Guided Morning Meditations

By Tergar Meditation Community • 3 min read

TRY FOR FREE

Before Opening Your Eyes

Guided morning meditations are the perfect way to start your day. Here is 3 minute read on how to do a simple guided meditation for the morning that anyone can do. This can be a 3 minute meditation or as long as you wish.

Listen to a 5 minute guided morning meditation by Mingyur Rinpoche.

Just as you are beginning to wake up, bring your awareness to your feet. “Bringing awareness” just means to simply feel them, be aware of their existence. Slowly, in a relaxed way, move your awareness up to your legs, torso, and head.  Whatever sensations may arise, whether pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral, just let them be as they are.

Gratitude

Open your eyes. Appreciate that you are breathing, alive, in a body. If you cast your gaze around, you will find many things for which to be grateful. For example, you have a soft place to lie down, and maybe a blanket to keep you warm, a pillow to cushion your head. You have the shelter of a roof over your head. Perhaps there is a fan to keep you cool, or a window that lets in sunlight. Maybe there is another being there in the form of another person, an animal, or a green plant. No matter how humble your environment, you are surrounded by gifts!

Get in Touch with Your Heart

Take three deep breaths. Then, open your heart, and set your motivation. You can do this by recognizing your fundamental human feelings: we all have a basic desire to do some good in the world, to help other beings when we can. Touch into this deeply-held wish, and extend it to others.

Ready to Rise

Now that you have completed a guided morning meditation, you’re ready to begin a wonderful day. Enjoy it!

You may end your day with this guided sleep meditation.

“Happiness and unhappiness are not primarily created by the material world or the physical body. First and foremost, they are decisions of the mind.”

– Mingyur Rinpoche –

Join Our Mailing List

If you enjoyed reading our articles, please join our mailing list and we’ll send you our news and latest pieces.

Here is a guided meditation session to help you get started:

Listen to 5 minute guided morning meditation by Mingyur Rinpoche

Joy of Living Online Training

Theory and practice of meditation, step-by-step.

Learn meditation under the skillful guidance of world-renowned teacher Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche at your own pace.

About the Author

By Tergar Meditation Community Team

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.

Related Articles

Meditation in Everyday Life

4 Ways to Have Healthy Relationships

In my tradition, we believe that with any type of relationship — between friends, family, teacher and student, or even the relationship between yourself and the society you live in — there are four points that need to be considered, sometimes called “the four enlightened activities.” These consist of peaceful activity, enriching activity, magnetizing activity, and powerful activity. All of them hinge on interdependence.

READ
How to Prevent Burnout

Meditation in Everyday Life

How to Avoid Burnout

Deadlines, competition, pressure — the concept of “burnout” to describe a sense of nervous exhaustion has been around since the 70’s, but never has the feeling of burnout been as prevalent as it is these days. In a situation that’s demanding too much of us, it’s natural to experience burnout. Still, there are certainly a few things we can keep in mind.

READ

Meditation in Everyday Life

How to practice meditation while working

“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.”

READ

Join Our Mailing List

If you enjoyed reading our articles, please join our mailing list and we’ll send you our news and latest pieces.

2024© Tergar International. The Tergar logo is a registered service mark of Tergar international.