07:35

Meeting Mind

by Neil Seligman

Rated
4.5
Type
guided
Activity
Meditation
Suitable for
Everyone
Plays
3.6k

Guided Mindfulness Meditation to build awareness of the workings of mind along with equanimity, non-judgment and self-compassion skills.

MindfulnessAwarenessEquanimityNon JudgmentSelf CompassionThoughtsDisengagementMeditationBody AwarenessThought ObservationDisengaging From ThoughtsMindfulness For WritersBreathingBreathing AwarenessGuided MeditationsSilent Meditations

Transcript

Number four,

Meeting mind.

Begin by finding a comfortable posture and by bringing your awareness to the breath.

Take a few moments to let yourself arrive and allow the breath to draw you gently into internal awareness.

Allow the gaze to soften,

The eyes to close.

As you breathe,

Bring your focus to the mind and quietly observe what it is doing.

The mind is very likely to be carrying a stream of thoughts.

The aim of this practice is to be aware of those thoughts without energizing them.

A thought is energized when followed up with another intentional thought,

Choice,

Comment or association,

Or when scheduled for action or added to a to-do list.

At first it can be challenging and seem almost impossible to disengage the mind's natural tendency to energize thoughts,

But with repeated practice and perseverance it can become second nature.

In the minute of silence that follows,

Attend to mind,

Trying not to energize any thoughts that arise,

But simply observe them come and go.

If during the practice you notice that you have energized a thought,

It's important to practice two additional things.

The first is non-judgment and the second is self-compassion.

Non-judgment means that when realizing you've energized a thought,

You do not treat it as a failure.

In fact,

This realization is a vital moment within the practice,

As you are immediately offered the opportunity to return to the focus of the exercise by gently bringing awareness back to a neutral observation of mind.

Hand in hand with non-judgment comes self-compassion.

Being gentle with yourself is necessary because it gradually generates an ability to stay present in quiet observation of mind.

When scolding the mind for messing up or doing it wrong,

This compassionate awareness is lost.

This time try three minutes of silence.

Attend to mind,

Trying not to energize thoughts and practicing non-judgment and self-compassion.

Thank you.

Thank you.

Thank you.

Thank you.

Thank you.

Take five further breaths here and as you do so,

Remember the body.

Feel gravity pushing down on your seat.

Notice the rise and fall of your chest and perhaps give your fingers and toes a little wiggle.

And now,

In your very own time,

Open your eyes.

That was number four,

Meeting mind.

Thank yourself for finding time for this practice.

And don't forget to record your reflections in your mindfulness journal.

Meet your Teacher

Neil SeligmanLondon

4.5 (409)

Recent Reviews

Francisco

November 13, 2020

Amazing way to practice how to control your thoughts and your monkey mind...

Tom

September 4, 2020

Helpful to not energize thoughts and just let them go

Jennifer

March 10, 2017

Short, but helpful. I found the advice to practice non-judgment and self-compassion useful. Thank you!

remy

January 14, 2017

Beautifully focused. Loved the silent moments 🙏🏻🌱 namaste

humbledaisy

December 19, 2016

Sweet! Sort of a mini instruction + meditation. I appreciated the total quiet - no background noise - and the speaker's voice. Will bookmark this one.

Lynda

December 18, 2016

A challenge that will take some practice but will be worth it.

Tyler

December 18, 2016

I enjoyed the concept of energized thought followed by silent meditation

Glen

December 18, 2016

That's a cracker! Wish it went for longer

Xtina

December 17, 2016

That was excellent! Thank you! Really helpful.

Pat

December 17, 2016

So good! Never had heard the concept of not just observing thoughts but practicing how to "not energize" them. The balance of guidance and silence was great and his voice is wonderful. Could appreciate longer versions with the same style and pattern. Thanks!

William

December 17, 2016

I thought this was an excellent guided meditation. It broke things down into a couple of baby steps that were just right.

Susan

December 17, 2016

The descriptions of energizing versus observing helped me identify my mind's activity, and the self-kindness as necessary to observing and maintaining progress in mindfulness was also explicit and helpful. How do I connect with previous sets in your series?

Errin

December 17, 2016

Great for a quick cool down of emotions or stress.

Savun

December 17, 2016

Thank you very much. It's perfect because I had so much on my mind. Slowing it down and not judging them is what I needed.

Scott

December 17, 2016

Great to have longer silences in a well-guided meditation.

Serene

December 17, 2016

Interesting..... I've never focused on my mind before so that was a bit odd but helpful..... I like how he described "energizing thoughts ". Will do this one and similar others again.

sarah

December 17, 2016

Truly wonderful, thank you

Judy🌬

December 17, 2016

So good! I want to hear #'s 1, 2 and 3!

Jeannie

December 17, 2016

Wow, such an extraordinary meditation and I look forward to practicing mindfulness with my mind. So helpful. Thank you!

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© 2026 Neil Seligman. All rights reserved. All copyright in this work remains with the original creator. No part of this material may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

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