Meditation Lafayette LA

Now, you may think that just being on a serene beach relaxing should help instill a meditative state. Read on and get more information about stress managment, mental health, and other classes in Lafayette like pilates which lead to better health through deep-breathing and meditation.

Udumbara Sangha
(318) 235-1784
409 Azalea Street
Lafayette, LA
Specialty
Zen - Soto

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Udumbara Sangha
(318) 235-1784
409 Azalea Street
Lafayette, LA
Specialty
Zen - Soto

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Udumbara Sangha of Beaux Bridge
(318) 228-7683
1038 Martha Herbert Road
Beaux Bridge, LA
Specialty
Zen - Soto

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Dhongak Tharling Dharma Center
(504) 948-6721
3621 Desaix Blvd.
New Orleans, LA
Specialty
Tibetan Nyingma

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Center For Psychiatric and Addictive Medicine
(337) 233-2400
800 Kaliste Saloom Rd
Lafayette, LA
 
Udumbara Sangha of Beaux Bridge
(318) 228-7683
1038 Martha Herbert Road
Beaux Bridge, LA
Specialty
Zen - Soto

Data Provided by:
Blue Iris Sangha
First Church New Orleans
New Orleans, LA
Specialty
Mindfulness / Thich Nhat Hanh

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Shunyata Sangha
(225) 763-9389
8470 Goodwood Blvd.
Baton Rouge, LA
Specialty
Zen

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New Orleans Zen Temple - American Zen Association
(504) 565-7600
748 Camp St
New Orleans, LA
Specialty
Zen - Soto

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Preeminent Healthcare Systems
(337) 593-0700
1640 N Bertrand Dr
Lafayette, LA
 
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Meditation

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By Vickie McIntyre

I am, for lack of a better term, a meditation dropout. Oh, I’ve tried it all: the standard legs-crossed, deep-breathing variety (which made me stir-crazy after a few endless minutes); Pilates classes (where I managed to pull a muscle just learning to breathe properly); and t’ai chi instruction (which ended with gentle reprimands by my instructor that walking meditation was not a form of aerobic exercise). They all left me anxious and restless. I couldn’t let go and simply be present in the moment—a hallmark of my type-A personality. That all changed on a Caribbean vacation. There, I inadvertently learned even action-obsessed people like me can achieve satori.

Now, you may think that just being on a serene beach relaxing should help instill a meditative state. Not so for someone who every day had proudly recited the mantra “Go, go, go, faster, faster, faster.” But the morning I donned a snorkeling mask and submerged into the quiet, mystical world beneath the sea, my life began to change. I can still feel the magic of that first glimpse: a bright red starfish, a giant spotted ray gliding by like a bird in flight, and hundreds of silversides swimming in synchronized motion. It transported me to another realm.

Immersed in beauty, color, and silence, I was forced not to move too much or too suddenly, or the creatures around me would scatter. For the first time ever, I could be still. Minutes slipped away unnoticed, as the simple cadence of breathing in and breathing out became stronger and stronger. Lost in a dreamy world where parrot fish, barracuda, and even sea turtles swam by me as if I were invisible, I learned that submitting completely to silence brings an exhilarating, nerve-tingling rush.

Now, back in Pennsylvania, whenever I feel stressed, I lie down and visualize that moment when I place my face in the water and hear only the gentle waves breaking on the shore as I breathe deeply and glide ever so smoothly through warm, clear water filled with beauty. Breathing in and breathing out, I float and meditate while angelfish lead the way.

Author: Vickie McIntyre

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