JonW wrote:'Maybe you could also practice 3 times per day for 5 minutes?'
This is a great suggestion.
As Peter says, you can't realistically expect to see much change if you only commit five minutes per day. In that time, there simply isn't enough time for you to meet the kind of resistance that is at the heart of serious practice.
What kind of resistance are you meeting in that five minutes that makes it so challenging, Spikey? Is it an overactive mind? Physical discomfort? Boredom? Something else?
As a teacher, at the end of an eight-week course, I encourage participants to keep their practice fresh by mixing up their meditations. Do as much sitting practice as possible. But throw in body scans, walking meditations, mindful movement etc.
Also, Peter and myself are big believers in the idea of reading as part of practice. My own practice is sustained by reading a lot of books, not just on mindfulness/meditation, but also Zen, non-duality, spirituality, poetry etc. All of it keeps me grounded in my practice.
The key is to keep remembering to be mindful. And there's no substitute for daily practice. That's the only way.
Cheers,
Jon
The resitance that I meet is that I find it boring and often after a minute I'm hoping that the meditation is aleady over - and sometimes also physical discomfort. Also I find it hard to experience that my thoughts come in randomly because it feels I'm those thoughts - even though I know I'm not those thoughts they still feel like me when I'm in them and it is often hard for me to feel myself because they have an very strong influence on how I experience myself and the world. They are not clouds passing by for me like many like to use as a metaphor.
I find resistance in a lot of things. I'm busy with an IT training - and even though this training is very good for me - I keep getting very strong resistance working on it 1-2 hour a day. And this counts for many things in life that I want to do. This might also have to do with my depression