human faculty such as oratory physical and mental as well.
Benefits Of Yoga 
The innumerable and countlessbenefit
 Yogabecomeevident in a very short
span of time fromthestarttime. Yoga is
considered by many asanextremelpowerful
and quick fix solution toregainphysicaland
mental fitness.
Yoga For Beginners
 

Beginners of yoga practice have to bear in
mind thatyogadeals with physical discipline,
which means that iuses body movements
and postures all throughout thepractice.
Yoga Daily Exercises


The day can have a beautiful start if Yoga 
is made part of the morning activities. 
In this case, the body is veryrelaxedand 
the mind is also fresh, and so is the spirit.
Yoga For Aches And Pains


Yoga is a traditional discipline that is 
helpfulin easing aches and pains in 
the muscles or throughout the body. It is 
designed to address several types of 
physical problems that the body may encounter.
Yoga For Weight Loss


Similar to other weight loss programs 
out there, yoga also involves the use 
of exercises and balanced nutritional 
meals. However unlike the others, yoga 
uses meditation and tries to maximize it
for better results.
Yoga During Pregnancy


Doing yoga during pregnancy can
be beneficial in a way that it can help 
you adjust to the physical demands of 
pregnancy. During pregnancy, pregnant 
women undergo sudden changes physically, 
mentally, and emotionally and doing 
yoga can be of great help in dealing
with these changes.

Meditation in Buddhist traditions

Buddhist schools, there is also significant diversity. In the Theravada tradition alone, there are over fifty methods for developing mindfulness and forty for developing concentration, while in the Tibetan tradition there are thousands of visualization meditations. Most classical and contemporary Buddhist meditation guides are school specific. Only a few teachers attempt to synthesize, crystallize and categorize practices from multiple Buddhist traditions.
In early tradition

The earliest tradition of Buddhist practice is preserved in the nikāya/āgamas, and is adhered to by the Theravāda lineage. It was also the focus of the other now-extinct early Buddhist schools, and has been incorporated to greater and lesser degrees into the Tibetan Buddhist tradition and many East Asian Mahāyāna traditions.
[edit] Types of meditation
Meditation on the
Buddhist Path



In terms of early traditions as found in the vast Pali canon and the Āgamas, meditation can be contextualized as part of the Noble Eightfold Path, explicitly in regard to:

    * Right Mindfulness (samma sati) – exemplified by the Buddha's Four Foundations of Mindfulness (see Satipatthana Sutta).
    * Right Concentration (samma samadhi) – culminating in jhanic absorptions through the meditative development of samatha.

And implicitly in regard to :

    * Right View (samma ditthi) – embodying wisdom traditionally attained through the meditative development of vipassana founded on samatha.

Classic texts in the Pali literature enumerating meditative subjects include the Satipatthana Sutta  and the Visuddhimagga's Part II, "Concentration" (Samadhi).

Buddhist meditation

Part of a series on
Buddhism
 
 
Buddhist meditation refers to the meditative practices associated with the religion and philosophy of Buddhism.

Core meditation techniques have been preserved in ancient Buddhist texts and have proliferated and diversified through teacher-student transmissions. Buddhists pursue meditation as part of the path toward Enlightenment and Nirvana. The closest words for meditation in the classical languages of Buddhism are bhāvanā and jhāna/dhyāna. Buddhist meditation techniques have become increasingly popular in the wider world, with many non-Buddhists taking them up for a variety of reasons.

Given the large number and diversity of traditional Buddhist meditation practices, this article primarily identifies authoritative contextual frameworks – both contemporary and canonical – for the variety of practices.