pescador,pescador wrote:Do you know if is it possible to achive jhanas doing only lying meditation on a bed?
Please understand that I'm still quite new, but I don't see how the jhanas are able to be attained in walking meditation since there is such a "distancing" from the senses. I'll be very interested in seeing how more experienced persons answer.Is it possible to achieve them only doing walking meditation?
Walking, yes. Lying, almost. Just this morning I awoke before my alarm and had the thought I should experiment a little. I may try to put some emphasis on that in the near future. As it was, this morning I ended up going back to sleep after a few minutes.Do any of you practice lying or walking meditation daily?
pescador wrote:Do any of you practice lying or walking meditation daily?
pescador wrote:Do any of you practice lying or walking meditation daily?
pescador wrote:Do you know if is it possible to achive jhanas doing only lying meditation on a bed? Is it possible to achieve them only doing walking meditation?
pescador wrote:
Do any of you practice lying ... daily?
pescador wrote:Thank you, guys.
I'm curious about the monk who achive jhanas doing walking meditation, so if any of you can confirm his existence, I'd like to hear about him.
(There're really interesting people living in monasteries. I wonder why films directors don't make documentaries about them).
pt1 wrote:Hi, I do while lying. As mentioned, sleepiness might be the problem, though usually only in the beginning (at least in my case). One way to get around sleepiness is to assume lion's posture, as it's called in the suttas (also called "sleeping Buddha" position nowadays I think) - lying on your right side, legs fully straight, left leg exactly on top of the right, left hand straight down resting on top of the hip, right hand bent under the head.
The benefit of that posture is that it requires a very very delicate balance, so the moment you start falling asleep (or even just getting drowsy), the body tips over to the side, and you wake up. It's really hard to fall asleep in that posture - basically, the more you pull your legs apart or bend them, the more stability you get and the easier it becomes to fall asleep. But if your legs are exactly on top of each other and fully straight, like advised for that posture, there's only like one spot that is in perfect balance, everything else will cause tipping over.
In my case, it was also useful initially to have a specific posture for sleeping, and another one for meditating, so that the mind doesn't get confused (sometimes I wanted to sleep, but would end up meditating, and the other way around). But these problems also go away with time (unless I meditate right before sleeping - in that case it's still hard to go from meditation straight into sleeping without a break in between).

Laurens wrote:
I don't think it's possible to attain jhana it walking meditation because one's is up and moving, eyes open, and this, I understand makes it quite impossible to attain jhana.
catmoon wrote:Laurens wrote:
I don't think it's possible to attain jhana it walking meditation because one's is up and moving, eyes open, and this, I understand makes it quite impossible to attain jhana.
I see it as a possibility. There are people who have mastered jhana to the extent of being able to enter it at will. It would not surprise me to learn that such a person could take jhana off the cushion and into walking meditation.

Laurens wrote:catmoon wrote:Laurens wrote:
I don't think it's possible to attain jhana it walking meditation because one's is up and moving, eyes open, and this, I understand makes it quite impossible to attain jhana.
I see it as a possibility. There are people who have mastered jhana to the extent of being able to enter it at will. It would not surprise me to learn that such a person could take jhana off the cushion and into walking meditation.
I understood that a requisite for jhana was the shutting off of the senses, but in walking meditation you need to keep your eyes open. I always understood that this ruled out jhana.
suriyopama wrote:Dhammanando Bhikku did recomend me to be aware only of my position when going to sleep, nothing else. After one week following his advice I could sleep normally again
Modus.Ponens wrote:In the "sutta jhanas" the senses are not shutted off. It is in the "comentarial jhanas" that the senses are shutted off. As far as I know, the "vipassana jhanas" (of the Mahasi Sayadaw tradition) do not have the senses shutted down _ and thus are similar to the "sutta jhanas" _ and can be attained walking.
Metta
thanks for informing meReturn to Samatha Meditation and Jhana
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