Mental & Emotional Health Spiritual HealthThe Benefits of Meditation and Waking Up By Barb Schmidt Waking Up is a daily morning meditation that helps you tap into your inner source of strength and wisdom. These quiet minutes establish your intention to be present and mindful throughout the day. This morning meditation helps to calm, center, and empower you as you establish a peaceful state of mind. It enables you to greet life’s challenges and opportunities from a grounded place. Embrace this simple morning routine and discover its life-changing benefits!The Waking Up Meditation practice accommodates a busy lifestyle. If you’re new to a meditation practice, it’s perfectly fine to start with five minutes. After meditating consistently for a week or more, you may feel a desire to lengthen your meditation. For me, the ideal time is 30 minutes. I recommend that you meditate for the length of time that feels right for you. The main purpose is to have a meditation practice that is consistent. You wake up and meditate every morning before beginning your day.Countless variations for meditating exist. If you already meditate, feel free to use your current method or adapt elements of the Waking Up Meditation below.1. Dedicate a quiet place to practice your meditation. Sit on a chair, cushion, or the floor with your head, neck, and spine in a straight line and your back supported. Find a comfortable position, but not so comfortable that you fall asleep.2. Close your eyes. Take a few deep, cleansing breaths. Breath is your first and last relationship with your inner self in life. Focusing on your breath calms and connects you with your inner self during meditation.3. Breathe normally and release any distractions that come up. Focus on your breath, and then slowly repeat a spiritual text, prayer or your Sacred Mantra until your mind quiets. As thoughts come up, which they will inevitably do throughout the meditation, allow them to pass without engaging them.4. As your concentration deepens, your nervous system relaxes. Resist any temptation to sleep by bringing your body away from the wall or chair temporarily. If necessary, open your eyes or stand up for a moment. Be patient; sleep is something that comes to all of us who meditate. The whole aim is to stay awake, let the thoughts in your mind come and go, and stay in your meditation chair or cushion for the length of your time.5. You may wish to end your meditation time with a personal prayer, spiritual reading, or some quiet time. Notice how you feel. Establish your intention to carry this thread of peacefulness from your meditation throughout your day.6. As you leave your meditation space, call upon your Sacred Mantra, repeating it silently as you walk into the new day.Barb Schmidt is an international speaker, philanthropist, spiritual mentor, and best-selling author of The Practice. She has devoted more than 30 years to her studies with inspirational leaders such as Deepak Chopra, Thich Nhat Hanh, Scott Peck, Buddhist nun Tenzin Palmo, Thomas Merton scholar James Finley, and Marianne Williamson. For more information, visit www.barbschmidt.com and www.peacefulmindpeacefullife.org. Share this: