

Rui Sousa wrote:No discipline.
maybe 30 minutes a week...


bodom_bad_boy wrote:Rui Sousa wrote:No discipline.
maybe 30 minutes a week...
Questions & Answers with Ajahn Chah
Q: Is it necessary to sit for very long stretches?
Answer: No, sitting for hours on end is not necessary. Some people think that the longer you can sit, the wiser you must be. I have seen chickens sit on their nests for days on end! Wisdom comes from being mindful in all postures. Your practice should begin as you awaken in the morning. It should continue until you fall asleep. Don't be concerned about how long you can sit. What is important is only that you keep watchful whether you are working or sitting or going to the bathroom. Each person has his own natural pace. Some of you will die at age fifty, some at age sixty-five, and some at age ninety. So, too, your practice will not be all identical. Don't think or worry about this. Try to be mindful and let things take their natural course. Then your mind will become quieter and quieter in any surroundings. It will become still like a clear forest pool. Then all kinds of wonderful and rare animals will come to drink at the pool. You will see clearly the nature of all things (sankharas) in the world. You will see many wonderful and strange things come and go. But you will be still. Problems will arise and you will see through them immediately. This is the happiness of the Buddha.

gabrielbranbury wrote:bodom_bad_boy wrote:Rui Sousa wrote:No discipline.
maybe 30 minutes a week...
Questions & Answers with Ajahn Chah
Q: Is it necessary to sit for very long stretches?
Answer: No, sitting for hours on end is not necessary. Some people think that the longer you can sit, the wiser you must be. I have seen chickens sit on their nests for days on end! Wisdom comes from being mindful in all postures. Your practice should begin as you awaken in the morning. It should continue until you fall asleep. Don't be concerned about how long you can sit. What is important is only that you keep watchful whether you are working or sitting or going to the bathroom. Each person has his own natural pace. Some of you will die at age fifty, some at age sixty-five, and some at age ninety. So, too, your practice will not be all identical. Don't think or worry about this. Try to be mindful and let things take their natural course. Then your mind will become quieter and quieter in any surroundings. It will become still like a clear forest pool. Then all kinds of wonderful and rare animals will come to drink at the pool. You will see clearly the nature of all things (sankharas) in the world. You will see many wonderful and strange things come and go. But you will be still. Problems will arise and you will see through them immediately. This is the happiness of the Buddha.
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Jechbi wrote:I think there's a lot of wisdom in that quote from Ajahn Chah, but there's also some risk that people might take that as an excuse to exert minimal effort when it comes to formal sitting meditation. It's like physical exercise: You might think you're getting enough exercise by walking around the house while you vacuum and by walking out to get the mail, but it's better if you can set aside some time for formal physical exercise for your physical health.
There's no question that we can bring mindfulness to all activities in all postures, but I think we build up the ability to do that through formal sitting practice. You can't substitute one of the other. You need both.
Just my 2 cents ...


Tex wrote:Curious to hear how everyone practices.
On a weekday, I wake up and walk the dog while listening to a Dhamma talk on the I-Pod, then sit for either 20 or 30 minutes. I will meditate for another 20 or 30 minutes in the evening when I feel up to it, which is realistically only about half the time.
On Saturdays and Sundays I tend to have longer sittings of 45 or 60 minutes, sometimes two or three times per day.
So in an average week I'm putting in anywhere from 5 to 10 hours of meditation. Wow, that's not that much now that I add it up.
Anyway, what is your personal meditation routine?
bodom_bad_boy wrote:Rui Sousa wrote:No discipline.
maybe 30 minutes a week...
Questions & Answers with Ajahn Chah
Q: Is it necessary to sit for very long stretches?
Answer: No, sitting for hours on end is not necessary.(...)
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