The practice of tantric meditation revolves around the key theories of interconnectedness, enlightenment, and visualization. Introduced in India during the sixth century, the practice of tantra was adopted by Tibetan Buddhist monks and incorporated into the framework of Tibetan Buddhism, or Vajrayana. Buddhist tantric meditation encourages visualization, most particularly the visualization of results.
As a concept, tantric meditation has been given an overtly sexual label, although this is not strictly correct. The sexual nature of the process stems from seeking the same mental and physical state as that experienced during orgasm. It is said that, in this state, the energy flow through the mind and body is at its highest and most consistent level. The art of tantric meditation is the search for this state in everyday life along with the ability to control it.
Visualization and mantras are core components of tantric meditation. The Buddhist practice of the art comprises two main stages; these are generation and completion. The generation stage consists of the visualization of the self as a deity of the Buddha figure. By creating a self-image in this form, it is said that it is possible to adopt the enlightenment and self-awareness of the visualized being.
Why Meditate? What Are the Benefits?
Meditation can help you to enjoy life more and function better. Meditation enhances physical health and vitality, and promotes mental clarity. Emotionally, you will notice a deepened awareness of your feelings, and a greater capacity to give and receive love. Meditation is an overall physiological response – an integrated mind-body state. The ability to meditate is built-in, and there are thousands of ways of accessing it. The best way for an individual is the way that suits her nature.
Hundreds of scientific studies over the last several decades have established that meditation has significant and measurable physical, mental, and emotional benefits. Here are just a few:
Physical Benefits of Meditation
- Your muscles and nerves relax profoundly.
- You are able to rest deeply and recover quickly from fatigue.
- You have a way to release stress from your nervous system, reducing stress-related ailments.
- Your immune system becomes stronger and your body is able to heal more rapidly.
- Blood pressure is normalized (lowered if high).
- You become more comfortable in your body.
- Your senses open up and come alive.
- Your ability to experience physical pleasure increases. You are a better lover, more in touch with all your senses.
These physical benefits are a side effect of the mental attitude of relaxed attention you are cultivating.
Mental Benefits of Meditation
- You can see and hear your own thoughts more clearly.
- You are more alert.
- You are able to stay calmer under pressure.
- You are able to shift perspective quickly from narrow focus to big picture.
- You perceive more beauty in life.
- You have a sense of how things connect, how things work together.
- You have more choice in how you respond to the world, for example, whether to get stressed or not.
- You are more open to new experiences.
- You are more accepting of your individuality.
The physical and mental changes impact your emotional life by bringing you into inner balance. Meditation puts you in touch with yourself and your authentic feelings as well, helping you to learn from and integrate your emotions.
Emotional Benefits of Meditation
- You learn to accept all your emotions.
- You have more empathy with others.
- You feel more connected with those you love.
- Life seems more harmonious.
- You are able to give and receive pleasure, attention and love.
- You are better at letting go of resentment and hurt.
- You are a better friend and lover because you are able to listen fully.
- You have better boundaries. Because you spend time with yourself, you will know where you end and another begins.
- You have a specific time and technique to feel and heal your heartaches and emotional wounds.
Spirituality can be thought of as the wholeness of our being. Meditation gives us a chance to integrate and harmonize our physical, mental, and emotional worlds. We come into relationship with the vastness of life.
Spiritual Benefits of Meditation
- You have a sense of oneness with the world.
- You experience more wonder and awe at creation.
- You tune in to your essence, your soul.
- You are more grateful.
- You feel more compassion.
- You directly experience that life is sacred.
- You feel a sense of connectedness with the soul of humanity. You are at home in the cosmos.
- You develop spirituality in your own way, a gradual awakening to an intimate communion with life.
- You begin to come to terms with death, with the mystery of death and birth. You feel more comfortable with things unseen.
- Your sense of the meaning of life deepens.
It is surprising that such a simple practice can have these profound benefits. This is because life is all one piece, and when you pay loving attention to the flow of life within and around you, all dimensions of your being are positively affected. Meditation is just a name we give to cultivating our best, most loving attention.
Personal Responses to Stress
We all have experienced, at least momentarily, most of these common responses to stress. Some of these reactions may have become bad habits; others we may have faced at some point in life and eventually overcome.
Behavior: compulsive eating or smoking, or else self-starvation and denial of healthy needs; grinding the teeth at night; anxiously scanning the environment when there’s no implied threat.
Body: sweaty palms, dizziness, ringing in the ears, headache, indigestion, backache, racing heart, fatigue
Emotions: irritability, irrational anger, lack of pleasure, depression, loneli- ness, powerlessness
Mental functioning: continual worry resulting in difficulty making decisions and thinking clearly; tunnel vision concerning the object of worry, leaving no time for the big picture
Relationships: taking your frustration out on your loved ones, or overloading your relationships with your distress; blaming others; isolating in order to not rage at others; chronic intolerance, distrust, suspicion, and other relationship- killing emotional tones.
How Do You Get These Benefits?
You give a lot to get the benefits of meditation:
1) You give 20 minutes or so in the morning and evening. Usually before meals. Meditation is a time you give yourself, to take care of yourself.
2) You give attention and feel everything that is arising. You pay attention to whatever in you needs attention. This is very similar to the kind of loving attention you give a friend, spouse, animal. It’s good practice, but it is as demanding as any relationship. In meditation, you are not so much in relationship with yourself, as in relationship with life as you. You are feeling all your instincts, all your sensations and emotions, all your responses.
Once you get the hang of this, it is deeply pleasurable. It is pleasurable even to review what is bothering you. This process of reviewing things you feel bad about is called debriefing, and it is a major way we learn from our experience. When we have time to debrief daily life, we develop emotional intelligence, spiritual intelligence, and even physical intelligence. When we deny or block out this debriefing, then we interfere with our learning and may over time become less intelligent emotionally.
The Paradox of Relaxation
The big problem with relaxation in general is that the body wants to review stressors and turn off the stress response, if that is appropriate. It is almost always appropriate. What this means is that the body-mind system will utilize the relaxation and peace of meditation to relive trauma or pain, and work it through. The body is in a state of ease, and when feelings of dis-ease arise, they can be filtered and re-evaluated. So there you are, finally having some peace in meditation, and blam, something you are afraid of, or worried about, comes to mind.