Why Meditation makes you more fearless

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During our meditation practice, bliss is the basis of silence. Bliss is a state of supreme inner contentedness that silences the thinking process.

The following will explain why.

Any time we are conscious, thinking happens constantly. It is the nature of the mind, via thought, to move in the direction of greater happiness, whenever choice can be detected.

In meditation, occasionally we find that it is time to return to the mantra even though we cannot identify any thought having taken us away from the mantra. Clearly, the mantra was not there, since we are returning to that; but if the mantra was not there, and no other thought was there either, then what was there?

There are two possibilities: either "I was asleep (unconscious)", or "I was awake (conscious)". If we were asleep, then that explains why we cannot recall any thought having taken us away from the mantra. But if we are quite certain that we were not asleep—if, for example, the head did not drop suddenly—then we were awake—but apparently without thought. "Awake without thought" is the definition of pure consciousness, also described as "Being". So why do we say it is "bliss"?

Conscious silence must be bliss, since it is the mind's nature never to stop thinking until it arrives at bliss, the mind's ultimate goal.  An unconscious sleeping mind, naturally, does not think. But one could not claim that thought-free unconsciousness is bliss, since no experiencer is present when we are unconscious.

However, if the mind is conscious—that is, if, due to being conscious, the mind is capable of detecting charm (greater happiness); and if, due to its being conscious, the mind is capable of producing thoughts—yet it is not producing thoughts, then why did thinking not occur in consciousness, even if thinking ceased only for a few seconds?

From simultaneity of consciousness with no thought we can infer that the mind must have had an experience of satiety so great that the mind's search was fulfilled.  This is what we mean by bliss.

The experience of bliss in meditation causes the mind to fall silent.

When we come out of meditation, we begin to integrate this state of bliss in the eyes-open state, when we are active, and this leads to being more fearless.

Fearlessness is the diagnostic symptom of pure consciousness having integrated itself into the waking state.  When we have established ourselves in Being enough that bliss can sustain itself in the eyes-open state – when the mind is able to be active and not have to be silent in response to bliss, then the eyes-open waking state product of this is fearlessness. 

The experience of bliss outside of meditation, during activity, causes fearlessness.

Fearlessness is the pinnacle of human experience. 

One of the signs of being fearless is that we are able to deal with the demands of life without much fuss.

Our twice daily contact with bliss through meditation makes us more fearless in our daily lives. 

With love,
Limor

Holiday Meeting Schedule - 2014/2015

The final group meditation meeting for 2014 will be held at 6.30pm on Monday 15th December.

Come and join us for group meditation and Vedic knowledge.

We look forward to seeing you there.

The first group meditation meeting for 2015 will be held at 6.30pm on Monday 5th January.

You can always check our meeting schedule via the website: Double Bay Meditation Meeting Times

Wishing you all the very best over the festive season and a Happy New Year. 

With love,
Limor

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Special Meeting - Guru Purnima - Saturday July 12th, 2014 at 8pm

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Our annual Guru Purnima celebration (full moon in July) will be held on Saturday 12th July at 8pm at the Lotus Meditation Centre in Coogee.

Guru Purnima traditionally honours the Vedic Masters who brought to light the Vedic knowledge we all enjoy today.

I will perform “Puja” - the ceremony of gratitude that you witnessed when you learnt to meditate.

It is part of the mythos of Guru Purnima that a boon is granted in response to a wish offered with one’s flower at the culmination of the Puja.

All Vedic Meditators are invited to attend.

Please bring a flower with you and a wish!

It will be an evening of stories, eating of rich sweets together, taking in a moonlit stroll, and enjoying the great good fortune of being a meditator at the dawn of the age of enlightenment. 

Come along to the Lotus Meditation Centre and enjoy an evening of camaraderie with other meditators, to be together, eat together, and enjoy the richness of meditating life together.

The evening will include a short group meditation but it will be best to meditate and have dinner before coming. 

This is a free event.  To reserve a spot, you will need to RSVP by Thursday 10th July by emailing Lauren Godfrey at: info@lotusmeditationcentre.com

You will receive a reply with address details.

Initiator Training 2015

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Initiator Training is a dynamic and transformative process designed to train practitioners of Vedic Meditation to be professional Initiators - teachers in our Vedic tradition.

The next Initiator Training course will be conducted by Limor Babai, Thom Knoles and Christian Bevacqua in Rishikesh, India from January 20th to April 14th, 2015. 

This will be a full time 12 week residential program.

For further details and to complete the Application Form,  please click here: www.vedicmeditationit.com

Ayurveda and Cooking with Tim Mitchell - July 2014

My colleague and Master Ayurvedic Chef Tim Mitchell will conduct a course on Ayurveda and cooking as follows:

Thursday 17th July, 6-9pm

Saturday 19th July, 1-5pm

Sunday 20th July, 1-5pm

The course will be held at The Intuitive Well in Bondi Junction and is suitable for everyone. You will learn the basic principles of Ayurveda (the science of longevity) and how you can bring balance to your mind and body through food.  You will also enjoy feasting on Tim's delicious cooking. 

This course is highly recommended for anyone who wishes to learn more about Ayurveda, Ayurvedic cooking and how to balance your body for optimal health.

For further details, please click here:  Ayurveda and Cooking July 2014

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Weekend Retreat

Weekend Retreat - May 2014, Blue Mountains


A photo of the group of meditators who attended the recent Weekend Retreat in the beautiful Blue Mountains. 

Participants learnt and practised 'Rounding'. 'Rounding' combines a simple sequence of yoga positions (asanas) and a Vedic breathing technique (pranayama) with meditation. 

The depth and restfulness of meditation is multiplied exponentially as meditators extend the number of rounds through each day, from three to five to seven and beyond, diving deep into Nature and the Unified Field.

It was 3 days of deep rest, advanced knowledge, delicious food and fun.

Thank you to the highly conscious group who attended.

Exploring the Veda - a course of Advanced Knowledge

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All Vedic Meditators are invited to attend the Advanced Course entitled Exploring the Veda.

The knowledge and tools you will learn on this course will fast track your growth to higher states of consciousness, transform your waking state experience and help you realise your life purpose.

The Exploring the Veda course is conducted in 6 instalments in a non-residential setting at the Double Bay Meditation Centre. Instalment 1 will take place as follows:

Friday July 25th, 2014 - 7pm to 9.30pm

Saturday July 26th, 2014 - 10am to 6.30pm

Sunday July 27th, 2014 - 10am to 6.30pm

For further details about the course, please click here: Exploring the Veda

Upcoming Weekend Retreat - May 22nd - 25th, 2014

All Vedic Meditators are invited to attend this Long Weekend Retreat in the beautiful Blue Mountains from Thursday 22nd May (6.30pm) to Sunday 25th May (2pm). 

During the Retreat, you will learn and practice 'Rounding'. ‘Rounding' combines a simple sequence of yoga positions (asanas) and a Vedic breathing technique (pranayama) with your current meditation practice. The result is an 'industrial-strength' program designed to enhance the restfulness of meditation, release your deepest stresses and expand your consciousness. 

In addition to advancing both your meditation practice and waking state experience of life, you will come away from the Retreat feeling refreshed and revitalised for months to come. 

For further details, please click here: Weekend Retreat

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Holiday Meeting Schedule - 2013/2014

The final group meditation meeting for 2013 will be held at 6.30pm on Monday 16th December.

Come and join us for group meditation and Vedic knowledge.

We look forward to seeing you there.

The first group meditation meeting for 2014 will be held at 6.30pm on Monday 6th January.

However, there will be no group meditation meeting on the Australia Day Holiday; Monday 27th January.

You can always check our meeting schedule via the website: Double Bay Meditation Meeting Times

Wishing you all the very best over the festive season and a Happy New Year.

Thoughts are not the enemy ....

Thoughts are a part of meditation.

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Having lots of thoughts during a meditation session is not an indication of incorrect meditation.  In fact, thoughts are one of the symptoms of correct meditation.

Thoughts during meditation are caused by the body purifying itself of accumulated stress (overloads). This process of purification causes the mind to become more active which in turn leads to thoughts as the mind cannot be active without content.

In order to get a picture of what happens to a person’s body during meditation, scientific studies on meditators require them to wear so much invasive instrumentation and apparatus that no meditator being measured scientifically ever has had anything but a thought-filled meditation session.

Imagine wearing an electrocardiogram on your chest, 16 electrodes for EEG on your head, having a catheter inserted into your forearm artery, a gas mask over your nose and mouth, and a rectal thermometer taking your temperature, along with several other devices in place - all at once - and then being asked to meditate in the laboratory while knowing you were being measured.

Yet every scientific study published on the wonderful effects of meditation has asked the meditator to meditate under these or similar conditions.  After each study, when interviewed, meditators confirm typically that the session was far more thought-filled than their most thought-filled home sessions.  Yet it is these studies that demonstrate repeatedly beneficial physiological changes during meditation.

The lesson from this is that a meditator’s subjective assessment of the benefits of a meditation sitting is not an accurate tool for determining what is the full effect of a particular session.

Scientific studies ask the meditator for ten minutes both before and after the proper meditation-measuring phase of the study simply to sit with eyes closed and not use the mantra - to measure the difference between “sitting merely with eyes closed” versus that phase of the sitting during which the subject is “intending to meditate”.

The distinction between these two phases always is dramatic; the “intending-to-meditate” phase of sitting, however thought-filled, will show invariably powerful physiological changes - mostly those related to release of stress and of deep levels of rest, typically up to five times more restful than sleep.

When the body throws off stress during meditation, this causes the mind to march into thoughts and a feeling of buoyancy instead of diving.  The benefits of that phase of a sitting (even if it is the nature of an entire sitting) are mostly deferred benefits; those being detected outside the practice.  In other words, you will feel better for having done it, even if during it experiences are not as settled as in other sittings.

So continue to give meditation the priority it deserves in order to receive the wonderful benefits noticed by millions of people around the world.

With love,
Limor

Guru Purnima - Monday July 22nd, 2013 at 7pm

Special Meeting for Vedic Meditators to be conducted by Thom Knoles

GURU PURNIMA - Monday July 22nd at 7pm

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Venue: The Life Pod Yoga Studio; Level 1, 1A Victoria Street, Paddington

Celebrate Guru Purnima (the full moon in July) which traditionally honours the Vedic Masters who brought to light the Vedic knowledge we all enjoy today. Thom will perform “Puja” - the ceremony of gratitude that you witnessed when you learnt to meditate.  It is part of the mythos of Guru Purnima that a boon is granted in response to a wish offered with one’s flower at the culmination of the Puja.  It is an evening of stories, eating of rich sweets together, taking in a moonlit stroll, and enjoying the good fortune of being a meditator at the dawn of the age of enlightenment.

The evening will include group meditation.

Please bring a flower with you and a wish!

Free event.  No RSVP required.

Initiator Training 2014

Initiator Training is a dynamic and transformative process designed to train practitioners of Vedic Meditation to be professional Initiators - teachers in our Vedic tradition.

The next Initiator Training course will be conducted by Limor Babai, Thom Knoles and Christian Bevacqua in Rishikesh, India from January 15th to April 9th, 2014. 

This will be a full time 12 week residential program.

For further details and to complete the Application Form,  please click here: www.vedicmeditationit.com

Thom Knoles Tour of Sydney - July/August 2013

My brilliant and inspiring teacher, Thom Knoles will be in Sydney for 3 weeks this year.

Thom has been teaching meditation for the past 45 years.  He is a master of Vedic Meditation as well as an expert in physics, psychology, cognitive neuroscience and consciousness.

Thom will conduct Private Consultations for Meditators at the Double Bay Meditation Centre for 5 days only - on July 24th and July 30th to August 2nd.  If you would like to make an appointment with Thom for a Private Consultation please contact Anna Dudek at: annadudek.meditation@gmail.com

For further details of Thom's tour of Sydney, please click here: Thom Knoles Tour of Sydney 2013

Transcending isn't the goal

It is important to remember that the goal of Vedic Meditation is not to transcend thought in every 20 minute meditation session.

Vedic Meditation is a practice which systematically de-excites the mind.  However, we may not experience pure silence in every meditation session.

As we de-excite the mind in meditation, the body follows and we experience a profound state of rest.   This causes the body to unwind stress.  As the body releases stress during meditation, the mind can become active with thoughts and we may even experience emotions or body sensations.  Those experiences are the after effect or by-product of the body “unstressing”, detoxing and healing. When there is more stress in the body, there are more opportunities for stress to be released.  During the early days of meditation, when the body is still holding a lifetime backlog of stress, only very little de-excitation is needed in order to trigger its release.  As we clear out that backlog through regular daily practice, the trend is toward more sustained periods of depth in meditation.

Meditation is a process, not an outcome.  The process during the 20 minutes session is to effortlessly favour the mantra whenever we remember to do so.  If we follow this instruction then we have meditated, whether we transcend or not.

The outcome of meditation is how it enhances our activity and life when we come out of meditation. 

The wonderful benefits that come from meditating twice every day, such as:

- greater physical energy

- greater mental clarity

- feeling happy for no reason

- being calm in demanding situations

- having adaptive responses to changes of expectations

are some of the outcomes of meditation.

Therefore, when we meditate it is best not to have any expectation of any particular result during the 20 minute session.  We can look for the results after meditation in our daily activity.

Ultimately, the perfect prescription is simply to keep regular with our practice, and take the whole experience as it comes, without judgement or concern.

With love,
Limor

Ayurveda and cooking with Tim Mitchell

My colleague and Master Ayurvedic Chef Tim Mitchell will conduct a course on Ayurveda and cooking as follows:

Friday 2nd August, 6-9pm

Saturday 3rd August, 11-5pm

The course will be held at The Intuitive Well in Bondi Junction and is suitable for everyone. You will learn the basic principles of Ayurveda (the science of longevity) and how you can bring balance to your mind and body through food.  You will also enjoy feasting on Tim's delicious cooking.

This course is highly recommended for anyone who wishes to learn more about Ayurveda, Ayurvedic cooking and how to balance your body for optimal health.

For further details, please click here: Ayurveda and Cooking August 2013

Holiday Meeting Schedule - 2012/2013

The final group meditation meeting for 2012 will be held at 6.30pm on Monday 17th December.

Come and join us for group meditation and Vedic knowledge.

We look forward to seeing you there.

The first group meditation meeting for 2013 will be held at 6.30pm on Monday 21st January.

You can always check our meeting schedule via the website: Double Bay Meditation Meeting Times

Wishing you all the very best over the festive season and a Happy New Year.

Upcoming Weekend Retreat - March 7th - 10th, 2013

All Vedic Meditators are invited to attend this Long Weekend Retreat in the beautiful Blue Mountains from Thursday 7th March (6.30pm) to Sunday 10th March (2pm).

During the Retreat, you will learn and practice 'Rounding'. ‘Rounding' combines a simple sequence of yoga positions (asanas) and a Vedic breathing technique (pranayama) with your current meditation practice. The result is an 'industrial-strength' program designed to enhance the restfulness of meditation, release your deepest stresses and expand your consciousness.

In addition to advancing both your meditation practice and waking state experience of life, you will come away from the Retreat feeling refreshed and revitalised for months to come.

For further details, please click here: Weekend Retreat