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inner exploration

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‘Become aware of the breath, the sensation of the air passing in and out through your nostrils. As you focus in on this sensation, let everything else in your mind slowly fade away. Let all the things that have happened to you today and all the things that you have to do, all your cares, all your worries, all your troubles, slowly melt away. All you become aware of is the in and out of your breath. In…. and out…. in….. out….’

The journey from Meditation to Breath

I was sitting cross-legged in a Buddhist Gompa, listening to my teacher give instructions. It was very comforting; a still and quiet refuge from the craziness of the outside world. Whenever I stepped into the temple, the thick red carpet and scent of nag champa incense burning made me immediately relax.

While my teacher was speaking I found it very easy to concentrate. Her steady voice had a certain authority, and my mind naturally did as she asked. I focussed in on my breath, its slow steady rhythm and the in–and-out of air on my throat. My concentration narrowed, tightened, focussed. In…. and out…. in….. out….. .

I felt I could really train my mind in such a space, tame my monkey mind by improving my concentration. Make it like a smooth still lake, untroubled by ripples. Make it like the clear blue sky, untouched by clouds. Meditating on my breath was working on becoming enlightened – just as Buddha had – and that was definitely a goal worth striving for.

‘There is the outside world,’ my teacher said, ‘and the inside. Your breath is the bridge between them. You know what the outside is like; full of suffering and delusion, but do you know what the inside is like? What wonders lie inside? Remember, your breath is the bridge between them. In… and out…. In… out….’

And indeed there were wonders inside. Oceans of stillness, of peace, of strength, of love and compassion for all living beings. Big mind and big heart. Buddha mind, buddha heart. Enlightenment.

But when my teacher stopped speaking and let me meditate in silence, my meditation ended. My concentration wandered, my focus slipped. My monkey mind was back, jumping around all over the place, going anywhere but my breath. I was on the bridge and trying to get back inside, but it seemed a titanic wind was pushing against me, and the more I pushed on, the harder it pushed me back.

It was even worse when I left the refuge of the temple and tried to meditate at home. Not only was there that same wind beating me back – refusing me entrance to my inside world of wonders – but the craziness of the outside world, drenched in suffering and delusion, made the bridge feel like a dangerous place, an untethered, flapping rope bridge to cross a raging torrent. One slip and the waters would swallow and drown me.

After a while, I stopped meditating. I stopped going to the Gompa, I stopped following my teacher. Although my lack of progress in my meditation was not the primary reason in my decision, it definitely played a part. The glimpses that I had of my inside world became just memories. Enlightenment seemed again unattainable. I stepped back from the breath, from that bridge of terror, and became immersed again in the outside world.

A few years later, by chance I found myself at Conscious Breathwork in Bali, Indonesia. My experience of Buddhist breath meditation had left me cynical yet longing for something to happen. I wanted to try and cross the bridge again, but I had lost the faith that I – or even anyone else – really could.

For those of you who have experienced a Conscious Breathwork, you will know that it is nothing like a Buddhist breath meditation. There is no concentration, no focussing, no mental component at all. Just breathing, Conscious Breathing. Within a few breaths of my first session, amazingly, magically, without any effort, without even really listening to the teacher, I found myself back at the bridge, staring towards my interior world of wonders. The wind was as strong as before, perhaps stronger, the bridge more unstable, and the waters below more akin to a deluge than a river, but I was back, looking at something I thought lost to me forever.

This time though, standing at the start of the bridge, I felt strangely calm. With a flash of insight I knew what I had to do. Rather than force myself across, I took a different path. For a moment, I stood up tall and faced the wind, feeling it wrap and buffet my body. Then I let myself fall backwards into the river, letting the waters engulf and sweep me away.

You see I realised that my breath was not just the bridge, my breath was also the river. And if I just let myself go, if I abandoned my fear and followed my breath it could sweep me away not just to my inside world of wonders, but to places that I could not even imagine. A place where there was no difference between inside and out, where there was not any difference between suffering and enlightenment.

If you have the opportunity to try a Conscious Breathwork, and if you then find yourself standing in front of the wild elemental rivers of your own being, then you might find yourself letting go as well.

You could even go there right now, if you are brave enough. It’s easy. Just breathe. Consciously breathe.

In…. and out…. in….. out….

Benedict Beaumont – Founder of Breathing Space

To find out more about Benedict, take a look at his profile in Practitioners Corner

What is your personal journey?

I am a mystic that has completed that journey and so now I am looking into being more myself which means living a life according to preference, all things considered and included. I realized a while ago that life is a series of experiences, though the past can change, that ultimately repeats the pattern of desire and fulfilment. Knowing this, I am quite excited to continue discovering what seeds exist within me and are ready to bloom into my lived-reality.

What do you enjoy about breathwork and how has it helped you?

What I enjoy the most is that it is a point of connection with others and with myself. It has helped me travel the inside of my body as though I am made of mountains and valleys. What I ultimately love about the breath is that it allows me to exist and what I love most about watching it is that it brings me to new places within me that I didn’t know existed.

Where did you complete your training (or where are you still in training)?

My name is Tavisha Shummoogum and I have not completed any training towards becoming a breathwork facilitator.

What do you stand for, and what do you stand against?

I stand for truth simply because I like what feels true. I stand against holding myself fixed where I am when the natural call to action is no longer to pause and enjoy but to move forward. I love and appreciate every view along the way, but there is more to discover, more to live, more to enjoy, therefore, every now and then, I am magnetically drawn into continuing forward with curiosity, into the next, into the new, into the mystery. Put more simply, I stand against not moving forward when that moment of tension from staying rises up. And I’d like to clarify that the action of moving forward for me is allowing the desire to come up and out from within rather than suppressing it by ignoring it. This allowance also tends to result in me being repositioned deeper within myself which is always interesting (because what else is there to know??).

What is your greatest wish for your clients

I no longer work in a field where I have clients, so I’ll casually switch the word to fans since that is the world I am walking into. My greatest wish for them is that they live a life they deserve which means a life that constantly puts them in state of awe and wonder. It means a life that renders them speechless before they can even begin to explain it. It means a life that holds them in such a way that they have no doubt they are the precious point of existence.

My Bio

What am I? I am someone who is curious enough to let life reflect me to me. More specifically, I am someone who has noticed that all of existence blooms inside my heart for me to then live a reality that can surprise me with discovery of what started within and exists without. It leads me to this awareness that all things are connected and a newfound desire to let life evidence this.

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