I don't understand.
^ See now you're getting excited about the use of the word excited - please breathe man just breathe :D
I sit in grass when I meditateBut I do agree, cushions are exciting
![]()
In a lot of lineages zafus are little more than ass warmers. They are an inch tall and don't provide much support at all. Some ways of sitting might be better than others but there is no "right" way.How do you keep comfortable and support a straight posture without something to elevate your ass? Don't you find it awkward, or do you do it on a hill or slope or something?
In a lot of lineages zafus are little more than ass warmers. They are an inch tall and don't provide much support at all. Some ways of sitting might be better than others but there is no "right" way.
I'm extremely meditation naive, but I thought one of the points of meditation postures were to be slightly *un*comfortable. Else why not just lie down?
Chairs are good to sit in.
How do you keep comfortable and support a straight posture without something to elevate your ass? Don't you find it awkward, or do you do it on a hill or slope or something?
People don't intentionally sit uncomfortably because it aids in the meditation. It's because, although very painful and frustrating for beginners, it's positions like the lotus (with an erect posture, solid, grounded tri-pod effect) that will eventually lead to deeper levels of samadhi - something simply lying down won't do.
I'm going by something that Alan Watts said, about the role of the position being to allow easy breathing and prevent falling asleep. But I really have no experience..
^ I meant that if it's just about not falling asleep, then most positions would be more or less the same. But you're saying that there's a lot more to it than that, and that higher levels of concentration need good posture. I was just curious.
Posture and relative comfort are important in my experience. Posture keeps the mind in a place it should be (not too uptight, not too loose) while relative comfort keep you from constantly being reminded of the physical world around ya.
QUOTE]
Yeah I definitely agree
This may be hopefully of some help, to whoever reads it
The nearest thing to meditation that i can feel is if I use an analogy.
I am a valley, with water flowing through it.
Whatever is in that water, I just let it flow by.
If it rocks me, I do not fight it, but I do not focus on it neither.
I keep my focus on the whole of me, the valley, while the water, and
whatever is in, flows through.