The Buddhist concept of Mahamudra (Sanskrit for "the
great gesture") is a brilliant idea. Some people spend their entire
lives studying it, so obviously there's more to it than I can share
in this brief article, but the basic idea is simple:
According to Buddhism, everybody is enlightened,
but most people live as though they don't know they're enlightened.
Mahamudra simply means, while you're waiting to realize you're enlightened,
live as though you already know it.
It might be difficult to live enlightened all the
time, but not so difficult to live enlightened for one moment —
here's how:
#1 Focus on the present moment.
Give the moment your fullest attention and explore its details.
To keep your mind from straying, focus on feeling your body.
#2 Regard the present moment as perfect.
The present moment is the way it is whether you find fault with
it or not. The enlightened attitude is to let go of negative judgment,
stop comparing things to how you think they should be, and let the
present moment be perfect— since it is.
#3 Relax about it. There's no sense
getting tense about what's perfect.
#4 Acknowledge that although you
cannot do anything about the present moment, you are always doing
something anyway. The present moment simply is the way it is and
you can't do anything about it. Obviously you can do anything you
want, but by the time you've done something, it's no longer the
same moment. However, part of what exists in the present moment
is you, and you are doing something. You came into this world with
energy, with momentum, and that momentum is carrying you forward
even now.
#5 Breathe the Breath of Enlightenment.
You have to breathe, and there are many different ways you can breathe.
The Breath of Enlightenment means breathing in the way that best
supports all the Elements of Enlightenment.
The Breath of Enlightenment is a continuous breath,
with no pauses anywhere, so your consciousness is also continuous.
It emphasizes the inhale, taking in the perfection of the moment.
The exhale is completely relaxed — not controlled in any way — so
your entire being can relax. To assist your concentration on the
feelings in your body, imagine that each inhale enters your body
through the sensation that is strongest at the moment. This enables
you to draw the feeling into your awareness at the same time you
draw the breath into your body.
These Five Elements of Enlightenment correspond to
The Five Elements of Vivation, which I developed in 1979. Numbered
in a different order, The Five Elements of Vivation are:
#1 Circular Breathing
#2 Complete Relaxation
#3 Awareness in Detail
#4 Integration into Ecstasy
#5 Do Whatever You Do — Willingness is Enough
Each of The Five Elements is a skill. You apply all
Five Elements simultaneously, allowing your body to present you
with the feeling-level awareness of whatever you have not been acting
enlightened about. By applying The Five Elements you get a mini-enlightenment
experience, called an "integration," embracing some aspect
of life that you had previously resisted, dropping a problematic
behavior, and experiencing a creative breakthrough.
Vivation teachers lead students through experiential
exercises to develop the students' skill with each of The Five Elements.
Then they lead them through a complete Vivation session, which results
in many Integrations and a more harmonious, creative and heart-felt
movement through life.
To understand the breathing, you must realize that
the breathing itself is not what causes the result in Vivation;
what causes the result is application of all Five Elements. The
breathing, when used optimally, does not change the way you feel,
it enables you to feel what you already feel in greater detail.
The breathing doesn't give you a better feeling than you already
have, it connects you more consciously with the Ecstasy that is
within you naturally in every moment. As you pass through sadness,
rage, fear or pain, you experience Enlightenment in the midst of
all of these feelings — you experience Ecstasy, unconditionally.
Why is the breathing so important? Your body is more
than bone, blood and matter. The body is a dynamic energy system.
The energy in your body moves in waves, just as everything in nature
does. Many things affect the flow of energy in your body: what you
eat, what you think, your environment. But the biggest factor is,
by far, your breathing. Circular Breathing has the purpose of uniting
your conscious mind with your unconscious, bringing your spirit
into your body, making you aware of the play of creativity going
on throughout your entire being all the time. It balances the energy
in your body and highlights the areas where a resistance can be
embraced.
Circular Breathing does this by sending high-amplitude,
slow-frequency waves of energy through your body. Within a few minutes
of starting Circular Breathing, you become more aware of your body
as an energy system. Circular Breathing works together with the
other Elements to empower you to embrace emotions you've been resisting,
which have been limiting your enjoyment of life and your effective,
creative action.
The waves of energy created by Circular Breathing
produce a pleasurable pulsing through your body that soothes and
relaxes your spirit at the same time it heightens your awareness.
The breathing is sometimes slow, other times fast; sometimes full
and other times shallow; you can do it in the upper part of the
lungs or the lower, breathing through either nose or mouth. The
continuity and connectedness of the breathing are essential, as
is the complete relaxation of the exhale. All other factors are
adjusted, depending on what's happening in the Vivation session
at the moment.
Breathing more fully sends higher amplitude waves
through the body, resulting in greater intensity of sensation. If
the feelings are not vivid enough to hold your attention, one thing
you do is breathe more fully. But the goal is detailed awareness,
not intensity — if the feelings are too intense you have less detailed
awareness. When the feelings are more intense than you prefer, take
smaller breaths.
Breathing faster speeds up the massaging pulses of
energy moving through your body, enhancing your awareness of the
dynamic dance of aliveness within the feeling you're exploring.
Some feelings are easier for people to embrace than others. When
feelings come up that seem uncomfortable, you speed up the breathing.
When you feel the energy dancing within the grief or pain, you will
be able to embrace it easily. When bliss or other pleasant feelings
are coming up, you breathe slowly, to drink in the delicious details
of the feeling. This is what people do naturally. When standing
on top of a mountain taking in the beautiful vista, people naturally
breathe slowly and fully. When they stub their toe on a sofa they
breath fast and shallowly.
You can focus your attention on a feeling in the
upper part of your body more easily when you're breathing in the
upper part of your lungs. When the strongest feeling is in the lower
part of your body, you can explore that more easily by breathing
in the lower part of your lungs. If you simply remember to pull
the breath in through the strongest feeling, you automatically place
the breath correctly.
Whether to breathe in and out through the nose or
in and out through the mouth is a matter of preference — whichever
feels better is better. In Circular Breathing we never inhale through
one and exhale through the other, because this breaks up the focused
movement of energy through the body and diverts attention from the
feeling that's coming up.
With practice you can learn to play your breathing
like an instrument, making beautiful internal music in concert with
the feelings your body presents to you. Vivation is a beautiful,
healing experience of rediscovering the divinity within yourself.
After a few lessons, you'll be able to do Vivation by yourself,
whenever and wherever you wish, even while engaging in other activities.