Mindfulness, the Essence of the Here and Now
We may undertake the practice of meditation with a sense of purity or austerity. We somehow feel that by meditating we are doing the right thing, and we feel like good boys or good girls. Not only are we doing the right thing, but we are also getting away from the ugly world. We are becoming pure; we are renouncing the world and becoming like the yogis of the past. We don’t actually live and meditate in a cave, but we can regard the corner of the room that we have arranged for meditation as a cave….This strong tendency is an attempt to isolate the practice of meditation from ones actual living situation. We build up all kinds of extraneous concepts and images about it. It is satisfying to regard meditation as austere and above life.
But mindfulness of life steers us in just the opposite direction. The approach of mindfulness of life is that, if you are meditating in a room, you are meditating in a room. You don’t regard the room as a cave. If you are breathing, you are breathing, rather than convincing yourself you are a motionless rock. Your keep your eyes open and simply let yourself be where you are. There are no imaginations involved with this approach. You just go through with your situation as it is. If your meditation place is in a rich setting, just be in the midst of it. If it is in a simple setting, just be in the midst of that. You are not trying to get away from here to somewhere else. You are tuning in simply and directly to your process of life. This practice is the essence of the here and now.