Welcome Waterlily thank you for sharing and hope you can tell us about your meditation experiences and practices and maybe you could share some of your artistic talents with our community.
This is a discussion on Inspire me! within the Introduce Your Self forums, part of the Introduction & Discussion category; Hi, I am always seeking to make meditation a bigger part of my life. It gives me the feeling of ...
Hi,
I am always seeking to make meditation a bigger part of my life. It gives me the feeling of peace and harmony and grounds me to the present moment. I also seek to more deeply connect to the spirit within. I have a great connection and have always sensed the sacred in nature. I come here to look for fellow meditators for whom meditation is a big part of their lives. I have learnt chakra meditation recently. I collect different meditations from books and the internet, and love using them. I write- poetry, songs. I photograph great moments captured in nature. I do art.
Welcome Waterlily thank you for sharing and hope you can tell us about your meditation experiences and practices and maybe you could share some of your artistic talents with our community.
To be in appreciation for nothing is true love. - 7 Meditations Founder & Administrator.
Meditation is a holistic discipline during which time the practitioner trains his or her mind in order to realize some benefit.[1]
Meditation is generally a subjective, personal experience and most often done without any external involvement, except perhaps prayer beads to count prayers. Meditation often involves invoking and cultivating a feeling or internal state, such as compassion, or attending to some focal point, etc. The term can refer to the process of reaching this state, as well as to the state itself.[2]
There are hundreds of specific types of meditation.[3] The word, 'meditation,' means many things dependent upon the context of its use. People practice meditation for many reasons, within the context of their social environment. Meditation is a component of many religions, and has been practiced since antiquity, particularly by monastics. A 2007 study by the U.S. government found that nearly 9.4% of U.S. adults (over 20 million) have used meditation within the past 12 months, up from 7.6% (more than 15 million people) in 2002.[4]
To date, the exact mechanism at work in meditation remains unclear,[5] while scientific research continues.[6][7]
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