SPIRITUAL ESSENCE:

Focusing on the essence of spirituality from all times, places, cultures…and beyond. Serving and cultivating the innate, inherent spiritual nature contained within all: the religious, the non-religious, the spiritual but not religious, the atheist, the agnostic, the mystic; whatever one does or does not consider oneself. We are beings at many different levels with many different aspects: physical, energy/life force, mind, intellect, emotion; but at our deepest common core, we are all spiritual beings. We all yearn to love and be loved, to nurture and be nurtured, to express and serve and realize each of our unique destinies. We can all help each other along our individual journeys, united by our common needs and yearnings.


Quote of the Week #156 - Listening/Hearing for Non-material Sustenance

Quote of the Week #156 - Listening/Hearing for Non-material Sustenance


Every one who is thirsty, come and drink. He who has no money, come, buy and eat. Come, buy wine and milk without money and without price. Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread and your labor for that which does not satisfy? Listen carefully to Me, and eat what is good. Let your soul delight in abundance. Incline your ear, and come to Me. Hear, that your soul will live…


--Isaiah 55:1-3, The Living Torah translation by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan

Monday, June 24, 2013

Quote of the Week #8 - The Purpose of Spiritual Practice


Many spiritual aspirants have a misconception that the purpose of spiritual practice is just to achieve divine bliss, divine ecstasy and divine oneness. 

These are just partial benefits. The purpose of spiritual practices is to accelerate the evolutionary development of the soul so that the person can be of greater service to mankind and the planet Earth.

--From The Origin of Modern Pranic Healing and Arhatic Yoga by Master Choa Kok Sui

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Universal Mantras - Adonai Hineni and So Hum


Universal Mantras
From the Hebrew Tradition – Adonai Hineni (Hineni Adonai)
From the Yoga Tradition – So Hum (Hamsa)
Steven J. Gold
spiritualessens@gmail.com

At a sister site to this site, yajcenter.blogspot.com (Yoga and Judaism Center), and in my book, Yoga and Judaism, I have written other articles about Jewish Yoga Meditation and Hebrew Mantras. They make many suggestions for the practitioner to experiment with concerning various mantras. In addition to the foundational mantras involving the Tetragrammaton, the Shema, and the Amidah, over the years of experimentation, another Hebrew mantra has emerged as particularly potent in my own experience and in the experience of many who have been introduced to this specific mantra through my teaching sessions, Adonai Hineni, sometimes presented in the reverse order, Hineni Adonai. I have come to focus on it whenever I am introducing Hebrew mantras to new students. This article highlights its significance, along with the universal yoga mantra, So Hum, also sometimes presented in the reverse order, Hamsa.

The term “Adonai” (sometimes transliterated as “Adonoi”, phonetically pronounced “Ah-Doh-Noy”) has a particular significance as found in the Torah. Up until its first appearance, the terms utilized in referencing God, such as Elohim, YHVH (the Tetragrammaton), and El Shaddai, were terms spoken directly by God as the omniscient narrator of the Torah (or, from another perspective, through the agency/narration of Moses). “Adonai” is somewhat unique, because it is uttered not directly from God, but through man (Abraham) in addressing/calling out to God (Genesis 15:2). It is usually translated as “Lord”, as acknowledgement of an ultimate power existing that is much greater than the individual mortal self.

“Hineni” (sometimes transliterated as “Hinani”, phonetically pronounced “Hee-Nay-Nee”), likewise first appears in the Torah as spoken by man/Abraham, this time in responding to God’s call (Genesis 22:1). The last time it appears in the Torah is during the event when Moses encounters the burning bush on Mt. Sinai. When the voice of God calls out to Moses, his response is, “Hineni” (Exodus 3:4). It is translated as “Here I am”, or “I am here.”, but the commentary on the inner meaning of this response is very significant. This is not the common separative “I/self” asserting itself and indicating physical location, but rather the humble vestige of a separative self responding in awe to the greatness of the Almighty which it is beholding, and offering up itself in complete submission and service. “I am at your service”, would be a more correct translation capturing the inner meaning of the literal translation. Like Abraham’s earlier addressing God as “Adonai”, here again is an utterance of great servants of God in response to God’s call to them. (Other uses found in the Torah convey similar meanings).

What has felt right for me is to utilize the two words, “Adonai” and “Hineni” in conjunction and in coordination with the breath: “Adonai” is silently intoned internally, coordinated with the inhalation (breathing in the Divine essence/life force offered by God) and “Hineni” is silently intoned internally, coordinated with the exhalation (extending back to God what we can offer in humble service, in return, with profound gratitude). I have found it to be very powerful, as have many other people to whom I have introduced it.

There is a correlation of this mantra to a primary breath-coordinated mantra from my yoga tradition, the “so-hum” mantra, also sometimes referred to as the “hamsa” mantra (reversing the ordering of the syllables). “So” is silently intoned internally, coordinated with the inhalation, and “hum” is silently intoned internally, coordinated with the exhalation. “So-Hum” is generally translated as “I am That”, or “That I am”, with “So” meaning “That” and “Hum” meaning “I”. The general import is similar to “Adonai Hineni”, as what is perceived as God separate from the small self, “That”, is taken in, while what is perceived as the small separate self, “I” is offered out, acknowledging the deeper merging of the two as “I am That”. The reverse ordering of these two syllables creates the word “hamsa”, which means “swan”, a Vedic symbol of the ability of the mind to discriminate the unreal from the real, to come to the realization that what appears separate as “That-So” and “I-Hum” are in fact connected and not separated. It is similar to the concept of Martin Buber of transforming “I-It” to “I-Thou”. However, traditional Jewish notions maintain that one can never fully merge identity with the One, but can only become closely united/clinging, similar to the bhakti perspective in yoga (the path of devotion and praise) while the teachings of Vedanta maintain that the individual identity can fully merge with the One (which can also be found in the kabalist conception of yichud/unity and bitul/negation of separation).

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Quote of the Week #7 - Nameless/Named, Desireless/Desired


The nameless is the beginning of heaven and earth.
The named is the mother of ten thousand things.
Ever desireless, one can see the mystery.
Ever desiring, one can see the manifestations.

--Tao Te Ching

Monday, June 10, 2013

Mantra Meditation Basics - Theory


Mantra Meditation Basics – Theory
Steven J. Gold
spiritualessens@gmail.com
This article is meant to supplement other articles on meditation by going a little deeper into the theory behind the use of mantras.
Some meditation researchers, most notably Herbert Benson of Harvard, have come to the conclusion that there is not much significance to the language or form of mantras used during meditation, that any soothing sound (such as “one, one, one”) intoned internally will elicit an equally effective “relaxation response.” The yoga meditation tradition in which I was trained, and I believe most spiritually-based meditation traditions would have no difficulty acknowledging the validity to Benson’s research and findings as to the benefits of meditation practice regardless of the phrase utilized. However, they would also maintain that there are additional benefits if mantras originating from sacred languages are utilized and prescribed by teachers trained in specific meditation traditions. Benson is a scientific researcher, and desires to restrict his focus to what scientific standards and procedures can measure and verify. And his work has made a significant contribution in legitimizing and promoting the benefits of meditation practice. My spiritual teacher, Swami Rama, was also dedicated to scientifically verifying the benefits of meditation. But he eventually came to the conclusion that there were certain spiritual practices and phenomenal realities that could not be scientifically verified due to the limitations of current scientific measurement technologies.
When venturing into a discussion of “sacred language”, it would appear that a leap of faith beyond what science can verify may be required. I do not apologize for that, but I can attempt to explain it in support of its validity. I am a proponent of the concept that there exists a mode of perception and functioning that lies between the rationality generally associated with the functions of the logical, scientific, reasoning mind, and the irrationality generally associated with emotional responses that over-rule the mind in certain circumstances. This other mode of operation is what I call the “non-rational” or “intuition”. I have also heard it called the “arational”. It is a mode of perception and operating faculty that can be developed through meditation. There is no way to scientifically verify or confirm its existence, and thus it can be said that it requires an act of faith to believe in it. I would prefer to say that it requires the cultivation of an inner sense of experience and knowledge that it in fact does exist. It is what mystics and spiritually advanced beings throughout times and cultures have attempted to identify in their literature and artistic expressions. One either accepts the validity of this assertion or one doesn’t. What follows is a spiritual/mystical description about sacred language and the origin and operation of mantras. Some of the below is excerpted and revised from my book, IVRI: The Essence of Hebrew Spirituality.

Biblical Hebrew and Sanskrit are sacred languages because they are spiritual languages. Why are they spiritual/sacred, and how is that designation distinguished from other languages or usages that do not have those qualities, from the mundane and the profane?

Sometimes the distinction between the sacred and the mundane is dependent on context. A glass of wine imbibed during an ordinary dinner does not carry the same significance as a cup of wine used in a religious ritual, even though it may be the same wine. Sometimes tradition, ritual, or legend may ascribe spiritual connotations to things or places. Throughout the world, there are temples, shrines, mountains, valleys, rivers that have become imbued with spiritual significance. It can be maintained that since everything and all activity is a part of Divinity, everything is sacred, which is true to an extent. But there remain degrees of specialness which render some activities in some contexts more special, and thus “sacred”, based upon the factors described above. Going for a leisurely swim is not of the same quality as a ritual immersion. Concerning the profane, perhaps it is basically nothing more than the abuse of the sacred.

The origins of sacred languages such as Biblical Hebrew and Sanskrit are lost in the mists of time and myth. A general mystical conception is that language can be traced back to sound, and all sound has its roots in Primordial Divine Sound. Divine Sound emanates out of Primordial Divine Fire, which is also the source of Divine Light. All manifest existence, known to the external and internal senses, is a result of an interchange between Divine Light and Divine Sound, which possesses limitless possible permutations. The Primordial Divine Fire has also been referred to as a Cosmic Magnet or Cosmic Electricity. I like the characterizations of a Cosmic Generator, a Cosmic Dynamo.

In any event, out of the Nothingness that is paradoxically the unmanifest potentiality of Everythingness, this Fire, this Dynamo, generates sound as well as light. Our spiritual ancestors internally “heard” the “roar” of the Divine Fire, the “hum” of the Cosmic Dynamo, the first emanation of Divine Sound. It is what Moses encountered in the burning bush. It is why the first utterance of the ancient Rishis in the Vedas is “agni”, which means fire. As it worked its way through the layers of the inner realms, it eventually emerged from the lips of ancient sages as chants, as strings of mantras. That is why both the Torah and the Vedas are chanted, because they first emerged as sounds which morphed into chants; first, wordless chants, and then chants with words, with language. Eventually, the oral language was reduced to the writing found in ancient Hebrew and Vedic scriptures. These languages are sacred because of their close connection to the unmanifest realm of Silence, of the paradoxical Soundless Sound, which is their Source. Other languages are derivatives and thus further removed, and therefore not qualitatively sacred in the way that these two languages are sacred. Properly understood and employed in meditative practices, as discovered and developed by the ancient sages of the Hebrew and Vedic spiritual traditions, utilization of mantras, which are phrases from the scriptures in which these languages were written, can assist one in awakening, nurturing and expressing their innate spirituality. Through this process, people can approach wholeness, and each individual can become more cognizant of their true and deep individual purpose and meaning, enabling them to become more conscious and joyous participants in the wonder of life. This was the revelation and mission of Abraham, confirmed and forwarded at Mt. Sinai, and of the Rishis of the Himalayas.

Silently internally intoning mantras as part of a meditative practice incorporates several aspects that are beneficial to spiritual development and expression. Mantras operate from the outside in and from the inside out. Invoking a mantra on the surface level serves as an anchor to assist in plumbing the inner depths from which the mantra originated. One should not hold on to the external form of the mantra as it meanders its way within, but should rather allow it to change form as it progresses. At such a point, one becomes aware that the mantra will take on a life of its own, and that you are not repeating it, but rather you are listening to it as it generates itself without your assistance. Allow it to change and morph and keep on listening. The surface level invoking of a mantra also resonates with its source deep within, and initiates a process whereby it is energized at its source and  seeks access to the surface. At some point, the inside out and the outside in paths connect, creating an unbroken two-way avenue for its expression both within and without. This avenue can be broadened and strengthened through repeated practice until it remains unbroken through all of life’s activities. This results in “meditation in action”, in which all of life’s activities are enlivened and enriched by one’s meditative presence.

Invoking mantras also facilitates subtle structuring of inner energies beneficial to spiritual development and expression. All mantras have their origins in the Silence from which they emerged, and eventually lead us back to that spiritual ground of Silence. However, specific mantras vary in the effects they produce along the way back to their common source. They are aids assisting to address subtle inner purification and empowerment. Experiment with them, beseech the assistance of Divine Guidance, and find out for yourself!

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Quote of the Week #6 - Infinity


You are a finite vessel that is carrying Infinity within. You are great because there is something called Infinity in you. You are complete in yourself, no matter how much you condemn yourself or what others say about you. You move because Infinity dwells in you. Without that Infinity you are nothing. You carry that Infinity wherever you go. Even when you are in deep sleep that Infinity is with you. When you are fooling yourself, that Infinity is with you. If God is everywhere, then He is also in you. If he Is in you, why are you afraid? You simply have to realize it.

From, Samadhi, the Highest State of Wisdom, by Swami Rama.  

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Meditation Basics - Theory and Practice


Meditation Basics – Theory and Practice
Steven J. Gold
spiritualessens@gmail.com
There is no substitute for obtaining in-person meditation instruction from a teacher who is receiving guidance through an established meditation tradition/lineage. However, for those who do not have easy access for such instruction, I offer this little self-help written version. There are many different meditation techniques and variations to those techniques, but for the sake of brevity, I am limiting these descriptions to one primary practice and slight variations to that practice that I have learned through my yoga tradition and experimented with over the years. This practice is generally categorized as a silent, internal, receptive practice, as distinct from many other meditation and contemplation practices that involve other elements, such as using external aids, chanting, guided visualizations, etc. I believe this practice provides an excellent foundation that can serve as a springboard for other practices, and can be utilized with Sanskrit or Hebrew mantras or internal visualizations. The focus here is on the utilization of mantras. However, if sounds, colors or images come forward of their own accord during a meditation session, they may certainly be worthwhile tools for focusing one’s inner attention.

Why Meditate? I always start my normal meditation classes asking the members of the class to introduce themselves and say something about their background and their interest in meditation. The most common responses include that people want to learn to relax, de-stress, quiet down their noisy minds. Meditation will do all of that and more. It will help you address an inner call/yearning to connect with the spiritual essence that resides within us all. When that inner essence is contacted and magnified, the other benefits will follow, including becoming a more productive participant in everyday life.

Posture. “Head, neck and trunk in a straight line”. My spiritual father, Swami Rama, never tired of saying this. There are a variety of seated positions that accomplish this. The most important point is to get the body in a position with this basic alignment that is comfortable, so that bodily discomfort is not creating a distraction. In this form of meditation, the primary concern is to leave bodily awareness and external sensation behind, which can only be accomplished if the body is comfortable and not a cause for distraction. (Zen meditation is quite different, where bodily and external sensory awareness is heightened. In contrast, the traditional yoga meditation involves withdrawing awareness from external sensation, freeing up this energy to focus within). It is also emphasized in this traditional yoga practice that the aligned head, neck and trunk need to be perpendicular to the ground, so lying down is not an option. The question is often raised about “why not lying down?”. The simple answer is that you would be prone to falling asleep. Another answer is that there is something meditatively beneficial to having the body aligned perpendicular to the ground. There are other yoga practices that employ the body lying down, such as progressive relaxation exercises and yogic sleep (yoga nidra), but it is not recommended for meditation. For those who can sit comfortably on a cushion on the floor in one of the cross-legged yoga meditation postures, that is recommended. It is beyond the scope of this article to go into the variations on the cross-legged postures, but the most important point remains for the body to be comfortable. Most people need a cushion of some height, placed under the base of the spine (but not the legs) depending upon the physical make-up of the person, to raise up the hips so that the lower back is comfortably straightened without undue effort.

If sitting cross-legged is not comfortable, then sitting in a firm chair is the next best choice. A second important aspect, even if seated in a chair, is to do so in a manner in which the posture itself supports the back, without the back leaning on anything else, like the back of the chair. So, if utilizing a chair, sit forward, away from the back, and find a comfortable posture with the head, neck and truck aligned. It is helpful for the feet to be comfortably touching the ground with the soles planted on the ground, for the thighs to be roughly parallel to the ground and the lower legs to be roughly perpendicular to the ground. For short people whose feet dangle from a normal chair, use cushions under the feet. For tall people whose height prevents the thighs from being parallel to the ground and the lower legs from being perpendicular to the ground at the same time, stretch the legs out in front until the thighs are parallel to the ground and cross the legs at the ankles, preferably right ankle over left. If for any reason it is not comfortable to sit cross-legged on the ground or on a chair without external support to the back, then use whatever support for the back that will make you comfortable.

Concerning the arms, hands and fingers, there are various positions that can be utilized, but again, the over-riding principle is for the body to be comfortable and not a distraction. Hands palm down or palm up on the thighs is fine. A variation involves touching the tips of the thumbs with the tips of the index fingers, either palms up or down, resting on the thighs. A traditional Buddhist position for the hands is with the right hand resting in the palm of the left hand in the lap, palms facing up.

There are a few more subtle aspects to bodily positioning worth noting. Concerning the head, there is something in yoga called the “chin lock”. If someone asked you to slightly nod your head “yes”, the chin lock would be the position of the head in the downward position of the nod, with the chin just slightly pointing down and a little in. This little maneuver is very beneficial. The jaw should be relaxed, with the lips lightly sealed, the teeth comfortably separated, and the tongue gently touching the upper palate. There is also something called the “anal lock”. This is described as slightly squeezing in on the anal sphincter, which also accomplishes tightening up on the perineum, the area between the anus and the genitals. Another method to accomplish this perineal pressure is to employ the cross-legged position of “siddhasana” whereby the heel of the left foot is positioned so that it is applying pressure to the perineum, with the heel of the right foot placed on top of the heel of the left foot. Sitting on a small additional cushion placed at this region also provides this added pressure to the perineum.
Sense Withdrawal. As discussed above, this meditation technique is designed to aid in withdrawing the expenditure/dissipation of energy through the external senses, and redirect this energy within, to aid in the unfoldment of inner dimensions. When employing the senses in engagement with external phenomena, a great deal of energy is involved. In this practice, the eyes are gently closed, thus easily eliminating the sensory expenditure involved with sight. (There are other techniques that involve keeping the eyes open, but that is beyond the scope of this article). Some yoga schools employ the use of ear plugs or other procedures to physically minimize the operation of external hearing. However, it is easy enough to assure that you meditate in a quiet space not likely to have intrusions of visual or auditory stimuli. (There are techniques employing the use of external sound, either introduced from an independent source or uttered by the meditator, but again, they are beyond the scope of this article). It is also easy enough to select a space not prone to strong odors, minimizing exposure to stimulating smells; and it is recommended that you meditate on an empty stomach for many reasons, including that by doing so, there is little chance of any lingering tastes in the mouth that may provide a distraction. (There are practices that incorporate pleasing fragrances from burning incense or aromatic oils, but they are also beyond the scope of this article. I do not know of any practice that encourages meditating right after eating – the digestion process can be distracting, and diverts energy that would otherwise be available for the meditative process performed on an empty stomach). Concerning touch, positioning of the body in a still, comfortable posture as addressed above minimizes the sensations of touch.
It is worth noting that for every external sensation, there is a corresponding internal sensation that may be experienced during meditation and may help provide a point of inner focus. For sight, there is inner light, colors, images, visions; for hearing, there is inner sound and music; for taste, there is inner flavor such as a taste of nectar/ambrosia; for smell, there is inner fragrance; and inner touch usually takes the form of a sensation of inner heat, although other inner touch sensations are possible. While these inner sensations may be pleasant and assist with inner focus, they are not to be considered the goal of meditation, but only guideposts and tools along the way. 

Breathing. There are many significant aspects to breathing as related to meditation. In the normal four-week course on meditation that I teach, I spend one full two-hour session just on this topic. For the sake of brevity here, I will emphasis the basics. Although there are other techniques that promote exhaling through the mouth, this practice emphasizes breathing only through the nostrils on both inhalation and exhalation. So to accomplish nostril-only breathing, during this technique the lips should remain gently sealed. Breathing should be at a comfortable and natural pace, allowing the bodily intelligence and needs to set the rhythm. It should be done diaphragmatically, coordinating the movement of the abdomen and solar plexus area with the breath: the abdomen/solar plexus region gently expanding during inhalation and gently contracting during exhalation. This is deep but gentle breathing, utilizing the internal diaphragm muscle located in the lower rib cage/solar plexus region, as distinct from utilizing expansion of the chest. Only the lower portion of the rib cage should expand and contract just a little to assure optimum use of the diaphragm and minimum use of the chest. There should be no extended pauses between inhalation and exhalation, just a natural continuous flow with that split second of suspension as it transitions from inhalation to exhalation, like the waves of the ocean coming onto the beach, turning, receding out, then turning and flowing in again. The breath should be smooth through the duration of each inhalation and exhalation, without any halting or jerkiness. Visualize with each inhalation that your body is like an empty glass being filled with the breath, first pouring down to the bottom and filling it up as it goes. Likewise, with each exhalation, the glass is emptied first from the top (being pushed up and out from the bottom), with the last bit of exhalation coming from the bottom. A slight variation is to visualize/sense a circuit of energy flowing into the body and up the spine during inhalation, and flowing out and down the front of the body during exhalation, creating a circuit running up the spine and out through the nose and down the front of the body, then up the spine again, and so on. A further visualization is to imagine the release of stresses, toxins and obstructions with each exhalation, and replacing those with nurturance, healing and well-being with each inhalation.
Focal Points for the Journey Within. Once you are settled into your seated posture and have closed your eyes, begin to focus on the breathing as described above. To assist with establishing a comfortable breathing rhythm,  first focus attention on the gentle expansion and contraction of the abdomen/solar plexus region coordinated with the inhalation and exhalation of the breath. Once a steady, comfortable rhythm is established, move the focal point to the tip of the nose, and observe the sensation of the breath as it moves in and out through the nostrils. This process aids in relaxation and moving your awareness from bodily awareness to breath awareness and the more subtle awareness of the life force (“prana” in yoga, “ruach” in kabala) that rides with the breath.
Several hours of my normal eight-hour meditation class focuses on the interplay between functions and nature of the mind, states of consciousness and emotions, all as related to the meditative journey within. Again for the sake of brevity here, I will discuss just the basic points. The mind has many functions, one of which is to serve as the seat of identity, of the sense of separate egoic self. This sense of identity is capable of inner mobility, so to speak; it can move through the various layers/levels that comprise the separate being. At the outermost layer, we are a physical body and identify with that body. Next in is the breath/pranic layer discussed above. Further in is the layer of lower mind, followed by higher mind/intellect, followed by the innermost subtle layer of spirituality beyond mind/breath/body. Our total identity includes all of these layers and more – we are conscious beings composed of body, breath, mind, emotion, and spirit.
In addition to the various functions of the mind and layers of the being, there is also an interplay of our sense of identity with emotional states and states of consciousness. The lower emotional states relate to the lower heart tied to our most basic primal instinct of self-preservation and its associated drives/needs for food, sleep and sensual gratification (pursuit of pleasure, avoidance of pain). Higher emotional states relate to the higher heart that is the source of spiritual yearning and Divine Love, and the urge to express Beauty and Love.
There are four basic states of consciousness: waking, dreaming, dreamless sleep, and the state beyond and underlying all other states (in yoga called “turiya”, the fourth state). There are also three transitional states of consciousness lying between the four basic states: in between waking and dreaming is the state of fantasy/imagination; in between dreaming and dreamless sleep is the state of spiritual vision/prophecy; and in between dreamless sleep and the fourth state is the state in yoga called yoga nidra/yogic sleep. These states are  also described in kabala. Our sense of identity is capable of shifting its focus between these various aspects of our being. This meditation technique is designed to assist one in a journey within, whereby the sense of identity locates these various inner aspects to one’s being.
Once the attention is steadied on the movement on the breath at the point at the tip of the nostrils, you are ready to introduce a mantra, if you would like, either a breath-coordinated mantra or otherwise, or continue the meditation without a mantra. You may also move your focus of attention from the tip of the nostrils to either the “third eye” point between and above the eyebrows (the center of the mind), or the region of the heart (the center of the emotions). Moving your focus of attention is similar to moving your sense of identity. The idea is to locate the higher quiet mind or the higher quiet heart and rest your attention/identity in one place or the other. The lower heart and lower mind are very noisy and chatty, creating a seemingly never-ending emotionally-charged inner soundtrack/dialogue that seems to never shut up. That is what many people who come to mediation class ask about, how to quiet this inner noise. By locating and maintaining the focus on the quiet higher inner heart or quiet higher inner mind, or both, the chattering starts to cease or at least recede into the background. Mantras are tools that aid in this process of connecting with the quiet inner heart or mind, but if you are not comfortable with utilizing a mantra, you can just continue to sit without utilizing one, and just remain open to what may come up from within, hopefully connecting with a place of inner peace and quiet. The image I often use is that of a hurricane: the eye of the hurricane remains calm, even while the bustle surrounding it continues. Meditation is about locating and remaining with our inner eye of peace and serenity.
There are two basic techniques in internalized mantra practice, by which the sounds are intoned only within, without any externalized vocalizations. One technique involves coordination of the intonation of the mantra sounds with the breath, and the other involves rapid repetition of a mantra without breath coordination. Specific descriptions of how to utilize mantras in either of these techniques is provided in the book, Yoga and Judaism (first and second editions), and in other articles on this blog and a sister blog, yajcenter.blogspot.com (Yoga and Judaism Center). I particularly commend the reader to a related article on this blog entitled “Universal Mantras – Adonai Hineni and So hum”, which describes basic breath-coordinated practices of particular potency utilizing a Hebrew mantra, and also a similar yoga/Sanskrit mantra.
At some point, the identity, with or without the aid of a mantra/spiritual sound moves even further within/beyond, to the place of the silent, subtle, spiritual realm that is the origin of all – the origin of all sound, of the mind, of the heart and of all internal and external phenomena. The Source of Creation of All is directly perceived, a sense of the process whereby everything arises out of the realm of the Absolute/Potentiality/Unmanifest into the realm of the Relative/Actuality/Manifestation and then back again. The process of Creation, Sustenance and Dissolution is beheld. Perhaps your sense of identity/self even disappears for a while. This is what in yoga is called “samadhi” and what in kabala is called “yichud” or “bitul”, where there is a merger/absorption of individual identity with the Source of All. A profound sense of inner peace, serenity, bliss, balance, equilibrium ensues.
Eventually, if you keep at it long enough, this profound sense of inner peace attained through regular silent seated meditation stays with you, and you can take it with you into the external world of everyday activity. That is what is called “meditation in action”. You will become a more centered, peaceful, yet dynamic and productive participant and contributor to everyday life, and experience a deep sense of fulfillment and existential meaning and purpose. So now we have come full circle and have concluded with the answer to the question posed at the beginning, “Why meditate?”

A Few Last Details. Recommended time: 20 to 30 minutes, twice a day, on an empty stomach; best first thing in the morning, and either late afternoon before supper, or before bed-time. Locate a quiet place in your residence for meditation sessions, and commit to doing your sessions regularly. Meditation practice has a cumulative effect if done regularly. If not done regularly, the effect is diminished. It is that simple. The above are optimal conditions, but meditation can be done in a variety of less than optimal settings, including on buses, trains, planes, airline terminals, etc. Bon voyage!