hello,
i have a question about a meditation experience, i have no real way to find information about it or ask anyone what it was
the experience was very intense.. to put it lightly, the feeling of the body dissapearing and at the same time the feeling of dying, and of a joy or happiness so intense it's beyond description. i didnt know if i should stop meditation because something was wrong, i thought i was having a seizure maybe.. my eyelids began fluttering rapidly and a stream of images.. like millions of images flashing by in a blur.. this lasted not very long before my concentration broke..
when I came out of it.. i was very calm, just a pure state of joy and calmness i've never experienced before, and the sense something amazing just happened but im at a loss to explain what..
I have not been able to re-achieve this state yet.. and dont know if I should, or how to
insight is appreciated.
meditation questions
Re: meditation questions
I think it is time for you to discuss jhana with your teacher, or start reading up on it.
Sergeant Schultz knew everything there was to know.
Re: meditation questions
its just a distraction.. all kinds of stuff can happen, often pleasant but sometimes thoroughly unpleasant.
its much more profound to remain on your meditation object and finally achieve effortless single-pointed concentration which cannot be moved off its chosen object
an epic meditation book written by the legendary B. Alan Wallace: "Stilling the Mind, Shamatha Teachings from Dudjom Lingpa's Vajra Essence"
its much more profound to remain on your meditation object and finally achieve effortless single-pointed concentration which cannot be moved off its chosen object
an epic meditation book written by the legendary B. Alan Wallace: "Stilling the Mind, Shamatha Teachings from Dudjom Lingpa's Vajra Essence"
Re: meditation questions
This is one distraction I don't worry about much. If bliss arises, that's very nice, but like ice cream, too much quickly gets tiring and the meditation tends to correct itself. As 5 heaps points out, it is important not to let it consume your attention, since you would then have a problematic distraction.
Sergeant Schultz knew everything there was to know.