Steven Sashen
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Instant Advanced Meditation Expert

Steven Sashen Quick Facts
I was a meditation failure.
After 30 years of traditional meditation in Buddhist, Hindu and Kabbalistic lineages, I wasn't getting the benefits I had been striving for, expecting, and promised. And when I discussed this with my teachers, they admitted to the same experience in their life as well. But where they thought "more practice" was the answer, I gave up meditation... I went "cold cushion."
But my interest in consciousness and awareness and happiness hadn't gone away. So I continued examining and exploring the mind and over the next few years developed some techniques that became my personal practice, something I did on my own. And what was interesting about these techniques is that I could do them anywhere, any time. They didn't require me to leave my daily life and escape to a quiet corner of my house, let alone a retreat center.
One day, during a conversation with a friend, I mentioned these odd little techniques and she asked me to tell her about them. So, I walked her through a practice I now call "All It Is."
It took about 5 minutes to tell her how to do it -- it isn't complicated; it's just a few concepts to consider, or often-unnoticed aspects of our awareness to attend to. And then she did the practice for another 5 minutes or so...
And then she slowly opened her eyes, which were a bit moist, and said, "I've spent 20 years doing Buddhist meditation with the hope that I'd experience something like that."
More than surprised, I felt like I had just been given a huge gift. What a sweet thing to hear.
"Are there more of these?" she asked.
"About 10," I said.
"You have got to teach these," she insisted.
And so I did ;-)
The first class had both beginning meditators, people who've tried to meditate but found it difficult because they couldn't still their mind or sit quietly or didn't have the time, and people who were meditation teachers and other long-time practitioners.
What amazed me was to discover that no matter how much, or little, experience people had, they all were getting the same kinds of results -- results that most people think takes YEARS to attain. And they were all able to get those results in just 5 or 10 minutes.
Again, the gratitude I felt was immense, and the FUN of being able to share and talk about what has been my favorite conversation -- how the mind works -- was even bigger! ;-)
But I still didn't do anything whith what I was now calling Instant Advanced Meditation. In part because I didn't need to. I was retired and so I didn't need to create some new business, let alone a persona as a "meditation teacher."
Then another friend called me and said, "Steven, I just did that 'Perceiving Receiving' practice! Can I offer that recording as a bonus to people who buy the DVD of my Zen movie?"
"Sure," I said. And then I turned to my wife and added, "That would be fun if 100 or 200 people get to try this. I wonder what will happen."
Well, what happened was 1563 people signed up to try the practices, and the I got hundreds of emails from people from all around the world, all ages, and all levels of experience...each one telling me about the profound experiences they had. And most of them asking, "Where can we get more!?"
But I didn't have a "more."
Some of those who had been in the class stepped up and edited the recordings they had made, another friend introduced me to a guy who could make a set of CDs from the recordings... and now people can get the same experiences with the Instant Advanced Meditation Course online.
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***Starting a Regular Meditation Practice
Most all meditation traditions suggest practicing meditation daily. Regardless of whether you are doing a mindfulness practice or yogic meditation, a Buddhist meditation or relaxation practice, or even listening to a guided meditatio CD, daily practice is usually recommended by most meditation teachers. My first formal meditation practice was in the Kriya Yoga tradition. It was in 1972 and I was ten years old. I was instructed to meditate for thirty minutes, twice daily, with an additional two hours each weekend.
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***Meditation: A Modern Look at the Practice and Science of Meditation
I was a meditation failure. I began meditating at the age of eight when I purchased a "Hypnodisk" I saw in the novelty Johnson-Smith catalog. The manual explained how to induce a hypnotic trance, information which soon caused my teacher to write to my parents asking me to stop hypnotizing the class. But it also contained some basic meditation instructions I began using at that time. When I turned 14, my meditation practice turned serious and I learned biofeedback to help me with migraines.
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***A New Meditation for Busy People
It’s said that the Buddha admonished his students not to believe anything just because it’s taught by teachers or appears in sacred books but, instead, to examine everything carefully themselves. With that in mind, let’s take a look at some ideas about meditation. I have often wondered about the phrase "meditation practice." Tell me, just what you are practicing for? Most people say they are doing meditation practice to improve other parts of their lives that don’t have anything to do with meditation.
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***Meditation Retreats - 10 Tips to Get You Started
Here are some ideas on how to best prepare for your first meditation retreat: 1) Make sure details are handled before leaving. Pay your bills. Arrange for someone to check your messages and let them know where to reach you in case of emergency. Be sure someone will be checking on your pets and knows how to reach your vet. Record a new outgoing voicemail message so people know you will be unavailable till you get back. 2) You will forget some things… and it will bother you.
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***Daily Meditations Beginning Meditators Can Do
Those who are just starting out with meditation often try to create a daily meditation practice. People regularly ask me to talk about starting a daily practice in a similar tone to how people talk about losing weight or stopping smoking. The conversation sounds like there is some habit that needs to be overcome or acquired. Maybe I'm not the best person to ask about this, because besides going to the bathroom and breathing, there isn't really anything I can think of that I do every single day.
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***Doing a Vipassana Meditation Retreat
I've done more than twenty Vipassana meditation retreats. My first one was in 1983. I had been meditating for more than twelve years at that point, but I had never taken ten days to do nothing except meditate for fourteen hours a day. Americans interested in practicing Vipassana are likely to encounter two primary lineages for this kind of meditation. One of them was brought from Burma by Mahasi Sayadaw and is taught at the Spirit Rock Meditation Center in Califo ia and at the Insight Meditation Society in Barre, Massachusetts. You will often hear this referred to mindfulness meditation.
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***Finding a Buddhist Meditation Retreat Center
If you are looking into Buddhist meditation and you want to really go deeply into it, then the best way to do that is to go on a Buddhist meditation retreat. You can find Buddhist meditation centers just about anywhere in the world. However, having completed over thirty meditation retreats, I can tell you that there is no need to travel to some distant country to find the best meditation center. This is true even if you want to do Tibetan meditation. There is no need to go to Tibet or Nepal for a good Tibetan Buddhist retreat.
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***Finding Your Perfect Meditation Cushion
Finding the right meditation supplies, especially the perfect meditation cushion, can feel lot like looking for the Holy Grail. I started meditating in 1970 and since then, I've tried almost every kind of meditation cushion ever created. I've spent so much time on this I even tried to design the ideal meditation cushion myself, contemplating how to make something that would hold my spine perfectly straight, let my knees be comfortable and my back to be free of pain.
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***Why Isn’t Meditation Instruction Free?
“Meditation teachers should offer their instruction for free.” About once a month, I get an email telling me that. Often, I hear this from people who have studied with meditation teachers in India or have visited ashrams where they weren’t asked for payment for classes they took. This gave them the idea that the teachings were free, even though they may have paid for room and board. The reality in these places is more complicated than it looks, however.
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***Learning Meditation Where You Live
It is easier than ever to get meditation instruction where you live. You can find meditation classes in almost any American city. I’ve see YMCA's in the middle of nowhere offer free meditation instruction. At one time, you could have listed all of America’s spiritual and meditation retreat centers in a book you could put in your back pocket. You can now find meditation centers and meditation teachers in every state in the Union, often no more than a few hours away. Back in 1970, when I started meditating, there weren’t very many books on meditation.
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***How to be a Meditation Teacher
Want to learn how to teach meditation? It’s simple. You can turn yourself into a meditation teacher in less than five minutes by following these easy steps. First, pick a simple meditation technique and practice describing how to do it. You don’t have to be able to do it yourself, just be able to explain to others how it is supposed to be done. Don’t know any meditation techniques? No problem. Just do a search for free meditation techniques online. Or you can try using this one: Pay attention to your breathing. Be aware of your in-breath; be aware of your out-breath.
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***How To Meditate
"How to Meditate" In 1970, I saw this title on a small ad in the back of a comic book. I could learn to meditate for just $1, the ad promised. “Secrets of ancient yogi masters revealed: achieve psychic powers, control the mind!” Learning to meditate like a monk through this step-by-step course was only four quarters away. I could hardly wait.
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