Is Meditation Safe?
By Tergar Community Team • 8 min read
As meditation increases in popularity, you might hear reports that there is a “dark side” to meditation. How can we answer the question, is meditation safe?
The essence of meditation is beautifully simple. However, there are people teaching meditation who have a mistaken understanding of the practice. And there are certainly ample opportunities these days to take workshops, watch videos, read books, or even go on retreats led by such people. Probably they mean well, but if you follow their incorrect instructions, then yes, there could be some unhealthy side effects to practicing meditation.
The main point to understand is that meditation is not about clearing your mind of thoughts or feelings. It has nothing to do with having a mind that is still or empty. Any meditation that aspires to that goal is completely misguided . . . and yes, it can be dangerous.
Mental afflictions are not enemies. They are our friends.”
– Mingyur Rinpoche –
This is because it is literally impossible to block thoughts and emotions. The mind is like a river, always moving, constantly changing. If meditation instructions aren’t teaching you how to embrace that natural flow, then they are turning the flow into your enemy. Noise, distractions, restlessness, ideas, worries, daydreams — attempting to resist these natural events in the mind will transform them into adversaries. The result? Instead of becoming calmer, your mind will become more sensitive. You will become agitated. If you were feeling unsettled to begin with, this can be really distressing. For this reason, it is crucial that meditation instructions teach you how to be present with whatever arises in your mind, without judgment or suppression.
Meditation is not intended to produce a feeling of bliss, peace, calm, or joy. Of course, those experiences are lovely when they happen. And they are perfectly valid experiences — but they’re only experiences, no better or worse than any other. They’re not intended to be the goals. In fact, it’s quite the opposite. That’s because if you are chasing after a particular experience, you are in a state of craving. And when you come to the cushion with craving or expectations, your mind will have a tendency to pull in the opposite direction.
We have all tried to not feel a certain way, or not get the giggles, or not cry, or not think of a certain thing by telling ourselves we must not. Perfect results every time, right? Similarly, we know it’s possible to study hard for an exam, and then suddenly blank out on the answers on exam day. It’s just the way the human mind operates. This is sometimes referred to as an “unpliable” or “unworkable” mind. Meditation should help your mind to become gradually more workable and pliable over time. It should never involve pushing or pulling.
The essence of meditation is awareness. That means that if you have thoughts in meditation, no big deal. If you don’t have thoughts, that’s alright too. Should you have feelings, no problem; if you don’t, also no problem. Making a mistake? That’s okay. Doing it perfectly? Also okay. Right or wrong, happy or sad, up or down — all are equally okay, because awareness is the ocean on which waves rise and fall. Meditation is about the ocean of awareness, not the waves of passing experience. Ultimately, correct meditation instructions should unite us with the fundamental nature of the mind, which is awareness, love, compassion, and wisdom.
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Here is a video to help you deepen this teaching
Learn meditation under the skillful guidance of world-renowned teacher Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche at your own pace.
Tergar Meditation Community supports individuals, practice groups, and meditation communities around the world in learning to live with awareness, compassion, and wisdom. Grounded in the Tibetan Buddhist lineage of our guiding teacher, Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche, our online and in-person programs are accessible to people of all cultures and faiths, and support a lifelong path toward the application of these principles in everyday life.
“It is really important that we try to believe in ourselves. Of course, sometimes we make mistakes, but we can be willing to learn from them. Even if we feel like a failure, we can view that failure as a chance to grow.”
“This technique of going in and out of meditation — traditionally referred to as “short times, many times” — is often illustrated by the example of drops of water falling one by one into a large empty bucket. It might take a long while, but in the end, the barrel will be full. Doing informal meditation while you’re working will increase your productivity and the quality of your work; at the same time it will develop your spiritual practice, improve the health of your relationships, and benefit your physical body, too. Altogether, a win-win.”
Many people have the wrong idea about meditation. For instance, one popular but incorrect notion is that in meditation, you’re supposed to think of nothing, and completely empty your mind. So, in trying to do it “right,” some folks will sit bolt upright on the cushion, eyes squeezed shut, concentrating really hard on their breath.
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