The cultivation of mindfulness requires periods of focused
attention. Many proponents of
mindfulness maintain that this is best developed through seated, silent
meditation. So, while I’d like to
investigate how to focus the attention, we must first consider our relationship
with silence.
Whether in the center of a city or deep in a forest, the
cacophony of sounds around us makes it apparent that true silence is
impossible. Composer John Cage wrote
music that included long periods of silence.
When the musicians stopped playing, concertgoers were quickly confronted
with the shuffling, shifting, and coughing sounds in the concert hall. So what is silence? I like to think of it as the absence of
intentional sound. Intentional sounds
are the things we turn on such as TVs and iPods, the words spoken or heard in a
conversation we are engaged in, music we make such as humming or tapping, and
the noise of tools, keyboards, or other objects we are interacting with. Sounds that remain are unavoidable. So silence is when we are purposefully
quiet. For many of us, this can be
unsettling.
A study of 580 undergraduate students undertaken over six
years, reported by Bruce Fell on The Conversation website, shows that the
constant accessibility and exposure to background media has created a mass of
people who fear silence. This study, along with research by Drs. Michael
Bittman of the University of New England and Mark Sipthorp of the Australian
Institute of Family Studies argues that “their need for noise and their
struggle with silence is a learnt behavior.”
This cannot be blamed on the relatively recent rise of social media and
24 hour availability. For so many of
these students’ lives the TV was always on, even when no one was watching, and
that was often the case for their parents while growing up as well. If the background noise of media has always been
with us, it’s no wonder we can become so uncomfortable when it’s taken away.
Lest I try to pass myself off as a contemplative or a
meditation master, I confess that I have my own difficulty with silence. My wife and I, city dwellers, were staying in
a house far from the city. It was
rustic, with no TV, radio, or internet. When
we went to bed it was so dark and quiet it was unsettling. We couldn’t sleep! If I miss a few days meditating in a row, as
I did in the busyness of the recent holidays, I find it very challenging to
break away and begin my practice again.
And when I am in a difficult episode, riddled with self-doubt,
nervousness or anxiety, the last thing I want to do is turn off all of the
media that distracts me from my insecurity.
But I soon realize that distractions can exacerbate the difficulty. I get back to fixed periods of silence,
return to the discipline of my practice, and heal.
If the fear of silence is a learned behavior, it can be
unlearned. This can be undertaken
through mindfulness meditation and focused attention. To develop focused attention, you may want to
begin by confronting the experience of silence.
Turn everything off, go to as quiet a place as you can find, and sit for
a few minutes. Take in the environment. Just experience the present moment and allow
what is around you to exert itself. If
you find yourself agitated or ill-at-ease, start with very short periods of
quiet. Turn off the TV when washing the
dishes. Drive without the radio on. Walk the dog without the iPod or phone. You will reap benefits. And slowly, as silence is embraced, you will
find comfort there.
No comments:
Post a Comment