
polarbuddha101 wrote:Just breathe. Mess around with it if you feel like it. Experiment a bit if you want and if you find it unprofitable then return to trying to observe the breath without controlling it. Although, I bought a CD from a yoga instructor of 30 years who specializes in stuff dealing with the breath and he said that although it is possible to be aware of/meditate on the breath without consciously or subconsciously manipulating it he said that it is very hard and rare to find people who actually can do it even though many think they are when they aren't. Just saying this not because I'm trying to say that you can't just watch the breath but saying this because if most people can't do it then it isn't that big of a deal so messing around with the breath is totally fine. Just do whatever helps you to develop calm, tranquility, composure, stillness and clarity. The form isn't the important part it's the result that counts.

flupwatson wrote:Thanks for the replies! I really appreciate it. I also wanted know how proficient I have to be at attention to breath before I should begin insight meditation, i.e. scanning the
body from head to toe. I've been observing the breath for about a month now and while I have moments, usually in the morning, when my mind can concentrate without
too many thoughts arising, it's far from perfect concentration as mentioned in the books I've read.
LonesomeYogurt wrote:flupwatson wrote:Thanks for the replies! I really appreciate it. I also wanted know how proficient I have to be at attention to breath before I should begin insight meditation, i.e. scanning the
body from head to toe. I've been observing the breath for about a month now and while I have moments, usually in the morning, when my mind can concentrate without
too many thoughts arising, it's far from perfect concentration as mentioned in the books I've read.
It really depends on what tradition you're interested in. A lot of teachers don't even use the head to toe method. Whose method are you most interested in following?
flupwatson wrote:The only technique I'm familiar with is the one I learned a few years back at a 10 day Vipassana retreat , the one founded by S N Goenka. It consisted of two stages,
following the breath and then the body scan thing from head to toe.
LonesomeYogurt wrote:flupwatson wrote:The only technique I'm familiar with is the one I learned a few years back at a 10 day Vipassana retreat , the one founded by S N Goenka. It consisted of two stages,
following the breath and then the body scan thing from head to toe.
Then I would maybe caution against taking cues from Bhante G; he's a great teacher but I think his approach might be a little different. He uses constant awareness of the breath along with momentary focus on other sensations as they arise. The levels of calm required by his method may not match up with Goenka's.
There is a user here, Ben, who has a lot of experience with Goenka's method. You might want to PM him! And if you're interested in other methods of vipassana meditation, feel free to PM me. If the Goenka method works for you though, I'd encourage you to stick with it!

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