The Middle Path is recommended to anyone who wants to get to know themselves - to experienced meditators, and those first becoming interested in insight or vipassana meditation, the systematic practice of mindfulness in daily life.
The Middle Path described by Dhiravamsa is neither self-mortification or self-indulgence, but rather a way of total balance. To develop "insight," to meditate, is to be aware of what is going on here and now, and to live fully in the present, without being swayed by the past or the future.
The purpose of meditating is to "see" who we are, honestly, and to learn how to "think from the heart." What we call the "heart" is just being, with no idea of center. When we see what kind of person we are - our particular qualities and weaknesses - we can open up to whatever is actually happening, without logic. Whatever arises, here and now, passes through us without our grasping ... and we can become truly active, vibrant, and spontaneous ... just who we have always wanted to be.
True wisdom springs from meditation - not from the explosive energy of suppressed conflicts, but from the nourishing flow of continuous insight. The mind becomes still, naturally, with panoramic vision. While the body may grow old, the free mind with clear insight is always young as it follows the middle path, the path of true freedom.
The Middle Path described by Dhiravamsa is neither self-mortification or self-indulgence, but rather a way of total balance. To develop "insight," to meditate, is to be aware of what is going on here and now, and to live fully in the present, without being swayed by the past or the future.
The purpose of meditating is to "see" who we are, honestly, and to learn how to "think from the heart." What we call the "heart" is just being, with no idea of center. When we see what kind of person we are - our particular qualities and weaknesses - we can open up to whatever is actually happening, without logic. Whatever arises, here and now, passes through us without our grasping ... and we can become truly active, vibrant, and spontaneous ... just who we have always wanted to be.
True wisdom springs from meditation - not from the explosive energy of suppressed conflicts, but from the nourishing flow of continuous insight. The mind becomes still, naturally, with panoramic vision. While the body may grow old, the free mind with clear insight is always young as it follows the middle path, the path of true freedom.