~One-pointed concentration
Returning attention again and again to a fixed, relatively unchanging
object sharpens and strengthens our ability to pay close attention
to life.
With concentration on seeing, the object is visual, and the practice
is to see while being awake to the fact that seeing is taking
place.
1) Choose an object that you like or love: a photograph of a loved
one; a beautiful stone, dried flower, or leaf; a candle; a piece
of jewelry....nothing too large. Stay with the same object in
each sitting.
2) Place your object far enough away so that the neck is not
strained.
3) Rest the eyes while seeing: practice relaxation whenever tension
in the body-mind becomes noticeable. If there is pressure on the
eyes, unusual visual effects, such as seeing colors or losing
focus, may occur. Blinking the eyes helps. Notice how little effort
is needed for vision to "happen."
4) Neither fight with nor entertain any images that seem to appear
in the object.
5) Sometimes it can be useful to pinpoint the vision on a tiny
detail of the object.
6) Beginning meditators may notice that their power of concentration,
or energy to keep returning to "just seeing," runs out
after ten or twenty minutes. In that case, take a mental break,
while maintaining physical stillness. After a few minutes, begin
again the practice of continually returning the attention to simple
seeing.

|