The Diary Of A CEO was joined by Buddhist teacher Gelong Thubten who discussed the importance of meditation to support your health and well-being.
Thubten is one of the UK’s most influential meditation teachers and he spoke on the importance of meditation to help manage stress, anxiety, depression and poor mental health.
Below are they key things we learned on meditation from a Buddhist teacher.
1. We are materially more comfortable now than ever, but emotionally the most uncomfortable we have ever been
In our existence as humans, we have never been more materially rich than we are now, but it appears to be coming at a cost. Consumerism is driving our false happiness, and we are losing real control of what makes us happy, and that is the freedom from wanting.
Commonly we now tell ourselves, “we will be happy if…” and “we will be happy when this happens or that happens…” The truth is that our happiness comes from within us and does not directly correlate to what we have.
Have you ever wanted something so much and when you have got it, that feeling of wanting it immediately disappears. The internal happiness will actually come from being free of wanting anything.
2. The past and future are an illusion
If we and everything around us are made from particles, key word being “part,” we can’t exist singularly, everything that defines our being is part of something, and that something is changing every minute of every day. Our cells regenerate so quickly that we are never the same person.
If that happens to every particle in the universe, then there is in theory no such thing as the past, or the future, we are always existing in the very present moment with the current cells and particles we have, the past no longer exists, the future never existed. We must therefore try to remain present in every moment to deal with the here and now.
3. Daily meditation can change your life
Focus on your breath, lose yourself in thought, and gently bring yourself back to your breath. Do this for 10 minutes every day as a start to understanding meditation.
Meditation is all in the losing yourself and coming back. If you sit and meditate, you have no conscious thought over what takes you away from focusing on your breath. If you bring yourself back from your thought, you are consciously choosing to come back and focus on your breath. That is where their is value in meditation, taking back control of your mind to think about your breath.
People often think breaking out and being calm and rational might mean you are taking your eye off things or losing focus, but it is done intentionally so you can return with a sharper mind.
Aim to be the sky instead of the clouds.


