Spontaneous Practice
Spontaneous Practice are those moments where practices is effortless, where the whole idea of practice dissolves into whatever is happening.
By: Vince Hornā
Spontaneous Practice is the result of a strong intention and dedicated application to the principles and practices of meditation. But oddly, while itās happening, it doesnāt require any discernable effort from us. During these moments, instead of us doing the meditation we find the meditation is doing us. These are the moments where practice is effortless, where the whole idea of practice dissolves into whatever is happening.
This is really beautiful when itās happens! And itās not something we can make happen, because if weāre making it happen then itās a formal practice or a life practice, itās something that weāre intentionally doing. When it happens by itself this is spontaneous practice.
Now, the power and promise of meditation is that these moments of spontaneity start to increase, to happen more of the time, to the point where they become part of a new baseline. They become part of who and what we are. At this point you could say that there isnāt even spontaneous practice happening anymore. When thereās no more need for a certain emphasis in our practice, we can broaden our scope, focus on some other aspect of experience that needs attention, train in this new style formally, integrating it into our life, and eventually encoding it into the core operating system of reality. When it becomes so deeply integrated that we donāt even notice it, thatās when the practice has reached completion. It also marks the beginning of a new phase of practice, where we become a beginner once again.
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