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Mindful Breathing
Mindfulness is true presence in the present moment, and mindful breathing is the core method to nourish lasting mindfulness. This method was taught by the Buddha in the Anapanasati Sutra (Mindfulness of Breathing), recorded fully in the Pali Canon and with equivalents found in the Chinese Āgama. For nearly 2,600 years, both the Southern (Nikāya) and Northern (Āgama) traditions have preserved the teachings on mindfulness of breathing, demonstrating the indestructibility and timeless value of this Dharma door.
Practicing conscious breathing helps us “dwell at home” with the five aggregates (form, feeling, perception, mental formations, consciousness), caring for body and mind as a king cares for the affairs of state. When there is mindfulness through the breath, we do not allow suffering, anger, or anxiety to arise chaotically, but instead welcome, recognize, and embrace them as a mother soothes her child. From the moment of waiting to hear the bell, sitting down to eat, walking meditation, to sitting meditation, simply breathing in—breathing out with awareness of the breath, body and mind become one, awakening inner security and happiness.
The process of practicing mindfulness of breathing
- Recognize the in-breath and out-breath (object of mindfulness – subject of mindfulness) without judging, simply being aware of the quality of the breath (short/long, coarse/subtle, noisy/quiet)
- Allow mindfulness to arise and continue naturally (successive conditions) on the foundation of the seed of mindfulness already present (primary condition), with the support of the sangha, the sound of the bell, and the practice environment (supporting conditions)
- Maintain continuous, simple recognition so that body and mind are in harmony, “dwelling at home” to care for the five aggregates, to transform suffering and nurture happiness that transcends time