A nineteenth-century
saint was once asked, “How can one realize God?,” to
which he replied, “One must think of the Lord incessantly,
like a lawyer does with his cases.” Apparently, even the mystics
understand how our minds become saturated with our legal work. Especially
while litigating, I am amazed how my mind constantly percolates
and churns the case facts, issues, witnesses, strategies, and so
on. Truly incessant, my mind will offer its suggestions while I’m
sleeping, eating, and in my last case, showering. I laughed upon
realizing that I couldn’t even scrub without my mental voice
presenting some new angle on a potential evidentiary dispute.
There’s nothing wrong with being mentally consumed
with our work. The problem is turning down the mental volume and
slowing our mental speed when our work does not demand this involvement.
Unfortunately, overuse of our mental faculty often makes it difficult
to relax the mind at the times we intend to unwind and enjoy a break
from our work. We suffer the fate of the sorcerer’s apprentice.
If you remember the movie Fantasia, Mickey Mouse disobediently uses
his master’s magic to animate broomsticks to fill a vat with
buckets of well-water, (the apprentice’s task), but when the
job is completed, he can’t stop the magical workers from dumping
more water and flooding the castle. A drowning Mickey is saved by
the return of the sorcerer, who angrily utters the proper incantation
to stop the spell. We have created these vast and useful intellects
to do our bidding, yet without learning how to operate the shut-off
switch, our willing servants can demonize us by preventing the relaxation,
renewal, and inner peace that are necessary for our well-being.
Simply put, meditation is mind-control—you
learning how to control your own mind. Control does not mean subjugation.
The mind is obviously an essential tool. It serves us best when
treated well, and like any servant, performs optimally and according
to our wishes when it is respected and treated with kindness.
The process of meditation is simple. Sit comfortably
in a quiet place with your spine erect, head straight, and eyes
closed. Observe carefully the procession of thoughts and sensations.
Notice what is passing through your awareness, without any need
to alter your experience or change your thoughts or sensations.
Let your awareness be unconnected to the objects of its attention.
Keep your attention clear, yet relaxed. Your attention is like an
adjustable lens of a camera. You can be under- or over-focused.
Either way the result is a blur. Meditation is the same way. If
insufficient energy is given to your attention, you tend to daydream
or doze off. If too much effort is used, the process becomes strained
and the mind becomes fatigued or agitated. Find the balance between
slothfulness and trying too hard. A good meditation posture helps
to maintain this balance.
Most meditation systems use a “focal point,”
a place to return the attention to, when you become caught in the
mind’s wanderings. The most common focal point is the sensation
of the breath as it enters and exits the tip of the nostrils. As
you are meditating, focus your attention on this sensation of the
breath. If a thought arises, watch it pass by. Sometimes though,
one thought will trigger a chain of thought. You might think of
a particular client, and before you know it, you’re mentally
reviewing the causes of action for the pleading you will be drafting
later that week. Your focal point enables you to pull yourself out
of that daydream. It serves as a reminder to bring your attention
back to the present—the sensation of the breath entering and
exiting the nostrils. No matter how often your attention strays,
gently but firmly bring your attention back to your focal point.
Different traditions use different focal points.
Early Christian monks were fond of using the sensation of the abdomen
rising and falling caused by diaphragmatic movement. Many Eastern
traditions use “mantras,” which are repetitive sounds
internally or externally chanted. Many Western monks intone the
“Jesus prayer:” “Lord Jesus Christ have mercy
on my soul.” All of these focal points share a common principle—give
the attention a home base, a place to rest and return to during
the meditation process. Pick a focal point that appeals to you and
stick with it.
While the process of meditation is simple, it is
far from easy. If your unruly mind has been your master for your
entire life, it’s not about to now compliantly surrender control.
We lawyers think of ourselves as powerful and highly competent advocates,
accomplishing remarkable things by the energy of our will and talent.
If you hanker for a lesson in humility, try meditating and see how
your power of attention holds up against the errant movements of
your mind. See how long you can focus on the sensation of the breath
before your attention is diverted.
Understanding how the mind works facilitates meditation.
The first principle of the mind is that, at any one moment, there
is only one object of its attention. Because mental attention jumps
so quickly from object to object, (three or four times per second,
according to scientists), many mistakenly believe that the conscious
mind is simultaneously occupied with numerous objects of attention.
Let’s say you are at a football game and you are cold and
thirsty. You might say that you are watching the play on the field
and are aware of your thirst and body temperature at the same time.
But this is what really is occurring: the teams line up; a thought
about what play will be called arises; a contraction in a back muscle
captures your attention; the thought “I wish I brought my
heavy jacket” arises; the ball is snapped; the thought, “He
doesn’t have time to get a pass off” arises; you feel
a scratchy sensation in your throat; the mental image of the beer
vendor crosses your mind; you experience a reaction of irritation
because you remember that the vendor hasn’t been seen this
quarter; you see the pass thrown; you feel a thumping in your chest
as the ball is in the air; etc.
In a second or two you have experienced multiple “mind
moments,” as I like to call them. They consist of either thoughts
or sensations. And they happen so rapidly that we barely recognize
them as individual entities. Meditation—the practice of awareness
without judgment—slows down the mental procession. Easing
mental rapidity allows you to see each “mind moment”
as an individual entity. When this begins to occur, you may notice
something else. Each thought or sensation has a beginning and an
end and there is a space between each “mind moment.”
It’s like being stopped at a railroad crossing and watching
the passing freight train. When the train is whizzing by, the individual
boxcars seem to blur together. Yet, if the train slows, you can
begin to see each boxcar as a distinct object, and if the train
is slowed sufficiently, you can see the space between each of the
cars.
And what is there in the spaces between your thoughts
and sensations? And for that matter, what are the benefits of meditation
and who is it that is observing all that passes? That is for each
of us to discover. Give it a try. Like any new endeavor, regular
practice is essential. Select a quiet time and place where you won’t
be disturbed. Set aside twenty minutes for meditation every day
and do it for one month. The results may surprise you. Good luck!
© 2003 George J. Felos. George
is a nationally-recognized expert in “right-to-die”
cases and practices law in Dunedin, Florida. He has practiced meditation
for twenty-nine years and has given many meditation seminars and
workshops. George offers “Meditation
for Lawyers” as an accredited Continuing Legal
Education course. He is the author of the non-fiction book, Litigation
as Spiritual Practice. To learn more about the
CLE course and book, visit www.LitigationAsSpiritualPractice.com.
To contact George, E-mail him at George@LitigationAsSpiritualPractice.com.
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