Death Meditation

Yesterday I talked about the obstacles to spiritual growth or the blocks to achieving anything we really want.  One of the most common roadblocks is simply “not wanting to do it”.  Sometimes this concept is translated as laziness.  In certain cultures, procrastination might be a good single word to describe it.

Skullclose.jpgI mentioned yesterday some of the antidotes to not wanting to do what needs to be done to get the results you want.

A traditional practice for this problem is a death meditation.  This may seem kind of odd.  How is thinking about death going to motivate one to action?!

Try it and see.  Here is one of my favorite death meditations inspired by Geshe Michael Roach:  DEATH MEDITATION (16 minutes)

Another simple practice is to live each day as if it were your last.  If this was the last day of your life, what would you be doing?

Death meditations, put everything into a more true perspective.  After all, today may be the last day of your life.  Death meditation practice is about connecting to what is really important to us and putting our energy in that place.  It is about taking our energy away from fretting about the past or worrying about the future.  If we are dying today there is not much future to worry about.

Remember, death meditation is a practice in living life fully.  Blessings to you and your practice.

 

Obstacles

There are five obstacles to spiritual progress.  These obstacle were originally taught to me as the obstacles to meditation, but they can equally apply to anything we want to achieve in our lives.

  1. Doubt
  2. Not wanting to do it (aka laziness)
  3. Attraction to other things like drug of choice or worldly things
  4. Resentments, ill will, aversions
  5. Worry, restlessness, distractions

 

Doubt can take two forms.  First, it can be doubt as to whether what you are going to do is possible.  For instance, is enlightenment really possible? Does this method really work?  Or on a more mundane level – is it really possible for someone to start their own business and succeed?

Second, one can have doubt regarding their personal capabilities.  For instance, will it work for me?  Others have gotten enlightened, but I am capable of doing it too?  Or, others are successful at business, but maybe I do not have what it takes.

The remedy for doubt is to get more information.  Read about what you are going to do.  Talk to people that are doing it and/or have done it.  Try it as an experiment to see if it might work.  Also consider other options.  If you don’t do it, how will your life be?

Considering your other options is also a good antidote for not wanting to do what would ultimately be for your highest good.  If you want to be healthy, but keep eating food that makes you fat or sick then you encountering the obstacle of “laziness”.  The antidote is to contemplate what you really want in your life.  Think about what will happen if you get what you want as compared to the result if you don’t make the change.  When it comes to healthy eating think about being vibrant in your later years as opposed to having a stroke, heart attack and lying in bed recuperating.  (Post on death meditation may be helpful.)

The remedies for the other obstacles are similar.  Focus on what you want and what will bring you what you want.  Turn your back on the activities and things that will not bring you what you want.  Keep your resolve strengthened by contact with people with similar goals and by reading about what you want.

Finally, be gentle with yourself.  Sometimes knowing is not the same as doing.  We are not our subconscious mind, but the habits and beliefs that reside in our subconscious are influencing everything we do.  Part of the path is loving ourselves without judgment.  We move to take right action without making anyone or anything wrong – including ourselves.

 

A dog’s brain

It seems to me that dogs have the same problem as me. Their conscious mind is not in charge either.

Mchispa watching the streety dog, Chispa, spent quite a few years on the street before she moved in with me.  I believe that experience made her a little cautious and defensive.  Being a chihuahua dachshund mix (and somewhat small) she will not make a front-on attack.  She prefers you ankles as you walk away.

Chispa also loves to be petted and held.  In fact, second to food, this is her heart’s desire.  Many people would love to indulge her, yet her defensiveness keeps them away.  This is another example of fear ruling one’s actions over rational thought.

The extreme example of her subconscious mind taking charge of her is how she behaves with new friends.  Sometimes when I have a visitor over she warms up enough to allow them them to pet her.  She might even be open to sitting in their laps.  Then, as they get up to leave, she will attack them from behind.  What is she thinking?

She is not thinking, she has the same problem I talked about yesterday.  Our conscious minds are not in control or our actions.