MEDITATION NOW OR NEVER

By Steve Hagen

"For the beginner, a lucid, no-frills introduction to Buddhist meditation. For the practitioner, a timely reminder of what meditation is all about."
—Stephen Batchelor, author of Buddhism Without Beliefs

"Clean and clear as a mountain stream. I wish I had found such a book when I began meditating. Hagen acts as 'the good teacher' offering much, needing nothing."
—Stephen Levine, author of A Gradual Awakening

"Zen priest Hagen, author of Buddhism Plain and Simple and Buddhism Is Not What You Think, offers a brief and wonderfully accessible primer on meditation, which can be a surprisingly difficult practice for many beginners. He helpfully defines meditation via negativa: meditation is not a self-help program, a quick fix, a mind-training technique or a way to relax before jumping right back into the fray of our busy lives. It's a lifelong practice that can, and should, seep into every arena of the quotidian, so that when we're attentively folding laundry or taking out the trash, we're doing meditation. It involves teaching the mind "just to be here," says Hagen. Three dozen microchapters are organized into sections on getting started, establishing a daily practice and doing meditation "for the long run." While there are a few black-and-white illustrations to get readers to try seated meditation in different postures, Hagen emphasizes that it's also okay to sit in a chair (without slouching), stand, walk barefoot or even lie down. The key is to be constant, meditating at "precisely the same time every day" and allowing the mind to settle into the present. "Meditation isn't something we apply to our life," Hagen insists. "Rather, we take it up as our life." —Publishers Weekly

"In practicing meditation, we go nowhere other than right here where we now stand, where we now sit, where we now live and breathe. In meditation we return to where we already are—this shifting, changing ever-present now."
—from the Introduction, Meditation Now or Never

 

 


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Table of Contents
Introduction: As We Live and Breathe

Part I—Getting Started

 1 It’s About Coming Back
 2 Why Bother with Meditation
 3 Things Mistaken for Meditation
 4 Sitting on the Earth
 5 Walking on the Earth
 6 What’s Your Problem?
 7 The Three Legs of Meditation Practice
 8 Bringing Meditation to Life
 9 Bringing Your Life to Meditation
10 The Ins and Outs of Breath

Part II—From Day to Day

11 Constancy
12 Sitting with Others
13 No Judgment
14 Frog Sitting
15 Stillness in Movement
16 It’s Not About Getting Things Done
17 It Couldn’t Be Simpler
18 Zero or 100%
19 Beyond Sitting Cross-Legged
20 Slowing Down
21 An Honest Question
22 Collecting the Mind
23 Sticky Sitting
24 Weather Watch
25 Compassion and Candor
26 What We Come to Realize

 

 

Part III—For the Long Run

27 Meditation Without Doing
28 Where We Lose Our Way
29 The Color of Meditation
30 Where to Put Your Energy
31 At Home in the World
32 Sounding Silence
33 Meditation Without Gimmicks
34 No Time, Place, or Size
35 Knowing Before You Think
36 Now or Never

Epilogue: It’s Up to You

Afterword: What to Look for in a Meditation Teacher

Selected Bibliography

Acknowledgments

About the Author