Day 1697 & Horror and Vipassana

Day 1697 Record Keeping
Day 1669 Fixed Meditation (3 hours Vipassana while watching horror show)
Day 1543 Writing (6, 20 min Pomodoros)
Day 1082 Exercise (DID NOT DO
)
Day 823 Mobility/Stretching (15 min, back, back erector, and shoulder smash, hip stretch)
Day 133 Flossing (All teeth)
Day 121 Monday Groceries


Good sleep. Really depleted and tired today for some reason. Maybe it’s the cold weather…and my lack of warm clothes.

Horror and Vipassana
Over the course of my meditations I’ve tried to practice it in real world situations. But what i’ve found is a good half step is to practice during movies - especially ones designed to draw out tension and awkwardness.

Over the weekend I got sucked into watching The Haunting of Hill House, a Netflix horror series praised for being really good.

I hate horror. I get scared really easily, I get spooked, and usually can’t really sleep well afterwards.

But while using Vipassana to keep a firm hold over my emotions, I was able to not be scared, but more importantly, actually enjoy the series.

In addition to navigating the intensity (I’m not claiming this series was intense, just that movies are designed to cause emotional ups and downs), it was a great challenge with regards to duration. I practice for three episodes today - an hour, then a break, then 2 hours at length. That’s pretty good, and definitely something I think I would have struggled with before.

The fact that I was able to enjoy it is also a great example of finding things that I tend to shirk away from, and using it as an object of meditation. The only way is through, as some meditators say!

Day 545 & Between Scylla and Charybdis

Day 545 Record Keeping (63)
Day 514 Fixed Meditation 
Day 460 Bodyweight Exercise (7 typewriter pushups - 60)
Day 387 Writing (56)
Day 560 Eating (72)
Good sleep, good wakeup. Feeling good.


Per my previous protocol, I’ve dropped recording the SRHI for fixed meditation because I maintained an 80 or above in it for a week, giving it superhabit status. As an aside meditation has been going well. Last night I started meditating (I’ve been doing this  more and more often lately) vipassana style. I found myself getting into this solid groove of letting thoughts flow without clinging, and it started to feel really good. Just as though I was entering first jhana.

Lydia has been reading about this more than I have lately, and Daniel Ingram does mention that you can enter first jhana through vipassana. I’m liking how a lot of his book reflects my personal experience after the fact, for items I didn’t read clearly or just skimmed over. It makes me feel like I’m making solid progress.

When I meditate I often don’t really want to go through with it - but that first initial repulsion is overwhelmed by the solid habit of just getting into position. Once I start it starts happening. That’s exactly what I’ve been feeling the last couple of days with writing. Thinking about the nitty gritty I immediately don’t want to do it, but I find myself just walking to my chair sitting down, and setting up my next writing task. That’s exactly where I want habits to be, especially ones I’m pushing - I’m never going to like the pain involved, but I’m not thinking about that - I’m mechanically and habitually getting set up, and the rest flows. This has clearly resulted in a higher score in the SRHI which I think will continue.

Eating has been amazing - it really clicked this weekend, as  I had some old college friends visit. Despite going out and having dinner, I was on autopilot, ignoring the bad foods and eating the solid ones. That’s also resulted in a very high score on the SRHI, and that’s exactly where I want that habit to be.

Between Scylla and Charybdis

I feel a lot better about my habits. Last weeks depression has fallen away, as predictable. It feels like it regularly takes a week or two for that strain to fade. The opposite is what I’m feeling now - the urge to do more. 

Having more latent energy makes me want to expand my exercises, expand my writing, expand my meditation…This is dangerous. 

It’s like Scylla and Charybdis in Ulysses.  Scylla was a monster, Charybdis was a whirlpool, and ships had to figure out how to navigate the Strait of Messina without being torn to pieces. This metaphor is particularly apt because I’ve described this scenario before as a battle of two forces that threaten to rip a part progress in this project. Too much depletion, and you don’t want to do anything. Too much energy, and the internal urge to do more overextends your willpower/endurance/grit.

Ulysses survived with few losses by choosing Scylla, I can’t afford the losses and must choose to angle my ship precisely in between the two dangers.

Lydia said something interesting today. “Now that you have done what you need to do, your job is to be satisfied.”

There’s a lot of wisdom and skill in that statement. It means sacrificing sudden momentary swaths of gains for long term steady progress, which is the heart of this entire project, yet so difficult to remember when in the thrall of vortex forces.

It is very interesting how these emotional urges play out time wise….it’s something I need to pay closer attention to.

Day 434

Day 434 Record Keeping
Day 403 Fixed Meditation
Day 349 Bodyweight Exercise (KBell Tabata)
Day 276 Writing (pitch writing)
Day 449 Eating
Day 84 Dynamic Meditation = 79 (20 min  - Vipassana)
Day 31 Marketing = 74 (pitching)

Good sleep, good wakeup.

Dynamic Med Notes (20 min):
Decided to do Vipassana today. It was incredibly difficult to sustain while talking and doing anything else other than sitting around. Thinking about cycling back and forth with my own Dynamic Meditation style which directly prevents negative arisings and Vipassna, where you merely note and watch the arisings crescendo and pass away.

Day 412

Day 412 Record Keeping
Day 381 Fixed Meditation
Day 327 Bodyweight Exercise (1x6 typewriter pushups)
Day 254 Writing (232 words)
Day 427 Eating
Day 62 Dynamic Meditation = 70 (1 hour)
Day 9 Marketing = 53 (action)

Bad sleep, slow wakeup. Tried to mentally reorganize myself so that doing one task was enough, even if it wasn’t a major step. This was difficult because I had to counter the arising of needing to hurry up to get to the REAL activity.

Dynamic Med Notes (1 hour):
Notes:
Very difficult continuing vipassana during everyday activities ,especially ones that involved work and frustration. 

Day 101 & Vipassana Metaphor

Day 101 Record Keeping SRHI = 58
Day 69 Fixed Meditation SRHI = 71
Day 15 Burpee SRHI= 43 (2x) and another 2x5 later in the day for fun)
Day 115 Eating SRHI = 63 
Good sleep, good wakeup. Really bad bout of depression last night.

Vipassana Metaphor

In Vipassana, the idea is to focus on the mind itself. In the teachings I’ve learned, you calmly repeat in your mind some quality about the emotion you are feeling. After staying with that emotional energy long enough, it will dissipate.

For example, when I’m mad, I  focus on the bodily sensations - is it a throbbing at my temple or a chocking sensation at my throat. Then I simply call out in my mind whether it’s staying the same, lessening, or unchanging at regular intervals. 

This first works by distancing - by calling out the quality of the emotion I’ve immediately stepped away from it. By focusing on how it’s changing, I have no room to feed the emotion by replaying the images or voices that set me off to begin with. So gradually it starts to fade.

What’s interesting is that this works with pain. A few months ago I was having horrible tension headaches - when I did this technique the pain receded. I’ve used this same principle with stomach pains.

What if habit formation is like this, only for long term? We try to focus on keeping to a schedule, but it fades from us…we forget about it. But if we stay with it long enough, it fades, merging into our subconscious as a habit.

Record keeping is my way of staying with it - I calmly record deviances in performance just like I record fluctuations of emotion. Eventually they level out as long as I can restrain myself from getting caught up in either emotions or the forgetfulness of other tasks of day-to-day life. 

In emotions, you refrain from feeding the recall of what set you off. I think with habits it’s more of not feeding the voices of inertia. Change is an unexpected thing - we don’t expect it in others, and we certainly don’t really believe it in ourselves. So we stress out - “why isn’t it happening faster!” or “maybe I’m failing” echo, and ironically, these thoughts cause us to fail. 

By not feeding those thoughts…by staying with it, despite distractions, inner qualms, and outward lapses, we form a habit, and in forming a habit, we get the change we desire.