Challenges You May Face When You Meditate
Being able to stay focused when you meditate is one of the main challenges that you face when you first engage in meditation. In meditation, you focus on your breathing or an object and try to clear your mind. Thoughts will start to come to mind, which you should acknowledge and then let them pass on.
Sometimes, if you are feeling stressed about some situation, thoughts of this may overpower you and you feel as if you should dwell on these to try to find a solution. Forcing the issue is not the way of meditating and will keep you from the true purpose.
When you first start your meditating session, you need to have a place where you will be free from distractions. This includes noise and images. You can block out the images by closing your eyes, but the daily sounds are often more difficult to block out. This is why most people choose the early morning hours to practice spiritual meditation. The rest of the household is asleep so you have some time to yourself when you won’t be interrupted.
Learning the various positions and being able to hold them for a length of time is a challenge for beginners. While most people have the idea that you have to be in a sitting position to meditate, you can meditate when you are walking, lying down, kneeling or standing. The sitting positions are the hardest to master, even when you sit on a chair because it is hard to maintain the same position for up to 30 minutes at a time.
The half lotus position is the one most prefer to use when meditating in a sitting position. To do this, you sit cross legged with the foot of one leg resting on the thigh of the other leg. The other foot is resting on the floor under the opposite thigh. The most difficult sitting position is the full lotus in which you have both feet resting on the thighs of the opposite legs and your knees touching the floor.
When you start to meditate, you also have to give yourself a few minutes at the beginning for your mind and body to relax. It takes a few minutes for this to happen and for your breathing to become regular. You have to let the tenseness out of the muscles in your back and neck and learn to breathe deeply. This means breathing in through your nose so that you take in the maximum amount of oxygen which can then get to the deepest portions of your lungs. Hold the breath for a second and let it out slowly.
There are no rules for meditating. The main goal is for you to see results from the session – whether this is simply a way of relaxing, finding a solution to your problems or finding a way of reaching a state of inner peace and calm. During the session, you do not allow your thoughts to consume you and through this you can learn to see and understand them in a different way.
The object is to meditate so that you become more effective in the way you handle the stresses of life so that you don’t act impulsively and become angry over every little thing. Once you grasp this concept, you will be able to have a happier life.
Sometimes, if you are feeling stressed about some situation, thoughts of this may overpower you and you feel as if you should dwell on these to try to find a solution. Forcing the issue is not the way of meditating and will keep you from the true purpose.
When you first start your meditating session, you need to have a place where you will be free from distractions. This includes noise and images. You can block out the images by closing your eyes, but the daily sounds are often more difficult to block out. This is why most people choose the early morning hours to practice spiritual meditation. The rest of the household is asleep so you have some time to yourself when you won’t be interrupted.
Learning the various positions and being able to hold them for a length of time is a challenge for beginners. While most people have the idea that you have to be in a sitting position to meditate, you can meditate when you are walking, lying down, kneeling or standing. The sitting positions are the hardest to master, even when you sit on a chair because it is hard to maintain the same position for up to 30 minutes at a time.
The half lotus position is the one most prefer to use when meditating in a sitting position. To do this, you sit cross legged with the foot of one leg resting on the thigh of the other leg. The other foot is resting on the floor under the opposite thigh. The most difficult sitting position is the full lotus in which you have both feet resting on the thighs of the opposite legs and your knees touching the floor.
When you start to meditate, you also have to give yourself a few minutes at the beginning for your mind and body to relax. It takes a few minutes for this to happen and for your breathing to become regular. You have to let the tenseness out of the muscles in your back and neck and learn to breathe deeply. This means breathing in through your nose so that you take in the maximum amount of oxygen which can then get to the deepest portions of your lungs. Hold the breath for a second and let it out slowly.
There are no rules for meditating. The main goal is for you to see results from the session – whether this is simply a way of relaxing, finding a solution to your problems or finding a way of reaching a state of inner peace and calm. During the session, you do not allow your thoughts to consume you and through this you can learn to see and understand them in a different way.
The object is to meditate so that you become more effective in the way you handle the stresses of life so that you don’t act impulsively and become angry over every little thing. Once you grasp this concept, you will be able to have a happier life.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Daily Meditation - Spiritual Support for Today's World
- The Spiritual Heart and Everyday Spiritual Practices and Exercises: A Mystic’s Journal Entries: May 31 and June 1, 2006
- The Healing Benefits of Meditation
- Meditation, a way of life
- Benefits of Meditation
- Guided Meditation: The Key to Good Physical and Mental Health
- Active Contemplation: Meditation Class: A Mystic’s Journal Entry: November 9, 2006
- Meditation Class: The Chaplet of St. Michael the Archangel & The Arrival of Oleg Alexander: A Mystic’s Journal Entries: July 25 - 27, 2006
- The Trinity of Powers in the Soul; Meditation Class : A Mystic's Journal Entry December 1, 2005
- On Meditation, the Ego and the Soul: An Interview with author Laurie Conrad by Diana Souza.
- Consciousness vs Thought: Meditation Class: A Mystic's Journal Entry April 22, 2007
- Supernatural Fragrances Return: A Chapter on Mystical Prayer: Meditation Class: A Mystic’s Journal Entry: January 31, 2007
- A Mystic’s Journal Entry: Meditation Class: Mystical Contemplation and the felt Presence of God: Chapter IV of "The Ways of Mental Prayer", May 3, 2006.
- Prayer and Meditation: A Mystic's Journal: Entry January 30, 2005
- Holosync Meditation - Does It Really Work?
- Meditation Helps Brain Focus: could Help with Attention Deficits
- Meditation Can Alter Your Genes
- Can We Train Our Brains Through Compassion Meditation?
- Meditation Timers Aid in Reaching Full Relaxation & Enlightenment
- Post-partum Meditation and Relaxation for Beginners
- Chakra Meditation for Beginners
- Chanting a Mantra - You can’t Go Wrong
- The Difference between Meditation and Prayer
- Meditating Without Relaxation: The Unnatural Positions Technique
- Beauty Parlor For the Soul – Meditation
- Filling Your Mind in Order to Empty It
- Healing on a Cellular Level through Meditation
- Holosync Meditation
- Mindfulness Meditation Slows HIV
- The Power of Positive Chanting
- Rosary Meditation
- Meditation vs. Medication
- Meditation? Me? - Why Even You Should Meditate
- The Zafu in Meditation
- "Idiot’s Guide" Provides Best Overall Meditation Information



