11 Jun 108 Ways to Deepen Your Meditation Practice
There are a million and one things that can get in the way of a daily meditation practice, but like the old Zen saying states, “you should sit in meditation every day for twenty minutes, unless you’re too busy. Then you should sit for an hour.”
The trouble for most of us is that, even when we do sit down to meditate, we have another million and one things competing for our attention and dragging us away from our center.
Well, readers rejoice!
We’ve compiled a list of 108 practices that are sure to take your mindfulness to the next level, no matter where you are in your meditation journey.
We hope you enjoy 🙂
108 Simple Ways to Deepen Your Meditation Practice
- Find your ideal meditation posture so you can comfortably sustain your meditation undisturbed
- Try not to move after the first few minutes. Simply notice your impulses of discomfort to move, scratch, yawn, or stretch
- Set a timer for yourself if you need to as you’re beginning
- Create a dedicated meditation room or space
- Remove all clutter and distractions
- Use a blanket to keep yourself warm
- Set your intention before each meditation. Something as simple as “Meditation comes easily and effortlessly to me now” can be very effective
- Meditate at sunrise. This is one of the most energetically potent times of day, when you are most receptive and uninhibited
- Wait for as long as it takes to find a consistently natural, calm, and undisturbed breath
- Remember that meditation is not to control your mind, but to release your mind’s control over you. Instead of combatting thoughts and trying to do away with them, allow them and release their hold on you. Do not react, simply witness
- Meditate at a consistent time each time
- Meditate for a consistent duration each day
- Start with just 5 minutes at first, and work your way up
- Ideally, meditate twice a day for your chosen amount of time (once in the morning and once in the afternoon)
- Complete your full time commitment when you meditate (no matter how long you meditate, the most powerful experiences often come at the end of your chosen length of time)
- Read inspiring books to deepen your understanding of and inspiration for meditation
- Surround yourself with inspiring books near your meditation space
- Learn some chants, to calm your mind and feel your devotion
- Try guided meditation to completely release into the experience
- Draw your focus to your third eye center in a relaxed and sustainable way
- Consider using a mala to count your mantra
- Release any ideas of what you think meditation is “supposed” to be
- “If you want to find God, hang out in the space between your thoughts.” – Alan Cohen
- Be kind, gentle and patient with yourself. Meditation is a lifelong journey, NOT a destination
- Meditate before eating meals, when you are lighter and brighter
- Chant affirmations (aloud or in your mind)
- Do a few minutes of yoga or stretching before meditating to relax your body and go deeper, faster in meditation
- Focus on meditation as an offering, rather than trying to achieve something
- Turn your phone on airplane mode (or don’t carry it with you at all) to eliminate all distractions
- Feel as though your creator / idol is meditating with you
- Tell yourself, “with every thought I detach from I move one layer deeper” or “with every sound I hear I move one layer deeper.”
- Keep a meditation journal to record your experiences
- Drink a glass of water before and after your meditation
- Read one of your favorite quotes or passages about meditation before your practice
- Release your attachments to time as you meditate. Have no schedule. Transcend the future and the past and enter the eternal present
- If you use one, do not check your timer. Develop the discipline to sit still without distraction for the duration of your meditation
- Meditate in a group (this is an instant and very powerful way to deepen your experience)
- Meditate in Nature
- Bring an element of Nature to your indoor space
- Occasionally use a block of your free time to set out in meditation with no time limit, and see how long you can go
- Set meditation goals to inspire perseverance
- Be inspired by the words of Paramhansa Yogananda, “When others end, I’m just beginning.”
- When time can afford it, go a little longer than normal
- Relax the shoulders and release them away from the ears
- Let your belly be natural and relaxed
- Remember to lighten up J
- Practice willingly and joyfully, with devotion and without thought of reward
- Practice meditation in the movement of your day, while walking, cooking, driving, or exercising
- Offer your meditation as a gift to the Divine Mother
- Be present with each and every sensation that arises
- Practice non-judgment and non-attachment throughout your day
- Pray to become aware of what is trying to make its way into your consciousness
- Pray to become a vessel through which your Divine calling may be known and expressed in this life
- Pray to be guided through a deeply calming, joyfully bright meditation experience
- Pray for inner stillness and relaxation
- When you feel tired or a drop in energy, try meditating instead of consuming caffeine
- Continually search for inspiration, and new ways in which you can fill your practice with joy
- Create a meditation altar filled with beautiful, uplifting, inspiring things that bring you back to your purpose and your devotion
- Experiment with new and different sitting positions / postures
- See your meditation as service to the planet
- Offer unconditional love, kindness, and upliftment to situations or people
- Become soft, fluid and yielding, for “Whatever is fluid, soft, and yielding will overcome whatever is rigid and hard. What is soft is strong.” – Lao Tzu
- Learn what it truly means to meditate without an agenda
- Encourage your family / friends to meditate and invite them to join you
- Share the power of meditation with a child
- Develop a habit of not over-thinking your decisions throughout your day. Practice listening to and following your intuition in everyday life, and watch it deepen through meditation
- Meditation is the discovery that the point of life is always arrived at in the immediate moment. – Alan Watts
- Ask for divine guidance / help when you need it! Know in your heart that you are not alone, and you never have to do anything alone.
- Open yourself to become a channel and concentrate on feeling the tangible vibrations of lightness, peace and bliss that are flowing through you
- The mind is responsible for the feelings of pleasure and pain. Control of the mind is the highest Yoga. – Swami Sivananda
- Ask yourself, “What is behind my attachment to this thought / feeling / reaction?”
- Remember that the answers you seek are already within you. You must learn to get quiet and listen
- Watch movies that will inspire your meditation practice
- Follow the breath, concentrating single-mindedly on making it long, easeful and smooth. Notice how thought-distractions instantly break the flow of breath, and return to it again and again
- Embrace your beginner’s mind. It’s impossible for a man to learn what he thinks he already knows
- Remember, if you have time to breathe you have time to meditate!
- Notice the impulses and desires that arise and gently release them
- Recognize your true self as the “witness” behind your thoughts and feelings
- Let every thought come and hug you, but you don’t hug anything. Then, gradually, the noise will start to back off. – Mooji
- Sometimes practice disciplined posture, sitting on sit bones, spine erect, heart uplifted, shoulders relaxed, breathing mindfully
- Sometimes practice complete surrender and pay no mind to how you are sitting or breathing, or how you might look to an outsider. Just let go
- One day per week have a longer meditation than normal
- Share meditation practice with someone you love
- Find someone who is more experienced in meditation, and ask them questions or meditate with them
- Listen to the silence
- Become aware of the most prominent sensation in your body. Hold your awareness there for a time, and then move to a slightly more subtle sensation. Hold your awareness there for a time, and then move to an even more subtle sensation. And so on
- Ask for help! Find an instructor, a class or an online resource to guide you
- Keep moving forward on your path no matter what. Don’t give up
- Offer it up. Whatever you meet in meditation that challenges your peace, do not fight with it (fighting is attaching). Simply offer it up to a higher power to transmute and release it from your heart and mind. Do this over and over and over
- Learn to hear your inner guidance. It speaks to you in words, symbols, feelings and callings which are often mistaken for fleeting glimpses of imagination
- Don’t get caught up in the “how”… just do!
- Check in with how you’re feeling at the beginning of your meditation, and accept it all, totally and completely
- Try counting your breath. Start with inhaling for 5, exhaling for 5, and then experiment with lengthening and deepening the breath
- Stay with whatever arises. Notice your tendency to “run” away from things as they come up by opening your eyes, shifting your seat, scratching an itch, etc. and instead just stay calmly with whatever comes up until it passes
- Become friends with yourself. Learn how to just be whole in your own presence, and always approach yourself with love instead of criticism
- Meditate anywhere! Don’t let a busy day stop you from fulfilling this sacred commitment. Meditate in the car, on the plane, in the waiting room… anywhere!
- Always let your breath be light and even
- Keep your face completely relaxed
- Soften the mind – keep your mental focus soft, not hard
- Don’t take your thoughts too personally
- Resist the impulse to claim each and every thought as your own
- Learn to smile at the voice in your head
- Be here now, and be somewhere else later
- Remember that the best meditator is the one who meditates!
- End your meditation slowly, with mindfulness and an honoring of the stillness you’ve just created
- Smile when you’re done J Feel grateful for your accomplishment
- Remember that “The you that goes in one side of the meditation experience is not the same you that comes out the other side.”
- Take your practice off the cushion and out into all the moments of your life
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