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   Practice, and they work synergistically. Stillness, as the low-
   ering of arousal and muscle tone, is a physical skill. Detach-
   ment is an emotional skill. The observer mind is a cognitive
   skill. Being still and doing almost nothing may seem like
   a waste of time, but it has many spin-off benefits. When we
   finish our Standard Meditation Practice, we should be phys-
   ically calm, mentally clear, somewhat refreshed, and above
   all, ready to reenter the world of action.
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   2
   Anxiety and the
   Overactive Mind
   How does a monk contemplate his states of mind? . . .
   When his mind is caught in Desire, he knows: “This
   is Desire .” When his mind is free of Desire, he knows:
   “This is the mind free of Desire .” He carefully observes
   how desire arises and passes away, and what causes
   it to do so . He learns how to extinguish desire when
   it arises, and how to prevent it arising in the future .
   In the same manner, he examines the four other
   Hindrances, namely Anger, Lethargy,
   Anxiety, and Despair .
   —Satipatthana Sutta
   When I ask my students why they want to learn to med-
   itate, one reason consistently comes out on top: They
   are too anxious. They have runaway minds and sleep poorly.
   They may also have chronic muscle tension, headaches, pain,
   and poor digestion. They feel off-color and irritable most of
   the time. Their mood is low. They feel mentally dull, unable
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   to focus or to enjoy life. If they have tried sedatives or antidepressants, those didn’t seem to work.
   This is the normal anxiety bundle. It involves the whole
   body and mind, not just mood. Psychologists try to improve
   mood but tend to neglect the body. Meditation takes the
   opposite approach. It tackles anxiety from the body up. It
   releases muscle tension, lowers agitation, and improves sleep
   as the crucial first steps.
   Anxiety is a 24/7 state of chronic arousal and muscle
   tension. Anxious people remain tenser than they need to
   be, even while they’re sleeping. Their cortisol levels remain
   elevated. They spend less time in deep sleep. They are likely
   to wake up frequently during the night, and they won’t feel
   rested in the morning.
   It can be surprisingly hard to recognize our own level of
   anxiety. It is easily masked by hyperactivity and a sense of
   excitement. When we’re young, anxiety actually makes us
   more productive because of the effects of adrenaline and
   cortisol. Over time, however, anxiety can creep invisibly into
   our habits of thought and behavior in a way that becomes
   destructive. We can easily mistake it as a normal part of our
   character (“I was born anxious”). An anxious person never
   has anxiety-free periods. It is embedded in her body in the
   form of higher baseline levels of arousal and muscle tension.
   When we finally recognize anxiety as a problem that
   could be solved, we’ve usually been anxious for years. We
   will still tend to underestimate or minimize its effects. Stu-
   dents who come to my classes often say, “I’m just feeling a bit
   anxious these days.” Fortunately, their psychologist or doctor
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   will often set them straight: “This is anxiety. It deserves to be taken seriously.”
   Pills and quick-fix palliative techniques are not much use
   against entrenched anxiety, but mindfulness is promising.
   If we build a habit of self-observation, we can gradually chip
   away at the problem. If we notice a clenched jaw or a runaway
   thought or an emotional overreaction, we can start to under-
   mine it in that very moment.
   This is the value of doing short, frequent “reset” medita-
   tions during the day. To release a tension “on the spot” is a
   small but very real improvement, and its effects are cumula-
   tive. It is much better to dissolve anxiety through hundreds
   of small adjustments rather than hoping that occasional long
   meditations will do it.
   Anxiety naturally builds on itself. If we don’t relax well,
   our baseline levels of arousal and muscle tension just keep
   increasing as the years go by. Trying to push on regardless
   can be an acceptable short-term solution, but it is dreadful in
   the long run. Trying to ignore the way we feel (that is, being
   unmindful) paradoxically increases tension, cortisol levels,
   and cognitive failings.
   We can regard anxiety as maladaptive fear. Fear and
   worry in themselves can be helpful emotions. Fear enables us
   to respond rapidly to a threat. Worry helps us anticipate and
   prepare for future problems. Anxiety, however, is directed
   indiscriminately and ineffectually toward everything. We
   lose perspective, and even small problems can feel like crises.
   Fear sharpens the mind and heightens our percep-
   tions under threat, but anxiety just makes us agitated and
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   confused. We feel bad and don’t know what to do about it.
   Fear is short-lasting, and worry should come and go accord-
   ing to circumstances, but anxiety can set in for a lifetime.
   Because fear and worry are essential to our well-being, they
   tend to stay active in the brain and body long after they have
   ceased to be useful. We do relax a bit after a stressful email or
   the drive to work, but usually not much, and not very quickly.
   A new baseline will have been set.
   After a high-energy event, we don’t relax completely. We
   settle back into a state of mild overarousal that intuitively
   feels safe, given what has just happened. We remain partially
   fired up just in case another “predator” is lurking. This edgy,
   “looking around for danger” state makes it hard for us to
   focus adequately on what we are doing. If we are habitually
   more stirred up than we need to be for the task at hand, we
   can self-diagnose this as “anxiety” or “stress.”
   We are all descendants of African ancestors who responded
   quickly and without deliberation to potential threats either
   by fighting, fleeing, or freezing. This bias toward a knee-jerk
   response doesn’t help when we have to make decisions more
   complex than “fight or flight.” Anxiety makes us think too
   quickly to be productive. It is the mental equivalent of the
   fight-or-flight response.
   Anxiety typically leads to an overactive, runaway, obses-
   sive mind. Our thoughts take over. We can’t stop them or
   direct them. We overreact to everything indiscriminately.
   Even when we are exhausted, the mind doesn’t give up, and
   its incessant chatter can keep us awake at night.<
br />
   Anxiety is like coffee. It increases arousal and energy con-
   sumption. It makes more energy available in the bloodstream,
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   but we also burn through it more quickly. Coffee in the morning charges us up, but we can feel exhausted by midafternoon.
   Anxiety depletes us in the same way. This means that we can
   feel anxiety both as high-energy agitation and as low-energy
   dullness and muddle.
   In the high-energy state, the mind is too fast. It jumps too
   rapidly from one thought to another on impulse, without
   reflection. It constantly scans the periphery for danger or
   advantage. It is easily distracted and can’t concentrate. This
   rapid thought switching can give us the illusion of being busy
   and therefore productive.
   Unfortunately, burning energy is not the same as doing
   things well. Shifting attention is always an expensive maneu-
   ver. We lose energy and a few seconds each time we shift focus
   and have to adjust our mental settings to another thought or
   action. If we do this several times a minute, we burn through
   our reserves very quickly. Multitasking is one of the most
   wasteful activities we can ever attempt to do.
   If the mind is too speedy, it doesn’t spend enough time
   with any one issue to process it adequately. We leave behind
   a trail of unfinished, ill-digested actions that we often have
   to return to and patch up afterward. For mental efficiency
   it is much better to slow down, pay attention, and keep the
   thought switching to a minimum. Just a few seconds more
   with any one issue would be a vast improvement.
   Anxiety can also be a low-energy state. When our energy is
   depleted, the mind gets too tired to focus at all. It drifts uncon-
   trollably from one thought to another at the mercy of any dis-
   traction, or it defaults to its habitual worries. It can’t follow a
   train of thought productively and often just spaces out.
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   When we are tired and fretful, we can still function and
   apparently get through the day, but there is a price. We won’t
   be mindful enough to adequately monitor what we are doing.
   We will probably be forgetful and neglect important details.
   Our mood will be poor, with little enjoyment or enthusiasm.
   We will also be worried that we are not functioning well,
   which is of course an accurate assessment.
   This combination of low energy, dull attention, scrappy
   performance, poor recall, irritability, and foul mood can make
   us feel we are not coping well at all. In fact, this is a rule-of-
   thumb definition of stress. Whether the demands on you are
   heavy or light, you can say that you are “stressed” if you feel
   that you don’t have the inner or outer resources to cope with
   them. One more email or harsh comment can make you snap.
   An estimated 10 to 20 percent of the population of devel-
   oped countries is likely to be suffering from anxiety at any
   one time, and it is a common component of other maladies.
   People with free-floating anxiety are often diagnosed as hav-
   ing a generalized anxiety disorder. About a quarter of such
   people will also face the horror of panic attacks. These sud-
   den eruptions of paralytic fear can occur without any obvi-
   ous trigger and are often mistaken for heart attacks.
   Habitual anxiety, the high-energy state, often leads inex-
   orably over the years into mild depression, the low-energy
   state. With no energy or enthusiasm, many people give in to
   a sense of futility. They get trapped in dull, obsessive, circular
   patterns of thought. They eat, drink, smoke, shop, watch TV,
   or sleep to excess, and with varying degrees of self-loathing.
   Many fall into the roundabout of legal drugs (antidepres-
   sants and sedatives). For many people, these only seem to be
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   helpful in the short term, and their benefits are by no means obvious. The legal drugs often have wide-ranging and unpre-dictable side effects over time. For many people, there is a sig-
   nificant risk that prolonged use is more likely to exacerbate
   their low mood rather than alleviate it.
   All this anguish can start with feeling just a bit anxious.
   Since chronic anxiety naturally edges upward from existing
   levels of arousal, it is well worth trying to reverse it at an early
   stage. Fairly minor interventions are usually enough to main-
   tain existing levels and prevent blowouts. With deliberate
   training, however, it is possible to reverse and virtually cure
   anxiety. It all starts with relaxing the body, and controlling
   attention and thought.
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   3
   The Breath Meditation
   Mindfully he breathes in and mindfully he breathes
   out . When inhaling a long breath, he thinks: “I
   am inhaling a long breath .” When exhaling a long
   breath, he thinks: “I am exhaling a long breath .”
   Likewise, he knows when he is breathing in or out a
   short breath . He is like a skilled turner who knows
   when he is making a long or short turn on the lathe .
   —Satipatthana Sutta
   We can define meditation very simply. It means to focus
   continuously on the breath or on the body in some
   way. This is a crude but remarkably adequate definition.
   There are dozens of possible ways of doing this, but they all
   have the same modus operandi.
   Meditation trains us to feel our bodies more vividly
   from the inside. In particular we learn to read the real-time,
   ever-changing sensations coming from the musculature and
   the internal organs. This is how we become mindful of tension,
   arousal, energy levels, balance, pain, comfort, and the quality
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   of our health at any moment. This cognitive process is called
   “interoception” (literally, “inner-perception”), and it makes our
   mental map of our bodies more accessible to consciousness.
   The technical name for this mental map is the “body
   schema.” Originally this term only applied to musculoskel-
   etal information. I’m using it a broader whole-body sense,
   as many people now do. The body schema is in fact a com-
   posite image. Signals from the muscles are mapped in the
   somatosensory cortex of the brain. Signals from the internal
   organs—the viscera—are mapped in the insula. Other signals
   are mapped elsewhere in the brain. Nonetheless, we always
   sense the body schema as an integrated whole.
   Over time a meditator cultivates a rich attunement to
   her body schema, almost without realizing it. Simply paying
   good at
tention to the body for long enough will eventually
   achieve this attunement. Many of the lasting benefits of med-
   itation rely on this feeling of being “grounded” or “centered”
   or “embodied.” This deeper, conscious familiarity with the
   body is another reason why it feels so good to meditate. With-
   out this anchor, we can easily get caught in the world of per-
   petual thought.
   Some people prefer to meditate on the breath. Others
   prefer to explore the body. This chapter will focus on breath
   meditations, and “body scan” meditations will be discussed
   in chapter 5. The distinction is somewhat arbitrary, since
   each implies the other. We couldn’t focus on the breath with-
   out also being aware of the body, and vice versa. It is simply a
   question of which is consciously in the foreground and which
   is in the background. Focusing on either is guaranteed to
   strengthen our conscious perception of the body schema.
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   The breath meditation is easy to understand and do. Body
   scanning is more complex and detailed. In the Sutta, the Bud-
   dha starts with the breath meditation and develops it imme-
   diately into the body scan meditation. In two other important
   texts from the Pali Canon, Mindfulness of the Breath and Mindfulness of the Body, he treats them as entirely separate medi-
   tations. Each of these ancient practices has developed many
   variants, but the ten-day Vipassana retreats and the MBSR pro-
   gram that introduced mindfulness to psychology both derive
   from the original meditations as described in the Sutta.
   Focusing on the breath is often presented as a complete
   description of meditation itself, but this is a mistake. Meditat-
   ing is more about cultivating total body awareness and devel-
   oping the cognitive skill of focusing itself. The breath is just
   one point of entry into the body schema. Nor does the breath
   meditation suit everyone. Many people actively dislike it
   and prefer scanning the body. Focusing on the breath makes
   some people more, not less, anxious, and many get caught up
   in the trap of trying to breathe “correctly.”
   We can make another distinction. The body scan is a superb
   way of releasing subtle muscle tension. It works directly on the
   musculoskeletal system. As soon as we notice unnecessary