| No. 1 2009 | ACEM MEDITATION eNEWS | Acem | ||
| An empty mind
Will meditation help us attain that state? by Torbjørn Hobbel, initiator in Acem Meditation Everyone who meditates – whether with Acem Meditation or another technique – has to deal with thoughts. People who have tried unsuccessfully to meditate often say, ”It was too difficult. I was unable to get rid of my thoughts.” This article offers some reflections on thoughts in meditation from an Acem perspective and compares them with Buddhist views of meditation. The manner in which thoughts are dealt with during meditation – and the understanding of their importance – makes Acem Meditation different from most other meditation methods.
Some time ago, I read a Buddhist magazine published in the US. Three famous Buddhist teachers from the East and West responded to questions from readers. One question went like this:
The questioner felt somewhat disillusioned – no real progress despite the wonderful teachings and all the good practice. A sadness surfaced in the form of a natural doubt: What is the point of it all?
The problem of thoughts
Two of the teachers try their best to reassure the meditating Buddhist. They emphasise the importance of continuing to meditate, even if beneficial effects aren’t always apparent. Benefits will definitely become manifest, they say – at the moment of death, if not before. The problem is that it takes a very long time to achieve what they call deprogramming of the mind. So their message is: Do not give up! They don’t really go into the problem of thoughts in meditation, and they seem to share the questioner’s underlying assumption that one day the thoughts will miraculously be gone.
The third teacher – a woman from the West – writes that the practice of meditation always has an effect, but not always what we anticipate. According to her, it is unrealistic to expect to experience emptiness of mind, and she advises the meditator not to hold on to the thoughts, but let them go by returning to the meditation practice: ”As to not experiencing the absence of thoughts: None of us do. Just let them come and go, like the scenery from a train window.”
The thoughts are not the problem A significant difference between Acem Meditation and other techniques is that in Acem Meditation, we let thoughts come and go as they will. When we become aware that we are thinking, we go gently back to repeating the meditation sound. Without effort or concentration, the sound is brought into the centre of our awareness. It is important for beginners in Acem Meditation to understand that correct technique does not involve struggling against thoughts, but rather the opposite – allowing them greater space and freedom. One should repeat the meditation sound while also accepting the presence of thoughts. This is what we refer to in Acem Meditation as a free mental attitude.
It may take a little while to establish such an attitude, and the problem may recur over and over again at deeper levels of the meditation process. Considering how difficult this aspect of meditation is, practitioners are entitled to ask another question: Why is it so important to allow thoughts to come and go freely, and not to regard them as disturbances?
The importance of thoughts
Among other things, the spontaneous activity of the mind expresses residues from the recent or distant past. The thoughts are parts of an inner rearrangement that takes place during Acem Meditation. They represent underlying currents in our consciousness that surface when the mind is more open and receptive.
This is why Acem encourages meditators not merely to resign themselves to reluctantly accepting thoughts in the hope that one day they will suddenly go away. On the contrary, they should be welcomed with understanding and sympathy along with the gentle repetition of the meditation sound. Allowing the mind to flow freely during meditation makes it easier to release psychological residues and the deeply rooted tensions associated with them.
In a sense, then, the question of how to attain an empty mind is the wrong question. The real challenge – for beginners and experienced practitioners of Acem Meditation alike – is how to deal with spontaneous mental activity during meditation. Finding an answer to this may help us to grow beyond our personal limitations and live a richer life.
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