Has this ever happened to you?
You sit down to meditate — or to relax, or to just be quiet for a moment. And almost immediately, the thoughts begin. You think about thinking too much. You remind yourself to focus. You evaluate whether you are doing it right. You wonder if it's working. You are, in other words, more overwhelmed by thinking than you were before you started.
Most of us approach peace the same way we approach every other goal: with our minds. We analyze the problem, develop a strategy, and apply effort. And then we are frustrated when the harder we try to relax, the more elusive relaxation becomes.
This points to something important: inner peace is not a mental achievement. It cannot be thought into existence. We have to feel it first – the key is to begin with a feeling.
The Body as the Gateway
In Body & Brain, we begin every practice with a simple instruction: bring your awareness into your body. Not thinking about your body, but actually feeling it. The weight of your feet on the floor. The feeling of breath moving in and out of your chest. The quality of sensation in your hands, your legs, your face.
This one shift, from thinking to feeling, changes everything.
This is not a theory. It is what practitioners experience, class after class, in our studios. People come in with their minds running at full speed and their shoulders stuck next to their ears. An hour later, something in them has settled — not because they thought the right thoughts, but because they brought awareness back to their bodies.
A Practice to Try
Most people try to reach stillness by going straight to the idea of stillness. We find it works much better to move the body before trying to still the mind.
Start with a comfortable standing posture. Begin tapping your body with your palms or fingertips — your arms, your chest, your belly, your legs, the soles of your feet if you can reach them. Feel each part of your body as you tap, from the top of your head all the way down to your toes.
This kind of tapping stimulates circulation, wakes up the meridians, and most importantly, pulls your awareness away from your thoughts and into your body. You can feel the difference almost immediately — a warmth spreading through the skin, a sense of aliveness that wasn't there a moment before.
After one to two minutes of tapping, stand with your feet shoulder-width apart and gently bounce your body up and down — knees slightly bent, arms loose, feet planted on the floor. Feel the vibration travel up and down from the top of your head to the bottom of your feet. Notice the feeling in each moment and remember to breathe. There’s no need to achieve a particular benefit or feeling, just keep coming back to the next feeling and breathe comfortably.
Now slowly stop and exhale.
Scan your body slowly from head to toe. Begin at the crown of your head and move your awareness downward: to your face, your neck, your shoulders, your chest, your belly, your hips, your legs, and your feet. Imagine feeling your internal organs — your brain, your heart, your stomach and more. Wherever you notice tension, simply breathe out through your mouth and let it go. You may feel the sensation of your body becoming softer and sinking gently into the earth.
Slowly bring your awareness to rest in your lower dahn jon — the space 2 inches below your navel, in the center of your abdomen. This is your body's energetic core, the place where Qi gathers and develops. Breathe in with a gentle awareness of your dahn jon. Stay here for a few minutes.
When you open your eyes, notice what has shifted.
Your mind may feel quieter, your chest is more open, and your awareness is more awake and present in your body. You can breathe with a sense of peace and groundedness, like your mind finally has somewhere to rest. The important thing is not to try to find stillness with your mind, but instead to utilize your body to bring the mind back to the present moment. This is the key to creating a habit of peace and presence.