The precise explanations of the Chanmyay method loop in my mind, making me question every movement and sensation as I struggle to stay present. It is just past 2 a.m., and there is a sharpness to the floor that I didn't anticipate. A blanket is draped over my shoulders—not because the room is freezing, but to buffer against that specific, bone-deep stillness of the night. My neck is tight; I move it, hear a small crack, and then immediately feel a surge of doubt about the "correctness" of that movement. That thought annoys me more than the stiffness itself.
The looping Echo of "Simple" Instructions
The technical details of the Chanmyay method repeat in my head like fragmented directions. The commands are simple: observe, know, stay clear, stay constant. In theory, the words are basic, but in practice—without the presence of a guide—they become incredibly complex. Alone like this, the explanations don’t sound firm anymore. They blur. They echo. And my mind fills in the gaps with doubt.
I focus on the breathing, but it seems to react to being watched, becoming shallow and forced. My chest tightens a bit. I label it mentally, then immediately question whether I labeled too fast. Or too slow. Or mechanically. That spiral is familiar. It shows up a lot when I remember how precise Chanmyay explanations are supposed to be. Without external guidance, the search for "correct" mindfulness feels like a test I am constantly failing.
Knowledge Evaporates When the Body Speaks
I feel a lingering, dull pain in my left leg; I make an effort to observe it without flinching. My thoughts repeatedly wander to spiritual clichés: "direct knowing," "bare attention," "dropping the narrative." A quiet chuckle escapes me, and I immediately try to turn that sound into a meditative object. I try to categorize the laugh—is it neutral or pleasant?—but it's gone before the mind can file it away.
Earlier tonight I reread some notes about Satipatthana and immediately felt smarter. More confident. Sitting now, that confidence is gone. Knowledge evaporates fast when the body starts complaining. The knee speaks louder than the read more books. The mind wants reassurance that I’m doing this correctly, that this pain fits into the explanation somewhere. I don’t find it.
The Heavy Refusal to Comfort
My posture is a constant struggle; I relax my shoulders, but they reflexively tighten again. My breathing is hitching, and I feel a surge of unprovoked anger. I note the irritation, then I note the fact that I am noting. Then I get tired of recognizing anything at all. This is where Chanmyay explanations feel both helpful and heavy. They don’t comfort. There is no "it's okay" in this tradition. There is only the instruction to see what is true, over and over.
A mosquito is buzzing nearby; I endure the sound for as long as I can before finally striking out. The emotions—anger, release, guilt—pass through me in a blur. I am too slow to catch them all. I recognize my own lack of speed, a thought that arrives without any emotional weight.
Experience Isn't Neat
The diagrams make the practice look organized: body, feelings, mind, and dhammas. Direct experience is a tangle where the boundaries are blurred. Sensation bleeds into emotion. Thought hides inside bodily tension. I try to just feel without the "story," but my mind is a professional narrator and refuses to quit.
Against my better judgment, I look at the clock. Eight minutes have passed. Time is indifferent to my struggle. The sensation in my leg changes its character. The shift irritates me more than the ache itself. I wanted it stable. Predictable. Observationally satisfying. The reality of the sensation doesn't read the books; it just keeps shifting.
The "explanations" finally stop when the physical sensations become too loud to ignore. Warmth, compression, and prickling sensations fill my awareness. I anchor myself in the most prominent feeling. Then I drift. Then I come back. No clarity. No summary.
I am not finishing this sit with a greater intellectual grasp of the path. I am suspended between the "memory" of how to practice and the "act" of actually practicing. sitting in this unfinished mess, letting it be messy, because that’s what’s happening whether I approve of it or not.