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Method Name:
One Moment At A Time
Description:
I am a forty-five-year-old woman who
suffered a spinal injury thirty years ago that has resulted in a legacy of
on-going physical pain. Of course this has been difficult to live with, but some
twenty years ago I had a significant experience that radically changed my
perspective on life and plunged me into the wonder of living in 'the present
moment'.
I was in an intensive care ward at the time, with an acute deterioration of my
condition. I had been bedridden for several months and unable to sit up, but on
this occasion I had undergone a diagnostic procedure that required me to sit up
for several hours afterwards. During this long night of intense pain I felt
myself sliding towards the edge of madness.
I spent hours with two internal voices locked in combat - one voice convinced I
could not stay sane till morning and the other willing me to do so. It was an
incredibly intense, brittle, heart-breaking experience.
Then, suddenly, my experience completely changed when I heard a quiet inner
voice saying: "You don't have to get through till morning; you only have to get
through the present moment". It was like a house of cards collapsing, revealing
the space that had been present all along, if only I could have recognised it. My experience immediately changed from an agonised, contracted state to one that
was soft and rich - despite the physical pain. At that moment of relaxing into
the present moment, just as it was, I intuitively knew I had tasted something
true.
I later found a way of making sense of this experience through the teachings of
Buddhism and have spent the past 20 years training my heart and mind, using
meditation and mindfulness. I was ordained into the Western Buddhist Order in
1995 and for several years I have taught meditation and mindfulness practice to
others who live with pain and illness.
Below are some tips and pointers drawn from the methods I have developed that
you might find helpful if you are living with discomfort or pain. Please explore
these as you wish, alongside any other treatments or therapies you may be
receiving. Mindfulness practice can 'complement' conventional medicine in a
helpful way.
The first thing is to learn to distinguish between
primary and secondary suffering.
Primary suffering is any unpleasant physical
sensations you may experience as a consequence of illness, injury, fatigue, etc. You may not be able to do anything about this level of suffering and the task is
to accept it and make peace with it as best you can.
Secondary suffering is the human anguish we all experience as a reaction
to primary suffering: feelings like anger, fear, depression, anxiety and despair
that we instinctively pile on top of any unpleasant sensation or event in a
dense web of reactivity. With mindfulness, or awareness, we can learn to modify
and reduce these experiences of secondary suffering. This can greatly improve
our quality of life, even if the primary suffering remains unchanged, or even
worsens.
The tips that follow are aimed at helping you to accept your primary suffering
and reduce your secondary suffering.
- See if you can stay in the present moment as much as
you can. Whenever you notice that your mind has wandered off into the future
or the past, gently bring it back. This doesn't mean you can't think about the
past or future, but try not to get too caught up with these thoughts.
- Investigate the process you call 'pain'. You will
notice it is in fact a mass of sensations, not a thing. Get to know it as
actual, felt experience, rather than getting too caught up with thoughts about
it. Notice how it is always changing from one sensation to another, no matter
how dense and solid it may feel.
- Move towards the pain. See if you can soften around
any resistance you may feel towards it. This is counter-intuitive but if you
try to ignore it or push it away, it will just scream louder. Use the breath
to help with this (see meditation that follows).
- Kindness and gentleness are crucial. Treat pain as
you'd treat an injured loved one. See if you can find a tender attitude of
heart.
- Once you have gently acknowledged the pain you can
then broaden out your field of awareness to look for any pleasure that is also
going on in the moment. Notice experiences such as sun on the skin, being with
a loved one, noticing flowers by the bed, etc. There will always be something
pleasurable in your experience, no matter how subtle. Let the pain be just one
of several things you are aware of in the moment.
- With this honest, tender attitude to all the shades
of physical, emotional and mental experiences in the present moment you can
then choose how you respond to things. This is the point of creativity - how
we respond/act in this moment sets up conditions for the next moment. You can
always insert a moment of choice no matter how far down the line you've gone
into distress and anguish. Any moment can be an opportunity for learning if we
come back to the actual sensations of the present moment rather than getting
lost in thoughts and reactions. See if you can let both pain and pleasure be
held within this broad perspective: neither contracting tightly against pain
nor clinging tightly to pleasure. Allow all sensations to come into being and
pass away moment by moment.
To summarise: Essentially you are learning three skills:
- Moving towards the pain with a kindly, gentle
attitude, experiencing it as moment-by-moment changing sensations.
- Then broadening out awareness of the moment to
include/embrace pleasurable dimensions as well.
- On the basis of this broad, rich and more spacious
experience of the moment making choices about how you respond to what you
encounter. Learning to 'respond' rather than 'react'. This can enrich your
experience of life enormously, even when living with pain/illness.
Guided meditation practice
(You may like someone to read this to you, or to dictate
it onto a tape or CD.)
To begin with make sure the
body is in as comfortable a position as possible, either sitting in a chair or
lying down on the bed or the floor. Allow the weight of the body to settle down
towards the earth, taking a few deeper breaths and letting go a little bit more
on each out breath.
Now allow the breath to
settle and to find its own natural rhythm, letting the breath breathe itself. Try not to interfere with this process, and notice how the body moves in
response to the breath: the chest expanding and relaxing, the belly rising and
falling. If your breath is affected in any way by your illness or pain, then
just noting this with a kindly, gentle awareness. Try to let go of any ideas
about how you think it ought to be, and just rest with an awareness of how
things actually are for you in each moment.
Pause
Sometimes it can help to
include an image with a sense of the breath: you can imagine a wave flowing up
the beach, turning, and flowing back out to sea again, noticing how the movement
of the breath has a rhythm very like this. Or you might have another image that
you find evocative and calming. Use your imagination in your own way to help the
mind and the body settle around the breath.
Pause
Notice how each breath is
unique, how no two breaths are the same. Notice the texture, the quality, and
the duration of each breath. If you notice the body or the mind tensing up
around your experience, in the noticing you can gently let go again without judgement. Do this over and over again if necessary with a kindly, gentle
awareness.
Include any pain or
discomfort in the body within your broad field of awareness. Very often we
resist feelings of pain or discomfort, and this just leads to more tension, more
pain and more discomfort. Use the breath to help soften the hard edges around
the pain and allow a tender, gentle awareness to permeate the in- and the
out-breaths. As you use the breath to soften resistance to the pain or
discomfort, you may notice how the experience of pain is in fact a constantly
changing mass of different sensations. Experience how it comes into being and
passes away moment by moment.
Pause
Now you can broaden out your
experience even more to invite in the pleasurable dimensions of your field of
awareness. They might be very subtle, such as tingling in the fingers, some sort
of pleasure around the breath, or maybe the sun is shining through the window
onto the skin. In your own way scanning through your whole experience and
noticing little moments of pleasure, no matter how fleeting - arising and
falling with each moment.
You may notice that each
moment of life contains elements that are painful and elements which are
pleasurable. This is the way things are in this world for everyone. Notice the
tendency to harden against pain and to grasp after pleasure, and in the noticing
relax back into the broad field of awareness.
Pause
Now broaden out your
awareness still more to include an awareness of others. Become aware that all
humanity experiences a mixture of pain and pleasure moment by moment in much the
way that you do. The stories of our lives are unique, but the range of basic
human experience and emotions will be very similar. We all have hopes and
dreams, fears and regrets, no matter where we live, our age, colour or wealth. In this way we can allow our own experience of pain and illness to become a
moment of empathy for others who are in pain, or who are ill, rather than a
moment of isolation. All life suffers in one way or another. All life
experiences pleasure in one way or another.
In the same way that you
imbued the breath with a kindly awareness towards your own experience, you can
now allow a kindly awareness to permeate the in- and the out-breaths as you
think of others. Maybe you can get a sense of the whole world breathing - all
life breathing like waves on the ocean. Rising and falling. Allow a sense of the
hard edges of separation to soften, letting go into a sense of all that we share
and a feeling of connection with all life as you sit or lie here resting quietly
with the breath moment by moment.
Rest with this quality of
awareness for as long as feels appropriate for you at this time.
Pause
Now in your own time bring
the meditation to a close. Come back to a full awareness of the body lying on
the bed or sitting on the chair. Feel in firm contact with the earth. Tune into
the movements of the breath in the body and gradually externalise your
awareness. When you're ready gently open the eyes, take in your surroundings,
and re-engage with the day. See if you can take this quality of awareness with
you on into your life as it unfolds moment by moment.
When practising meditation it is important
to let go of craving a certain outcome, for example a reduction of pain. The
pain may go on for a long time! This does not mean you've failed or not
meditated correctly. It is just the way things are when one is ill or has an
injured body. There is no need for blame or judgement. But remember that even if
the body is painful and ill, the mind and heart can experience moments of peace
and calm, even a sense of freedom. Meditation can guide us through the doorway
to these moments and teach us how to rest there with an honest heart.
Vidyamala is a co-founder and director
of Breathworks, a company offering 'mindfulness-based strategies for living
well'. She runs courses in Manchester UK for people suffering from chronic
pain and illness, teaching them how to optimise quality of life using meditation
and other mindfulness-based strategies. She also is involved in running a
training programme for others wishing to deliver the Breathworks programme in
other localities. She suffered a spinal injury in 1976 and has used
meditation and mindfulness to manage her own chronic pain for many years.
This helpful meditation method was provided by
Vidyamala of Breathworks. Visit Breathworks for more information on meditation.
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