Average Weekend

Two days, two med­i­ta­tions, both okay, mostly, I think, because I did them in the morn­ing, or at least no later than early after­noon. Noth­ing much to report, really. No great moments of inspi­ra­tion or aware­ness, just twenty min­utes sit­ting on a cush­ion try­ing to con­cen­trate. Ho hum.

This week I’m going to start rein­ing in some desires, and see how it feels, as opposed to just watch­ing myself give in to them.

Eating

The more I observe myself this week, the more I realise how sep­a­rate my desire to eat is from my phys­i­cal need for food. There’s no con­nec­tion there what­ever. I’m just back from hol­i­day, and I’ve maybe eaten a bit more than usual recently, and I actu­ally think I’ve felt no phys­i­cal need for food at all this week — I’ve been eat­ing so much so reg­u­larly that there’s been no hunger.

I also think this might be the state I spend most of my life in, one of the main rea­sons I’m still pretty over­weight, despite now being a reg­u­lar jogger.

This is some­thing I really need to focus on. I think for the rest of this week, I’ll try to pay atten­tion to it, but keep eat­ing as nor­mal, but for next week I’ll see how it feels not to eat unless I can detect some phys­i­cal hunger. That’s not as easy as it sounds — it’s tough, some­times, to sep­a­rate the men­tal and the phys­i­cal — but I’ll give it a try, and see if I can then observe more of this addic­tive desire. Should be eas­ier to see when it’s being denied…

Med­i­ta­tion last night: rub­bish. I was too tired, and I started too late. Med­i­ta­tion this evening: also rub­bish, I started fairly soon after I got home from work, and I was still too tired. I just came back early from the Flickr meet at the pub so I could get to bed ear­lier. Here’s hop­ing I sleep well…

Hungry Ghost

Or, in fact, not-hungry ghost. I sat tonight’s med­i­ta­tion while my din­ner was cook­ing — the twenty-minute cook­ing time for chicken with rose­mary is a good match to my cur­rent med­i­ta­tion time! But as I was sit­ting, I had a very clear real­i­sa­tion: I wasn’t hungry.

And this seems to be true for all of my meals so far in this “month of desire”. And for snacks, and for my latte in the morn­ing, and my habit­ual after­noon vend­ing machine milk­shake. None of them seem to be any­thing to do with sat­is­fy­ing a phys­i­cal need. Well, maybe the drinks might have some­thing to do with thirst. But not much, that I’ve noticed.

Bud­dhist mythol­ogy has fig­ures called Hun­gry Ghosts. The Zen of Eat­ing describes them like this:

There’s a pow­er­ful image to depict the futil­ity of pur­su­ing one object of desire after another: the Hun­gry Ghost. Hun­gry Ghosts are large, mythic beings with huge, dis­tended bel­lies and extremely nar­row throats. They try to eat, but their nar­row throats pre­vent them from get­ting the ful­fil­ment they crave. No mat­ter what they do and how hard they try, they feel empty and unsat­is­fied. The Hun­gry Ghosts is not just a fig­ure in Bud­dhist mythol­ogy. There’s a Hun­gry Ghost in each of us, too.”

This rang a strong bell with me when I read it. I often feel like this about eat­ing. It seems I’m try­ing to sat­isfy some­thing other than phys­i­cal need when I eat; it’s a crav­ing for ful­fil­ment, and it is never satisfied.

So, lots to think about here. I’ll try to focus in on this feel­ing when I’m want­ing to eat. Try to fig­ure out where it comes from, if it’s not from hunger, or any other phys­i­cal feel­ing of need…

Sleepiness And Desire

Yes­ter­day I didn’t med­i­tate until far too late. Today I med­i­tated as soon as I got home from work. Both had the same result, sadly: a real fail­ure to stay awake. I’m not going to be too hard on myself for that, though, as yes­ter­day I just had a really bad day, headachey and ener­gy­less. I won­der if I may be going down with something..?

On the plus side, I’ve started think­ing more about my desire as I feel it, as was the plan for the month. That was mostly at work today, espe­cially after my Graze box arrived — my first one! A month when I’m meant to be analysing my desire seemed a good month to start hav­ing Graze boxes deliv­ered to work; cer­tainly it’s inter­est­ing to observe my reac­tions to know­ing there are tasty snacks in my drawer.

So far my obser­va­tions have told me things I already knew — for starters, that my desire for food has no con­nec­tion with hunger, as far as I can tell. When I want to eat it reminds me of quit­ting smok­ing — that desire to pull some­thing into my mouth, a feel­ing that there was a hole that needed fill­ing, that I just wanted to breathe more in than air.

I ate a cou­ple of the selec­tions of my Graze box today (you get four per box.) I’m going to try to keep the next two for the next two days. Next week, I’ll try to stretch the four lit­tle packs over four days. I think this is a good way of “play­ing” with my desire.

I’m still read­ing The Zen of Eat­ing. I’m not get­ting through it fast, but that’s mostly because it has a lot of good stuff to say, and I want to think about — and blog about — angry ghosts and dry drunks before I carry on. Maybe later this week, though it looks to be a busy one…

A Meditation on Twenty Minutes

Some days, twenty min­utes seems much, much longer than fif­teen. Still, I think that’s good. This morn­ing I med­i­tated through many dif­fer­ent dis­trac­tions, inter­nal and exter­nal — the clank­ing and beep­ing of the wash­ing machine, the peo­ple unload­ing a van out­side my flat, the sud­den mem­ory of things I’d for­got­ten to do. And gen­er­ally I came back to my med­i­ta­tion fairly well, and just car­ried on.

Best moment was sud­denly real­is­ing how much ten­sion I was car­ry­ing in my shoul­ders, and let­ting it go.