What to Meditate on
Awhile back, I wrote about how I “fell into” meditation by just sitting quietly, and just focusing on my breath. Fifteen minutes passed without me knowing where it went, and I said to my calmer, refreshed self: “You did it!”
The imagery which worked for me in that moment was that I was floating – not unlike an aircraft – through clouds. It was a slow, controlled gliding, where there was no fear about falling, and there was a sense that I could go anywhere and soar at any altitude.
In subsequent meditations, I have imagined floating – not walking – through places I know, even places as mundane as a grocery store. I glide past the pastas, the frozen perogies, and the neatly arranged bagels. Something seems ethereal about that ability to float and not have to perambulate as usual.
This imagery, for whatever reason, makes me feel light. Unencumbered. And in the context of meditation, it allows we to just….drift.
Online, there’s much advice about *how* to meditate and a great deal of emphasis is put on posture, positioning, finding a quiet place, setting a timer, and setting an intention or mantra.
Some even recommend staring at a fixed object – such as a candle flame – as a way of narrowing your focus.
Of course, it’s almost impossible for anyone to advise as to what specifically to *think* about. Only you know what to do to put yourself in a calm state, and that might be very different than what someone else does to relax.
For me, I got tripped up with the posture. I found it difficult to “comply” with the recommended posture that many sources suggest in order to meditate effectively: cross-legged, or heroes pose. Cross-legged has been off the menu for me for quite awhile, but I found that to sit in heroes pose for an extended period of time – even with blocks and bolsters -- I experienced stress and anxiety about tingly, numbing legs which was absolutely not conducive to drifting away. I discovered that I am most effective at meditating sitting in a relaxed way with a strong posture. Not worrying about legs falling asleep. A straight-backed chair, or even sitting on the floor on a cushion, legs bent, with my back up against a wall or the bed. I even found it possible to meditate leaning forward in an airport waiting area seat or a doctor’s office waiting room. (One of my coaching clients said that she meditates lying on her stomach and has done so, draped on a park bench, prompting some stares.)
As to what to focus on: that is such a personal preference, and such a deeply individualized choice, that it would be folly to make recommendations. I can only comment on what works for me.
Other than the “gliding” paradigm, I really like visualizing a warm, white, glowing light that originates right around my solar plexus. It kind of like my “pilot light”, and I envision it glowing brighter on an inhale, and slightly dissipating on the exhale. Pulsing brighter and less brighter. Once that pattern is established, I envision it leaving my body, and floating over people I love. People in my life who I know need assistance and warmth. This ball encircles them and emanates its glow all over them.
This may be too much “thinking” during a meditation; regardless, I find that these positive images of sending light to others as soothing and fulfilling and allows me to access a drifting yet oddly focused area of my brain.
Whatever imagery you choose; whatever posture you take and which imagery allows you to drift off into a meditative state is highly personal, and only you can decide which works for you.






