Choiceless Awareness - opening to the flow of life

Post here if you have been practising for a while, and you are starting to get your head around what this is all about. Also post here if you are a long-term practitioner with something to say about the practice.
Happy Buddha
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Practice Mindfulness Since: 01 Jan 1989
Location: Leicestershire, UK and Europe
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Tue Mar 25, 2014 4:29 pm  

CHOICELESS AWARENESS AND OPENING TO THE FLOW OF LIFE

I spent many years trying to get somewhere in meditation, I tried to be calm, I tried to feel good, I tried to have only positive thoughts. I tried very hard to get rid of all my "bad" feelings and have only "good" ones and I tried get into higher states of consciousness. God loves a trier they say, but it didn't seem to be doing me much good. Then I came across a teaching called Choiceless Awareness and I was intrigued. I was intrigued mainly because I was trying very hard to "choose" my experience and it didn't seem to be bringing me much calm and joy.

Choiceless awareness is the way of mindfulness and effortlessness. That doesn’t mean to say it is easy. It is a way of opening to experience rather than trying to control it. When we “practice” choiceless awareness meditation everything about ourselves is allowed to arise and to pass away in its own time and in its own way. It is a way of sitting loose to ourselves rather than frantically trying to manipulate and control our experience into what we want it to be, or how we think it should be.

What I realised by bringing choicelessness into my mindfulness practice was that I was aligning myself with the natural way of things. The natural way is for all things to arise and to pass away. What I had been doing for many years in meditation was to deny this natural flow that is life. I realised I was frightened of life. Life isn't something we can hold onto, and if we attempt to do this it creates stress and suffering, because we are denying a simple but profound fact of life – what arises, passes. We could say that meditation is waking up to the facts of life...that what comes into being will eventually pass away, but we don't want to hear this. We want to think that we are a fixed and separate being and not part of life, but a-part from life, even though we long to be at one with it. Our efforts go into maintaining this sense of a fixed and permanent entity and it uses up a lot of energy often leaving us exhausted.

We not only want ourselves to be fixed and unchanging (even though paradoxically we want to change) we want all that brings us pleasure and comfort in life such as possessions and reputation to do the same. When we hold onto things emotionally the result is pain because the law of nature is what appears also disappears. When we grasp after pleasure the possibility of pain is alway there. It is like picking up a stick - you pick up one end and the other end comes with it. You cannot have a stick with only one end. It is the same with pleasure and pain. If you attach to pleasure you will get pain too. However, if we can welcome pleasure and indeed enjoy it without grasping then pain does not arise. This is something we all have to work out for ourselves in our own experience - this is the stick with only one end - amazing isn’t it!!!

I remember for years how I used to have a view that to be happy and peaceful I had to keep any unhappy thoughts and any un-peaceful feelings out of my experience. What I was actually doing was repressing energy and aspects of myself that wanted to follow the flow of life, to arise into consciousness and pass away. Fortunately I came across teachers who had been through the same process and were kind and wise enough to pass on what they had learned.

What I realised is that peacefulness isn't something that I can create through choosing what to experience. I had to have the courage to open to all of my experience and to let it be. Letting it be means to allow it into awareness. It means to feel what I may not want to feel because I have a view that it's bad for whatever reason. Letting things be isn't passive. It means being gently curious about what is happening in the body, feeling all the tensions, all the tight areas, it means feeling the open and expansive parts too. We bring things into awareness and that's all we need to do. We cannot trust that life will always be what we want it to be, but we can trust in awareness of it.

We cannot open ourselves in a flash - it takes patience, kindness and sensitivity toward ourselves. But if we are willing to be choiceless more and more as time goes on we will see a change. We realise that the peace we were striving for by trying to control our experience happens when we don't need to control our experience anymore. We can come to see that who we are is not limited to the contents of awareness but we are also the very spacious awareness in which they appear.

We all intuitively know that there is something about us that is boundless, limitless and joyful. However, when we turn back to our experience we certainly don’t experience ourselves as boundless, limited and joyful. Often our experience is just the opposite. We experience ourselves as very limited and unhappy. However, the unlimited and joyful has not gone away, but has been covered over by views, desires and fears that we spend our time sometimes following and other times battling against. The unbounded and joyful is our true nature and is not a thing in itself. It is like the sky, the sky exists but is not a thing in itself – it is the absence of things - but yet it exists.
You cannot grab the sky and put it in your pocket nor can you bottle it, but it’s there.

The intuitive sense of boundlessness and at the same time the experience of pain and limitation is often referred to as the holy war. The more we open and listen intuitively to the call of the unlimited the more it manifests in our life. But we must also work with the limited. We must face the fears, desires and anxieties that we have as humans on this earth. This is where being choiceless is helpful. When we practice choiceless awareness we let go of any object or focus of meditation. We observe anything and everything as it arises. We observe any judgments and opinions and let them go by like clouds in the sky. We watch and listen to any uncertainty and doubts about how we are doing. We notice thoughts and bodily sensations as they arise into awareness and watch then change too. In other words we are choiceless about what we give our attention to.

There is nothing that is given attention because we want more of it as in pleasant feelings or that we want to get rid of it as in unpleasant sensations. However, if the urge to get rid of something unpleasant arises that too is given space and allowed to follow its course. The practice of choicelessness is the opening to nature’s way. Nature’s way is that life appears in certain forms for a while changes and passes away. As this arising and passing away becomes clearer to us we see that there is no permanency to any of our experience and that none of this really belongs to us – it just happens. Just like the heart beats, the blood flows and the body breathes without any effort on your part.

Mindfulness allows us to sit at ease with the flow of emotions, thoughts and images that pass through our being. We see more clearly natures’s law – that all is changing moment by moment. But we also see something else that we had ignored all our lives – we begin to notice space.

When I walk into a room what I notice are objects in the room. I notice curtains, carpets, chairs and maybe people. I notice the walls with pictures hanging and I notice the ceiling. What I don’t notice is the space. What I immediately do when I enter a room is to scan the objects. It is the same with my mind. What I notice about my mind are the objects - thoughts, images and memories. If I learn to notice the space of my mind which is the purpose of choiceless meditation it brings with it a sense of ease. This is because we begin to realise that there is “something” other than thoughts that we can rely on. It may not be something tangible like a chair or a house – which it must be said aren’t always that reliable – but is definitely there. This is an intuitive awareness of space. We can sit and think about this spaciousness for decades and we will still be no nearer understanding it. Once we begin to trust this spaciousness - which is our natural intelligence – we then start to loosen our attachment to thoughts and this is one of the greatest blessings we can experience.

Have a go at this:
Take a seat and allow all thoughts to enter your awareness. Observe all your judgments and opinions about them - more thoughts. Notice how some make you tense, some carry you away. Some may make you feel good and some make you feel bad. Be honest here and acknowledge all that is happening. Being choiceless doesn’t mean not having reactions to whatever happens it means being honest enough to admit what is going on. It is only through this honesty that we create the right atmosphere and be at ease with passing thoughts.

www.mindfulnesscic.co.uk
Suryacitta is mindfulness teacher and author
He has been practising since 1989.
He runs regular webinars FREE for people who cannot attend classes in person
https://app.webinarjam.net/register/36719/4a30c901be
http://www.mindfulnesscic.co.uk

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Gareth
Site Admin
Posts: 1465

Tue Mar 25, 2014 10:16 pm  

It's a great post Suryacitta, I'll be putting it up as a blog in the not-too-distant future.

Choiceless awareness is something that has come more and more into my practice as time goes on. At first, I felt like I needed an anchor like sound or breath to prevent me from getting lost. I am comfortable sitting now and letting my attention go wherever it pleases. I still escort my attention back to something in the present moment when I notice that I am thinking. Is this the way that choiceless awareness is normally practised?

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piedwagtail91
Posts: 613
Practice Mindfulness Since: 0- 3-2011
Location: Lancashire witch country

Wed Mar 26, 2014 8:57 am  

we've just reached this in session 7!
i tend to just let my awareness go open or choiceless when i notice i've been lost in thought.
though going back to the anchor of the breath before opening up again works as well.
one of our practitioners uses the phrase 'allowing the awareness to go from sensation to sensation just like a butterfly moving from from flower to flower, sampling the nectar of each before moving on to the next'. naturally everyone else nicked it :)

Happy Buddha
Posts: 54
Practice Mindfulness Since: 01 Jan 1989
Location: Leicestershire, UK and Europe
Contact:

Wed Mar 26, 2014 9:32 am  

That's nice! What we need to do at some point to is to move on from "my" awareness. Awareness is not personal but an impersonal "function" of the universe. To see this for oneself try this. Try NOT to be aware right now. Impossible isn't it.

What we need to remember is that there is never an arrival point with this. if we think we have achieved something then it is guaranteed to not be it - WHY? Because there is no it. The mind is like a Russian doll with layers upon layers each layer more and more subtle masquerading as the end point or the point of it all.

When I practice choiceness awareness I am not letting the mind go from sensation to sensation though that is a useful entry point. There is not allowing of anything yet there is the allowing of everything. There is no direction, no allowing or not allowing. In essence there is no control or manipulation of any sort, but if there is that is simply witnessed as a functioning of the mind and is absolutely ok.

Basically there is life happening and nobody living it - the ultimate blessing.
Suryacitta is mindfulness teacher and author
He has been practising since 1989.
He runs regular webinars FREE for people who cannot attend classes in person
https://app.webinarjam.net/register/36719/4a30c901be
http://www.mindfulnesscic.co.uk

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piedwagtail91
Posts: 613
Practice Mindfulness Since: 0- 3-2011
Location: Lancashire witch country

Wed Mar 26, 2014 4:52 pm  

i'm with you on that, but in our mbct sessions we have to be careful. it's the first time that any of the participants have meditated without a single point of focus. for most if not all it's the first time they've ever meditated, some are ok with choiceless others are a bit lost or confused at first.
so we have to put a lot of guidance into that first practice, ease them in gently.
some go on to use it others never go back to it and stick with guided meditation which i feel is a real shame, but each to their own.
they're all in a better place because of mindfulness.

Happy Buddha
Posts: 54
Practice Mindfulness Since: 01 Jan 1989
Location: Leicestershire, UK and Europe
Contact:

Wed Mar 26, 2014 5:22 pm  

Yea of course. I am really talking to experienced people here on the experienced practitioners page.

It is worth noting though that somebody completely new to this can get it - beginners mind maybe...be well good discussion.
Suryacitta is mindfulness teacher and author
He has been practising since 1989.
He runs regular webinars FREE for people who cannot attend classes in person
https://app.webinarjam.net/register/36719/4a30c901be
http://www.mindfulnesscic.co.uk

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piedwagtail91
Posts: 613
Practice Mindfulness Since: 0- 3-2011
Location: Lancashire witch country

Wed Mar 26, 2014 6:04 pm  

oops! that me just clicking on new posts and not checking where they are on the forum :)

Happy Buddha
Posts: 54
Practice Mindfulness Since: 01 Jan 1989
Location: Leicestershire, UK and Europe
Contact:

Wed Mar 26, 2014 6:36 pm  

Gareth you wrote -
Choiceless awareness is something that has come more and more into my practice as time goes on. At first, I felt like I needed an anchor like sound or breath to prevent me from getting lost. I am comfortable sitting now and letting my attention go wherever it pleases. I still escort my attention back to something in the present moment when I notice that I am thinking. Is this the way that choiceless awareness is normally practised?


Yes it is. As one's practice matures it tends to go in the direction of choiceless awareness or Just Sitting. Though it is absolutely ok to take up the breath when needed. What i find is that most people when practising CA take their attention to a variety of different sensations, sounds etc. This is not really CA -it is taking your attention to something. When practising CA there is no notion of doing anything, or going anywhere. It is complete and utter free fall - but often takes a lot of "practice" to get there.

My own practice is smilier to your unless I am on a longer retreat. Sometimes my mind may be a little to choppy so i will steady it with a gentle focus - and sometimes not.

Wonderful isn't it!!!
Suryacitta is mindfulness teacher and author
He has been practising since 1989.
He runs regular webinars FREE for people who cannot attend classes in person
https://app.webinarjam.net/register/36719/4a30c901be
http://www.mindfulnesscic.co.uk

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Gareth
Site Admin
Posts: 1465

Wed Mar 26, 2014 8:59 pm  

It certainly is.

A journey with no end - my favourite kind of journey.

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Gareth
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Thu Mar 27, 2014 10:40 am  

I tried it this morning - just sitting for half an hour without fastening my attention to anything.

It was hard and it was good at the same time. Several times I found myself further down chains of thought than I normally get when focussing on the breath or music. On these occasions, I used the breath gently to coax my attention back to the present moment, then let it go where it wanted again.

A lot of the time though, the meditation felt very natural and nourishing; I was truly sitting with whatever arose and being with whatever I found. I think it helped that my mind was quite calm today.

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