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Glossary›Buddhist Meditation

Glossary

Buddhist Meditation

Mental training practices rooted in the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha) aimed at cultivating concentration, insight, and liberation from suffering.

What is Buddhist Meditation?

Buddhist meditation refers to a diverse set of mental training techniques developed within the Buddhist tradition to transform consciousness, reduce suffering, and ultimately achieve enlightenment (nirvana). The Pali and Sanskrit term bhāvanā literally means “development” or “cultivating” in the sense of “calling into existence,” representing a core concept in Buddhist practice. Unlike relaxation or stress-reduction exercises, Buddhist meditation is fundamentally soteriological—designed to address the existential problem of dukkha (suffering) through systematic observation of mind and body.

The practice encompasses two principal modes: samatha (focused attention), which develops concentration and tranquility aiming for deep mental absorption, and vipassana (open monitoring), which cultivates insight into the true nature of reality through mindfulness and non-judgmental awareness. Most traditions view these as complementary rather than separate paths.

Origins & Lineage

The exact origins of Buddhist meditation are subject to debate among scholars, though early written records of the multiple levels and stages of meditation in Buddhism in India are found in the sutras of the Pāli Canon, which dates to the 1st century BCE. The historical Buddha Siddhartha Gautama (circa 5th–4th century BCE) systematized meditation techniques that likely drew from earlier Indian contemplative traditions, particularly those found in the Upanishads.

The Ānāpānasati Sutta (Discourse on Mindfulness of Breathing), found at Majjhima Nikaya 118 in the Pali Canon, contains what American scholar monk Thanissaro Bhikkhu identifies as the most detailed meditation instructions in the Pali Canon, outlining sixteen steps of practice grouped into four tetrads. This text has served as a foundational manual across traditions.

By the tenth century, meditation was no longer practiced in the Theravada tradition due to the belief that Buddhism had degenerated; it was reinvented in Myanmar (Burma) in the 18th century by Medawi (1728–1816), leading to the rise of the Vipassanā movement in the 20th century. In Japan, when Dōgen returned from China around 1227, he wrote the instructions for Zazen (sitting meditation) and conceived of a community of monks primarily focused on Zazen, establishing the Soto Zen lineage.

By the twentieth century, North America had taken a great interest in Buddhist meditation, and scientists began studying the practice in neurological terms, examining meditation’s effect on the human brain.

How It’s Practiced

Buddhist meditation practice varies significantly across traditions but shares common structural elements. Practitioners typically sit cross-legged on a cushion or chair with an upright spine. The seven-point posture of Vairochana is an ancient set of posture points said to align the physical body with the energetic body, practiced for thousands of years by Hindu and Buddhist yogis.

In the sutras, jhāna (meditative absorption) is entered when one ‘sits down cross-legged and establishes mindfulness,’ and according to Buddhist tradition, it may be supported by ānāpānasati (mindfulness of breathing), a core meditative practice found in almost all schools of Buddhism. The meditator observes the natural rhythm of the breath without controlling it, using it as an anchor for attention.

In many Buddhist traditions, Samatha is practiced as a precursor to Vipassana meditation, following a progression from Morality (sila) to Concentration (samadhi) to Wisdom (panna). Sessions may last from 20 minutes to several hours, often alternating sitting meditation with walking meditation during intensive retreats.

Zen practice emphasizes zazen (sitting meditation), sometimes incorporating koan study—contemplation of paradoxical questions. Tibetan Buddhist (Vajrayana) traditions add visualization practices and mantra recitation. Theravada practitioners often focus on systematic body scanning and mental noting techniques.

Buddhist Meditation Today

Contemporary seekers encounter Buddhist meditation through multiple channels. Insight Meditation (Vipassana) centers throughout North America and Europe offer 10-day silent retreats based on Burmese Theravada traditions, particularly those of Mahasi Sayadaw and S.N. Goenka. Zen centers provide regular zazen sessions and sesshin (intensive retreats). Tibetan Buddhist communities offer courses in shamatha-vipashyana and deity visualization practices.

Secular adaptations have proliferated: Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) extract techniques from Buddhist meditation while removing religious context. A number of twentieth-century psychologists incorporated Buddhist meditation into their therapeutic practices, with people utilizing meditation to alleviate conditions such as depression, anxiety, and addiction, rather than to achieve enlightenment.

Smartphone apps like Headspace and Calm offer guided meditations inspired by Buddhist techniques. University contemplative studies programs now research meditation’s neurological and psychological effects using fMRI and EEG technology.

Common Misconceptions

Buddhist meditation is not:

Emptying the mind: The goal is not to stop thinking but to observe thoughts without attachment or aversion. Dhyāna is commonly translated as meditation to withdraw the mind from automatic responses to sense-impressions and “burn up” the defilements, leading to a “state of perfect equanimity and awareness”.

Exclusively relaxation: While meditation may produce calm, its traditional aim is radical insight into impermanence, suffering, and non-self—which can be profoundly challenging or destabilizing. Pure vipassana without adequate samatha can produce problems; insight into impermanence and non-self, when experienced by a mind that lacks stability, can be destabilizing.

One unified practice: The term encompasses hundreds of distinct techniques across Theravada, Mahayana, and Vajrayana traditions, each with different philosophical frameworks and goals.

Merely sitting quietly: Traditional Buddhist meditation involves precise instructions about posture, attention, mental noting, and progressive stages of concentration that distinguish it from informal contemplation.

Religion-neutral: While secular mindfulness extracts elements, traditional Buddhist meditation remains embedded in doctrines of karma, rebirth, and liberation that shape its methods and interpretation.

How to Begin

For a rigorous introduction, locate a local Insight Meditation or Zen center offering beginner instruction. Many provide free introductory evenings before commitment.

Text-based entry: Mindfulness in Plain English by Bhante Gunaratana offers clear, practical Theravada instruction. For Zen, consider The Three Pillars of Zen by Philip Kapleau. Thanissaro Bhikkhu’s translation and commentary on the Ānāpānasati Sutta (available free at dhammatalks.org) provides the canonical source.

Retreat experience: A 10-day Vipassana course (dhamma.org) offers intensive immersion in Burmese tradition. Zen centers typically require attendance at introductory workshops before sesshin participation.

Teacher relationship: Theravada, the “Teaching of the Elders,” is the oldest surviving Buddhist tradition and places strong emphasis on the Pali Canon, the monastic code, and meditation practices rooted in mindfulness and insight. Finding a qualified teacher within your chosen tradition ensures proper guidance through both technical instruction and the psychological challenges that arise in sustained practice.

Start with 15–20 minutes daily of basic breath awareness. Consistency matters more than duration. Expect distraction, discomfort, and doubt—these are not failures but the very material of the practice.

Related terms

vipassana meditationzen meditationmindfulnesssamadhiloving kindness meditationbreath work
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