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Glossary›Meditation

Glossary

Meditation

A practice of focused attention or open awareness cultivated to train the mind, reduce reactivity, and develop insight into the nature of consciousness.

What is Meditation?

Meditation is a deliberate practice of directing, sustaining, or opening one’s attention—typically in stillness and silence—to cultivate mental clarity, emotional regulation, and insight into the workings of consciousness. While techniques vary widely across traditions, all share a common structure: the practitioner assumes a posture (usually seated), adopts an object or mode of attention (the breath, a phrase, a visual image, or awareness itself), and sustains that focus for a defined period. The practice does not aim to suppress thought but to observe mental activity with less identification and reactivity.

Meditation exists in both religious and secular contexts. In Buddhism, Hinduism, Jainism, and Taoism, it serves as a vehicle for liberation, enlightenment, or union with the divine. In contemporary secular settings—hospitals, schools, corporate wellness programs—it functions as a tool for stress reduction, focus enhancement, and psychological well-being.

Origins & Lineage

The earliest written records of meditation practices appear in the Vedas, Hindu texts composed between 1500 and 500 BCE in the Indian subcontinent. The Upanishads (circa 800–200 BCE) describe dhyana (meditative absorption) as a path to knowledge of Brahman, the ultimate reality. By the 6th century BCE, meditation had become central to the teachings of Mahavira (founder of Jainism) and Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha), whose Anapanasati Sutta details breath-focused meditation.

Buddhist meditation spread from India to China (arriving by the 1st century CE), Japan (6th century), Tibet (7th century), and Southeast Asia, fragmenting into distinct lineages: Theravada vipassana (insight meditation), Mahayana Chan/Zen seated meditation (zazen), and Tibetan Vajrayana visualization practices. Meanwhile, Hindu yogic traditions codified meditation in Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras (circa 400 CE), which describe an eight-limbed path culminating in samadhi (meditative absorption).

Contemplative practices also developed independently in Christian monasticism (hesychasm in Eastern Orthodoxy, lectio divina in Benedictine communities), Sufi dhikr (remembrance of God), and Jewish Kabbalah. Each tradition embedded meditation within theological frameworks distinct from Indian models.

The 20th century saw meditation decontextualized and exported to the West. Key figures include D.T. Suzuki (who introduced Zen to American audiences in the 1950s), Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (who launched Transcendental Meditation in 1958), and S.N. Goenka (who taught vipassana to global audiences beginning in 1969). In 1979, Jon Kabat-Zinn adapted Buddhist mindfulness into Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, catalyzing meditation’s integration into clinical psychology and neuroscience.

How It’s Practiced

Meditation practice varies by tradition but typically follows a common arc. The practitioner finds a quiet environment, assumes a stable posture (cross-legged on a cushion, kneeling on a bench, or seated in a chair), and sets a duration (often 10–60 minutes). Eyes may be closed, lowered, or open depending on the method.

In concentration practices (samatha, zazen counting breaths, Transcendental Meditation’s mantra repetition), attention rests on a single object. When the mind wanders—as it inevitably does—the meditator notices the distraction and returns focus to the object. Over time, this repetition strengthens sustained attention and reduces mental agitation.

Insight practices (vipassana, Zen shikantaza, dzogchen) emphasize open awareness: observing sensations, emotions, and thoughts as they arise without clinging or aversion. The goal is not tranquility but direct perception of impermanence, interdependence, and the constructed nature of the self.

Devotional and visualization practices (Tibetan deity yoga, loving-kindness meditation, Christian centering prayer) engage imagination and emotion, directing attention toward qualities like compassion, gratitude, or divine presence.

Meditation can be practiced solo or in groups, in silence or accompanied by chanting, and in sessions ranging from five minutes to multi-day retreats.

Meditation Today

Contemporary seekers encounter meditation through multiple channels. Residential retreat centers—such as Spirit Rock in California, Plum Village in France, and Goenka centers worldwide—offer intensive silent retreats lasting from weekends to months. Urban meditation studios and dharma centers provide drop-in classes, often blending instruction with discussion.

Digital platforms have democratized access: apps like Headspace, Calm, and Insight Timer deliver guided sessions to millions. Universities now offer courses in contemplative studies, and medical schools train clinicians in MBSR and Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT).

Scientific research has proliferated since the 1970s, with neuroscientists using fMRI and EEG to study how meditation affects brain structure and function. Studies have linked regular practice to changes in the prefrontal cortex, amygdala, and default mode network, though effect sizes and replicability remain subjects of debate.

Common Misconceptions

Meditation is not the cessation of thought. Beginners often expect a blank mind and interpret mental chatter as failure; in fact, noticing distraction is the practice itself.

It is not inherently religious. While rooted in spiritual traditions, secular adaptations strip metaphysical commitments, framing meditation as mental training.

It is not relaxation. Though some sessions produce calm, others surface discomfort, boredom, or suppressed emotion. Equanimity—not bliss—is the more reliable outcome.

Meditation is not a quick fix. Marketing often promises rapid transformation, but traditional teachers emphasize years of consistent practice.

Finally, it is not universally beneficial. For individuals with certain trauma histories or psychiatric conditions, meditation can exacerbate dissociation or distress; clinical supervision is sometimes necessary.

How to Begin

Start with a simple breath-focused practice: sit comfortably, set a timer for five minutes, and rest attention on the sensation of breathing at the nostrils or abdomen. When attention wanders, gently return it to the breath. Repeat daily.

For structured guidance, consider Jon Kabat-Zinn’s Wherever You Go, There You Are or Joseph Goldstein’s Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Awakening. Apps like Insight Timer offer free guided meditations across traditions. Local meditation centers—Buddhist sanghas, yoga studios, Unitarian churches—often welcome beginners to drop-in sessions.

If drawn to a specific tradition, seek teachers with established lineages and transparent training credentials. Ten-day vipassana retreats (dhamma.org) or weekend Zen sesshins provide immersive introductions, though shorter urban courses may be more accessible starting points.

Artists & teachers in this practice

Xavier RuddXavier RuddYoga TeacherMobyMobyMusicianRavi ShankarRavi ShankarMusicianSnatam KaurSnatam KaurKirtan ArtistAyla NereoAyla NereoMusicianDeva PremalDeva PremalKirtanRam Dass KhalsaRam Dass KhalsaMusicianKrishna DasKrishna DasKirtan ArtistTrevor HallTrevor HallMusicianClannadClannadMusicianMoseMoseMusicianTina MaliaTina MaliaMusician

Related terms

mindfulnessvipassanazendharmasamadhicontemplative practice
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