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Ten minute meditation

Updated on October 24, 2014
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Through meditation and an eclectic spiritual journey, Kathryn learned from many teachers throughout her life, finding peace begins at home

Meadow and woods on the old home place
Meadow and woods on the old home place | Source

Good for the body, good for the mind, good for the soul

How frequently do you meditate?

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Calm your body, calm your mind in just ten minutes with this easy meditation

Feeling overloaded? There's nothing like a walk in the woods to soothe a troubled spirit. Haven't got a woods outside your door, let alone time for a long walk? Next time you feel ready to explode, or want to lie down in the fetal position, thumb to mouth, try this ten minute meditation for instant relief. You can do it anywhere.

And I mean anywhere. Use it when tensions rise in a meeting. It will calm you, help you focus on the task at hand, and no one will know you're doing it. Squished on all sides on a crowded bus? Employ this simple technique and feel the space around you shift.

Take ten before launching your evening routine after work. Or give yourself a break at the mall. Who knows? Maybe you'll decide you don't need that new pair of shoes after all.

Trouble sleeping? You'll nod off before you know it.

However you incorporate this easy tool into your routine, watch what happens. You might discover you don't need one more cup of coffee to get through the day.

You may even find yourself smiling more and reacting less.

Before you begin, take the phone off the hook and set a timer

When timing your meditation, use a gentle bell. This inexpensive app for your mobile devices, below, is perfect for meditating at the park, on the bus, anywhere you happen to be. Test drive it on your computer right now while you read this meditation.

In the shadows, across the meadow
In the shadows, across the meadow | Source

Begin

Sit solidly in your chair

Your back well supported. Uncross your ankles and place your feet flat on the ground, your hands loose in your lap or resting comfortably on your thighs.

Old home place, woods across the meadow
Old home place, woods across the meadow | Source

Be comfortable

Let go. Let your shoulders drop.
Take a long, slow, deep breath

Inhale deeply four more times
long and slow, letting all the air from your lungs and filling them full with each breath.

Old home place, creeping vine
Old home place, creeping vine | Source

You may experience
a long, shuddering sigh. Let it go.

Now, just naturally breathing,
not guiding your breath in any way, feel the intake of air through your nostrils.

Old home place, cottage
Old home place, cottage | Source

Gently bring your attention

to the cool air touching the tips of your nostrils as you breathe in.

As you exhale

gently bring your attention to the warmer air touching the tips of your nostrils as you breathe out.

Old home place, side cottage
Old home place, side cottage | Source

Thoughts will come

Lightly acknowledge each thought, as though giving it a slight bow with the head, then ever so easily, return your consciousness to the cool breath touching the tip of your nostrils, in.

Old home place, cloister
Old home place, cloister | Source

Whatever you are feeling

however tangled your thoughts, let it go. Let your attention drift to your breath, just at the tip of your nostril, warm air out.

For now, just for this breath,

bow to your suffering, bow to your dreams. Let them go, and return ever so gently to your breath. Cool air in, aware of it again just at the tip of your nostrils.

It may help to imagine

your thoughts, distractions, images and sensations drifting away, like a bubble or a dandelion seed, quickly forgotten.

Old home place, mushrooms
Old home place, mushrooms | Source

Returning each time

ever so gently, to the breath

              In              Out

Old home place, ivy covered tree
Old home place, ivy covered tree | Source

You may notice

discomforts in your body.

Let these awarenesses

come and go.

Return each moment

to the breath in, the breath out.

Purple daisies
Purple daisies | Source

A solution

to a problem in your life may float to the top. It is tempting to focus on the solution, perhaps to get up and take action.

Japanese garden bridge
Japanese garden bridge | Source

Acknowledge the thought

and let it go, returning to the breath in, the breath out.

Trust

that any useful information will be available to you later.

Old home place, pink flowers on long, bending stalks
Old home place, pink flowers on long, bending stalks | Source

This is always true

Some of your best problem-solving will occur in ten-minute meditations. Let the answers come and go, like every other thought. They will be waiting when you are ready. Ever so gently bring your focus again to the breath in, the breath out

Old home place, nasturtiums in the grass
Old home place, nasturtiums in the grass | Source

You may notice

your shoulders rising. Do nothing. Simply acknowledge the fact and return your attention to your breath.

Cool air--in.

Warm air--out.

Old home place, greenery
Old home place, greenery | Source

Continue to bring your awareness

gently to your breath, just at the tip of your nostrils.

For these few minutes

let go of time.

Old home place - Path through the woods
Old home place - Path through the woods | Source

Acknowledge and let go

all thoughts, itches, bubbles and pains, letting them fall away like leaves from a tree, like water from a bamboo fountain, falling away, dropping, knowing the timer will alert you when these minutes are past.

Old home place, orange posies
Old home place, orange posies | Source

For now

your only task is to breathe.

Cool air--in.

Warm air--out.

Breathe

Breathe
Breathe | Source
Old home place, purple blossoms in the meadow
Old home place, purple blossoms in the meadow | Source

When the bell rings

gently open your eyes. Like a lazy cat waking, ever so slowly stretch your arms and legs, your torso.

Warm the muscles

in a big, long comfortable stretch--no straining--just a very comfortable, lazy stretch.

Old home place, garden at main house
Old home place, garden at main house | Source

Yawn

a wide-mouthed yawn, opening the eyes wide, the nostrils wide.

 

Stretch your face

Exaggerate your yawn. Expand the body. Expand the lungs. Expand the arms.

 

Breathe.

Returning to the benches overlooking the meadow
Returning to the benches overlooking the meadow | Source

It feels so good

Are you smiling?

Smile again.

Old fashioned rose, fluttering in the breeze
Old fashioned rose, fluttering in the breeze | Source

When you are ready

gently resume your day.

At any moment

throughout the day, when you feel anxious, when you find yourself snapping back at someone, simply focus your attention for a moment or two on your breath.

Cool air--in.

Warm air--out.

Old home place, woods across the meadow
Old home place, woods across the meadow | Source

This is how we make peace in our lives--one breath at a time.


Old home place, Rufus
Old home place, Rufus | Source

With folded hands, I thank you.

Namaste



Meditation and Health

New studies back up what yoga students and spiritual seekers everywhere already know to be true: Meditation is one of the best things you can do for your health and overall wellness.

Editor, Yoga Journal in
Studies Tout Power of Meditation
March 11, 2013


A tip for bringing more peace into your every day

Before you rise in the morning

If you want peace in your life, start your day with the ten-minute meditation, just after waking, while you're still in bed. You'll be amazed how energized you feel. Here's how.

Begin at your first awareness, before you've fully wakened. Allow your body to rouse gently, focusing again on the cool air passing the tip of your nostril, in, and the warm air passing the tip of your nostril, out. Gradually deepen the breath until your eyes pop open and you fairly leap from the bed, eager for the day.

Yes, you can carry this quiet joy, this peace with you as you step into the shower or bath, and return to it easily throughout the day.

It is possible to regain these moments of calm anywhere, anytime, simply by focusing for a few breaths on the air in and the air out.

 

 

Live consciously

Start and end your meditation with an Om singing bowl that is as good for the artisans who made it as it is good for you. That's conscious living.

This beautiful, handmade singing meditation bowl is a certified fair trade product, which means you can count on the artisans having good working conditions and receiving fair wages.

It's easy to relax into your meditation when you know the products you are using have caused the least possible harm. This is one you can enjoy for a very long time.

Never silence a singing bell

Once sounded, the bell song must finish naturally. Close your eyes and let the soothing vibrations move through your body. Let go of tension as the waves diminish.

Thank you

Yellow rhododendron
Yellow rhododendron | Source

A virtual bouquet to each of you

I give gratitude to every person who finds something of value here. May you be thrice blessed.

© 2008 Kathryn Grace

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