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Breathing into Form: Body Contemplation, Tàm & Quý, and the Art of Daily Mindfulness
Meditation on the first skandha, form—our body—begins by making peace with it. There are four objects (foundations) of mindfulness:
- body
- feelings
- mind (consciousness)
- objects of mind (perceptions)
Mindful breathing (Ānāpānasati) is the vehicle that brings us back to these realms. By breathing in and out with awareness—“Breathing in, I know I’m breathing in. Breathing out, I smile.”—we reconnect with our body, embrace its conflicts and wrongs, and open to understanding that leads to freedom.
Contemplation of the body unfolds in two stages:
-
Body (+breath)
• as a whole
• in its four positions (standing, walking, sitting, lying)
• in its various movements
• in its parts -
Four elements (Mahābhūta)
• earth (solidity)
• water (liquidity)
• fire (heat)
• air (wind, breath)
By practicing “contemplation of the body in the body,” we remove the frontier between subject and object, cultivating nirvikalpajñāna, the wisdom of non-discrimination.
Every daily act—walking, raking leaves, washing dishes—becomes a work of art when performed mindfully, abolishing the divide between means and end. Two wholesome mental formations support our sincerity:
• tàm: personal shame at neglecting practice
• quý: shame that arises when witnessing another’s solid practice
These fuel our growth as students, teachers and siblings in the Dharma. In the refuge of the Sangha—like white chrysanthemums turning violet under shared light—we learn to trust this living community to carry us toward solidity, freedom and joy.