SamKR wrote:Moreover, observation of sensations necessarily includes observation of mind (as sensation is part of mental process). Isn't it?
I guess there is sensation accompanied by a mental "reaction" to it?
Spiny
SamKR wrote:Moreover, observation of sensations necessarily includes observation of mind (as sensation is part of mental process). Isn't it?
Viscid wrote:The nervous think forcefully and clearly. The languid are sluggish, inert, and weak, unclear, discursive, and often mixed-up in thought.
With a description like that, who the heck wants to admit to being languid?
Ben wrote:Hi Sam,SamKR wrote:
I used to practice observation of sensations, and later tried to change to observing mind/mind-objects. But I returned to sensations, as I found observation of sensations was more powerful (in the sense that understanding of anicca and anatta is easier). Furthermore, we need not completely stop observing mind/mind-objects while doing vipassana of vedananupassana (observing sensations). Goenka ji teaches that soon after observing mind and mental content we should switch to observation of sensations associated with the mental state of that moment.
Indeed. For me, especially during retreat, when sati is good and stable and I'm observing sensation the mind begins to also begin to do those other satipatthanas.
Several discourses relate the practice of a single satipatthana directly to realization. Similarly, the commentaries assign to each single satipatthana meditation the capacity to lead to full awakening. This may very well be why a high percentage of present-day meditation teachers focus on the use of a single meditation technique, on the ground that a single-minded and thorough perfection of one meditation technique can cover all aspects of satipatthana, and thus be sufficient to gain realization.
Indeed, the development of awareness with any particular meditation technique will automatically result in a marked increase in one's general level of awareness, therby enhancing one's capacity to be mindful in regard to situations that do not form part of one's primary object of meditation. In this way, even those aspects of satipatthana that have not deliberately been made the object of contemplation to some extent still receive mindful attention as a by-product of the primary practice.
-- Ven Analayo, (2003), Satipatthana: the direct path to realization, Windhorse, Cambridge UK, p22
Ben wrote:in fact, here is something from Ven Analayo on this subject:Several discourses relate the practice of a single satipatthana directly to realization. Similarly, the commentaries assign to each single satipatthana meditation the capacity to lead to full awakening. This may very well be why a high percentage of present-day meditation teachers focus on the use of a single meditation technique, on the ground that a single-minded and thorough perfection of one meditation technique can cover all aspects of satipatthana, and thus be sufficient to gain realization.
Indeed, the development of awareness with any particular meditation technique will automatically result in a marked increase in one's general level of awareness, therby enhancing one's capacity to be mindful in regard to situations that do not form part of one's primary object of meditation. In this way, even those aspects of satipatthana that have not deliberately been made the object of contemplation to some extent still receive mindful attention as a by-product of the primary practice.
-- Ven Analayo, (2003), Satipatthana: the direct path to realization, Windhorse, Cambridge UK, p22
kind regards
Ben
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