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Why The Best Meditation Requires Feedback

Carol McMahon | 05-14-2010 | Meditation | Viewed: 219 | Bookmark and Share
Article Summary Meditation is a skill like any other. You can do it poorly or you can excel. Most who meditate fail to excel because meditation lacks feedback -- something necessary for skill learning. Here a research psychologist shows how to add feedback and upgrade your practice to the best meditation.
What do you gain from meditation? Consider what could be. Imagine a “world of peace and ease,” yours without changing a thing. Imagine perfect mental balance: “a balance of mind never upset by any event under the canopy of heaven.” Meditation holds promise of: “Great Liberation;” “Great Knowledge;” “Great tranquility.” Great promise however is rarely fulfilled.

Most who meditate gain rest and relaxation, and little more. The shortfall is due to a flaw in traditional methods. This flaw prevents the growth of practice skill, holding benefit to the beginner level. (Some get even less effective with practice.) Meditation’s flaw is the lack of feedback necessary for learning. Let me explain.


Meditation: What’s Missing?

To a research psychologist with an interest in skill learning, meditation is missing something. Practicing any skill leads to improvement only if you can see what you are doing. In basketball for instance, shooting hoops in darkness would only waste time because knowledge of results is required for learning. The rule applies equally to meditation.


Shooting Hoops In Darkness? Why Meditation Requires Feedback

In meditation, attention is the skill you need to develop. Benefits increase with power of concentration.

While attending however (to your breath; a mantra, etc), attention slips away unseen. Like shooting hoops in darkness, you practice meditation without knowing you’re on target. You lose attention without knowing you are losing it, and find out only later when you wake from a daydream.

All traditional methods share this flaw. They lack feedback. They offer no way to monitor attention, yet amazingly, the necessary feedback is right before our eyes and has been there all along, unrecognized. Here’s how to find it.


Finding Feedback Right Before Your Eyes!

Throughout meditation’s long history, sensations of light have been noted. “Illumination” is described; light is seen at enlightenment. We failed however, to see the cause of this light. We never knew it was visual feedback – the very thing needed to excel at meditation.

Light sensations are produced when focused attention holds the eyes still. Here a “fixed image” (an image held in the same place on the eyes retinas) uses up photo pigment (like exposing photographic film). Retinal fatigue follows, and with it distortion in the form of light.

This light signals attention. It tells you you’re on target. When your mind wanders, your eyes wander too and the light disappears, signaling loss of attention. Use the light as feedback and you can see what you are doing. You gain the same advantage as seeing your target shooting hoops. Practice skill improves automatically. The key to great benefit is right before your eyes.


The Feedback Meditation Method How-To

Producing feedback is as easy as gazing at a spot on the floor. Focusing Discs however, specially designed to facilitate feedback, are freely available at the Straight Line Meditation website. These assure beginners instant success. Focus on the bull’s eye and feedback comes within seconds. Attend to the light and you anchor attention. Then you can hold attention the way you would grab a rope for a tow. You’re taken straight to the best meditation.


How Feedback Upgrades Meditation Practice

Feedback upgrades meditation practice by eliminating the shortfalls of traditional methods. It puts an end to:
* Wasted practice time. (With traditional methods, even with the best intentions, time is spent dreaming and drifting when you'd hoped for attention.)
* Slow, or even no practice skill development. ("After twenty years," warned a Zen Master, "you can finally say you've begun to learn how to sit.")
* Slow, unreliably progress. (Traditional methods yield slow, unreliable benefit. “Just sit,” says Buddhism, “Maybe after many lifetimes you will come upon the truth.")

These shortfalls are due to the inefficiency of traditional methods. Feedback counters the problem with precision self-guidance. It gives you a personal (meditation) trainer with a constantly vigilant eye. The outcome is fast, sure, practice skill development and productive use of every minute of practice time.

It’s how well you meditate (not necessarily how long), that determines your benefit. Feedback lets you trade hours spent meditating for minutes on target. Great benefit awaits the best meditation, and the best meditation requires feedback.
Carol McMahon As a National Science Foundation Trainee, Carol earned a Doctorate in the psychology of human learning from Penn State University. National Institute of Mental Health and American Philosophical Society grants followed and Carol published widely in distinguished journals including the American Journal of Psychology. Her book WHERE MEDICINE FAILS (paperback 2009), was a driving force in the holistic health movement. Discovery of a feedback meditation method, however, and the breakthrough it produced, redirected Carol’s life to teaching, testing and refining the method and to crafting enlightenment tests to guide readers. The work culminated in 2009 with: STRAIGHT LINE MEDITATION: HOW TO RESTORE AWARENESS AND WHY YOU NEED TO by Carol E. McMahon, Ph.D. with martial arts Master Deac Cataldo. She is married, has a daughter, holds a seventh degree black belt in Karate, and makes her book available free of charge to retreat centers and prison libraries. She invites you to experience meditation's true power at: http://www.StraightLineMeditation.com and http://www.TheBestWayToMeditate.com.

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Carol McMahon

As a National Science Foundation Trainee, Carol earned a Doctorate in psychology from Penn State University. National Institute of Mental Health and American Philosophical Society grants followed and Carol published widely in distinguished journals including the American Journal of Psychology. Her book WHERE MEDICINE FAILS (paperback 2009), was a driving force in the holistic health movement. Discovery of a feedback meditation method, however, and the breakthrough it produced, redirected Carol’s life to teaching, testing and refining the method and to crafting enlightenment tests to guide readers. The work culminated in 2009 with: STRAIGHT LINE MEDITATION: HOW TO RESTORE AWARENESS AND WHY YOU NEED TO by Carol E. McMahon, Ph.D. with martial arts Master Deac Cataldo. She is married, has a daughter, holds a sixth degree black belt in Karate, and makes her book available free of charge to retreat centers and prison libraries. More at: http://www.StraightLineMeditation.com and http://www.TheBestWayToMeditate.com.

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