Today there is a lot of material available on meditation,
much of which is seemingly conflicting. One feels at a loss to try
and sort it all out. There exists, however, among the writings of
the East, a classic text on meditation which gets to the heart of
the matter, stating clearly and concisely just what meditation is.
This text is held by tradition to contain the very essence of the
science of meditation, received from the ancient Indian sages,
and distilled through long ages of meditation experience. It has
stood the test of time, and although it is now preserved in the
Hindu tradition, its teachings on meditation are so universal
that they have been taken over into the Buddhist tradition as
well. Put simply, it states that:1
meditation is the fixing of the
mind on an object and holding it there. What then results after
prolonged practice is the merging of the mind with this object,
whatever it may be. It makes little difference what this object is.
To meditate is to place one’s consciousness on an object and
keep it there.
For beginners, one is often advised to chose an external
object on which to fix the mind. An example of this may be a
flower. How long can you keep the flower and only the flower in
your mind, with nothing else intruding? For most people, this
will be a matter of seconds only. This, of course, is to develop
the concentration aspect of meditation. The object chosen for
developing concentration need not only be a thing, but could
also be an activity. The beauty of this is that it can be practiced
all day every day, in whatever one may be doing. When washing
the dishes, think only of washing the dishes; when working at
your job, think only of your job, and so on. This latter, by the
way, may soon earn you a promotion, as it is so uncommon.
For one’s meditation sessions proper, the periods of time
set aside just for meditation, a highly regarded choice of object
is the breath. This meditation, then, is the observation of the
breath, not to be confused with breathing exercises in which
one tampers with the natural rhythms of the breath. Here one
only observes, and makes no attempt to alter one’s breathing.
2 Meditation: What Is It?
The unique advantage of this meditation has to do with the
close link between the breath and the mind. In the East it is said
that consciousness is mounted on the breath, or in the poetic
words of the Book of Dzyan (V.2), “Fohat is the steed and the
thought is the rider.” This type of meditation can provide useful
insights to the attentive observer. At what stage of the breath,
inbreathing, outbreathing, or pause, do what kinds of thoughts
arise? Advanced sages hint that at a specific point in the cycle of
the breath one may enter into the state of samadhi, the state in
which the consciousness merges with its object.
It is well known that the ability to concentrate, or attention
span, increases dramatically with interest in the object. This can
be used to one’s advantage in meditation practice. By making
the object of meditation something that is also of great interest,
one can harness one’s natural interest and use it to much more
easily achieve a state of concentration. The many people, for
example, who have a devotional side to their nature, often find
that they can quite effortlessly concentrate for long periods of
time on the object of their devotion. Thus a commonly used
object of meditation is an ideal being, which may take the form
of a favorite manifestation of divinity, etc.
Another widely used meditation object is a seed thought.
These are often drawn from writings one finds inspiring. Indian
tradition has picked out from the Upanishads “great sayings”
(mahå-våkyas), four of which are used as the seed thoughts in
the four orders of renunciants founded in the four corners of
India by the great Vedanta teacher Shankaracharya. These are:2
praj∆ånam brahma, “Brahman (the absolute) is consciousness”;
aham brahmåsmi, “I am brahman”; tat tvam asi, “You are that
(åtman, the self)”; ayam åtmå brahma, “This self is brahman.”
These Indian renunciants meditate on the same seed thought
throughout their lives, because of the depth of meaning found
in them. A meditation teacher once told us that he had been
assigned the seed thought, “atom,” for six months. He thought
that he was getting nowhere as the six month period neared
completion and his meditations had been barren, when all of a
sudden whole worlds of meaning opened up to him.
Meditation: What Is It? 3
A favored use of seed thought meditation among Tibetan
Buddhists is to take any of the elements of existence which
make up their world view, such as an atom might be in our
world view, and meditate on its emptiness. This is in fact where
they claim superiority over meditation as taught in the Hindu
tradition. They could not improve upon the ancient Indian
methods or techniques of meditation, namely how to fix the
mind on an object and hold it there, but they felt they had made
improvement regarding the object of meditation. To see in
meditation that any object ultimately lacks any real existence of
its own, or is empty, is to go beyond even the most subtle form of
conceptualization, they say. They teach that this is a powerfully
liberating form of meditation.
Mantras are also thought to be powerful in meditation,
and are used in various ways. The Sanskrit seed thoughts given
above from the Upanishads are not only seed thoughts, but are
also mantras. Thus their effectiveness is not only dependent on
their meaning, but also on their sound. Correct pronunciation
of mantras is considered in Indian tradition very important for
proper effectiveness. This is because sound is thought to have
brought the worlds into existence and to sustain them on track,
or to perpetuate the cosmic order. Tibetan tradition inherited
the use of mantras from India, but over time lost the correct
pronunciation. In Tibet, then, the effectiveness of mantras has
largely been due to faith or confidence in them, rather than
their meaning or their correct sound. So we here see three ways
in which mantras are considered to be effective in meditation.
The mantra vehicle is the most common name in Tibet for
the path of meditation practice following the “Books of Kiu-te,”
or the Tibetan Buddhist Tantras. This is also referred to as the
quick path, because it uses a special and very efficient method
to achieve stability of the mind on an object: visualization. Here
one visualizes specific divine forms, often with many heads and
arms of various colors, which are symbolic of specific energies.
These forms are generated from emptiness by using mantra
sounds, and then are dissolved back into emptiness at the end
of the meditation session. But visualization of any kind can be
4 Meditation: What Is It?
used in meditation to efficiently achieve stability of the mind on
an object. A theosophist, who has studied spiritual evolution,
may wish to visualize his or her self as a perfected human with
all the virtues. This not only uses visualization for its efficiency
in achieving stability of the mind on an object, but also for its
transformative power in bringing in the energies associated
with these virtues, thus helping to build them into one’s life.
Meditation, then, is the fixing of the mind on an object
and holding it there. To acquire proficiency in meditation is to
acquire proficiency in this. When one has acquired proficiency
in this, what is achieved by meditation depends on what one
meditates on.
Notes
1. Yoga-Sütras of Pata∆jali, III.1-2.
2. The sources of the mahå-våkyas are:
“praj∆ånam brahma”—Aitareya Upanißad 3.1.3, of the ‰g Veda;
“aham brahmåsmi”—B®hadårañyaka Upanißad 1.4.10, of the Yajur
Veda;
“tat tvam asi”—Chåndogya Upanißad 6.8.7, and ff., of the Såma Veda;
“ayam åtmå brahma”—Måñ∂ükya Upanißad 2, of the Atharva Veda.
[The foregoing article was written by David Reigle, and published in
The High Country Theosophist, vol. 12, no. 11, Nov. 1997, pp. 18-20, as
“Meditation.” This online edition is published by Eastern Tradition
Research Institute, copyright 2005.]