johnny wrote:if i meditate for an hour or so my left foot, and only the left, falls asleep so much that i cannot move it. i can move my leg, but i cannot even wiggle my toes. the leg and foot still have a healthy pink color and are not looking like the circulation is cut off or anything, it just doesn't work.
this lasts only about thirty seconds too maybe a minute or so and then i can wiggle them, and then needles and pins for a minute, and then i'm fine.
anyone know about this?
Cittasanto wrote:johnny wrote:if i meditate for an hour or so my left foot, and only the left, falls asleep so much that i cannot move it. i can move my leg, but i cannot even wiggle my toes. the leg and foot still have a healthy pink color and are not looking like the circulation is cut off or anything, it just doesn't work.
this lasts only about thirty seconds too maybe a minute or so and then i can wiggle them, and then needles and pins for a minute, and then i'm fine.
anyone know about this?
I get this, try doing some stretches to loosen up your leg muscles, & alter your leg possitioning. you may be putting to much pressure on your leg with the bend, or the stretch of the muscles.
Do you cross your legs the same way i.e. left foot clossest to you, each time?
I tend to sit in the Burmese posture or quater lotus with my left foot closest to me, I also get tight leg muscles for some reason so I have put it down to a mixture of the two although nothing seams to stop this fully except not sitting crossed legged.
It is very common for beginners to have their legs fall asleep or go numb during meditation. They are simply not accustomed to the cross-legged posture. Some people get very anxious about this. They feel they must get up and move around. A few are completely convinced that they will get gangrene from lack of circulation. Numbness in the leg is nothing to worry about. it is caused by nerve-pinch, not by lack of circulation. You can't damage the tissues of your legs by sitting. So relax. When your legs fall asleep in meditation, just mindfully observe the phenomenon. Examine what it feels like. It may be sort of uncomfortable, but it is not painful unless you tense up. Just stay calm and watch it. It does not matter if your legs go numb and stay that way for the whole period. After you have meditated for some time, that numbness gradually will disappear. Your body simply adjusts to daily practice. Then you can sit for very long sessions with no numbness whatever.

bodom wrote:From Bhante G:It is very common for beginners to have their legs fall asleep or go numb during meditation. They are simply not accustomed to the cross-legged posture. Some people get very anxious about this. They feel they must get up and move around. A few are completely convinced that they will get gangrene from lack of circulation. Numbness in the leg is nothing to worry about. it is caused by nerve-pinch, not by lack of circulation. You can't damage the tissues of your legs by sitting. So relax. When your legs fall asleep in meditation, just mindfully observe the phenomenon. Examine what it feels like. It may be sort of uncomfortable, but it is not painful unless you tense up. Just stay calm and watch it. It does not matter if your legs go numb and stay that way for the whole period. After you have meditated for some time, that numbness gradually will disappear. Your body simply adjusts to daily practice. Then you can sit for very long sessions with no numbness whatever.
johnny wrote:thanks. you have experienced this? total lack of ability too move it?
i do right foot on left thigh, left foot on right. it almost always slips off so i sit in half lotus for the rest of the time with my right foot still on my left thigh and my left foot on the floor.

daverupa wrote:Use a meditation bench, cushion, pillow... it's simply compressed nerves, adjust the sitting position and it's solved. No use just enduring it for the sake of the "I am sitting in lotus" dhamma.
Kamran wrote:I think this is usually caused when blood flow to the foot is slowed down(its not completely cut off). The blood is pushed out to capillaries. It like when there is an accident on the freeway and everybody takes the side roadsIn time, new capillaries will grow and the blood will be re-routed to your foot.
johnny wrote:i've heard too many people say it has to be lotus or bust. and the buddha always said "cross leg position" which i'm pretty sure is lotus.
please convince me lotus doesn't matter!

daverupa wrote:johnny wrote:i've heard too many people say it has to be lotus or bust. and the buddha always said "cross leg position" which i'm pretty sure is lotus.
please convince me lotus doesn't matter!
The burden of proof is on the claim that lotus is important, essential, or an otherwise superior aid.
Now, the phrase "legs folded crosswise" is simply part of a stock descriptive pericope; it means one is sitting with purpose, with neither legs akimbo nor lazy reclining. Note also that the following reference to setting the body straight is of course also not quite literal; the natural s-curve of the spine should be maintained to facilitate relaxed sitting for long periods, but no slouching should be permitted.
In a culture which is primarily one of chairs, adhering to a perceived-as-ideal seated form becomes distracting asceticism. There are many stories of people with blown menisci (basically, knee damage) on account of this sort of thing, a situation which greatly limits ones seating options. Of course, on the less severe side of the spectrum are the nerve compression sensations which you have experienced, which can manifest in very distracting but relatively harmless ways.
So the negatives are very clear, and no positives beyond nostalgia are as yet identified.
johnny wrote:and ugh, i know you're right but i've heard too many people say it has to be lotus or bust. and the buddha always said "cross leg position" which i'm pretty sure is lotus.
please convince me lotus doesn't matter! sincerely. i don't like lotus! however i would need a posture that is as conducive too wakefulness since lotus helps with that a lot.
marc108 wrote:lotus is 100% a cultural thing, and imo, is not in any way necessary.
johnny wrote:awesome and thanks sooo much too all giving me good reasons too forget lotus. i've never really cared for it.
last question: have any of you been able too attain jhana without it? probably a silly question since well known teachers don't always recommend it, but i'm curious.
marc108 wrote:johnny wrote:awesome and thanks sooo much too all giving me good reasons too forget lotus. i've never really cared for it.
last question: have any of you been able too attain jhana without it? probably a silly question since well known teachers don't always recommend it, but i'm curious.
I have always meditated in a chair and it's never been an issue for me as far as developing concentration... Bhante Sujato also uses a chair, and he clearly has/is attaining the deepest stages of Jhana.
dharmagoat wrote:Numbness in the legs is definitely associated with compressed nerves and not poor circulation. The two may occur together, but they are quite distinct.
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