Tag: Meditation

How to Meditate by Pema Chödrön

Cover photo of the book "How To Meditate" by Pema Chödrön

How to Meditate: A Practical Guide to Making Friends with Your Mind was first published in 2013 by Sounds True.

Written by Pema Chödrön, one of the most widely read Western teachers of Tibetan Buddhism, the book presents what she considers the essential foundations of a lifelong meditation practice. It is structured as a practical guide rather than a philosophical treatise, covering seated meditation technique, working with thoughts and emotions, and developing a sustainable relationship with one’s own mind.

The tone is accessible and direct, aimed at both complete beginners and those who have struggled to establish a consistent practice. The book draws on Chödrön’s decades of teaching experience within the Shambhala Buddhist tradition.


I had read perhaps a dozen meditation books before this one. Maybe more — I stopped counting. Each of them explained the theory clearly enough. Sit. Breathe. Notice your thoughts. Let them pass. Return to the breath. The instructions were always the same, and I always understood them. Understanding was never the problem.

The problem was sitting down and actually doing it.

I can’t say exactly what was different about Pema Chödrön’s How to Meditate. That’s a slightly unsatisfying thing to admit in a review, but it’s the honest answer. Something in the way she writes about the mind — not as something to be managed or defeated, but as something to be befriended — shifted something in me. The subtitle is A Practical Guide to Making Friends with Your Mind, and that phrase, which could easily sound like a self-help cliché, turns out to be precisely what the book delivers.

What Chödrön does, and does well, is refuse to make meditation aspirational. There is no promise of transformation, no gradient of enlightenment to climb. Instead, she is remarkably frank about what meditation actually feels like, especially at the beginning. You sit down. Your mind immediately produces a shopping list, a grievance from three years ago, and a low-grade anxiety about something you said at a dinner party. You are supposed to be observing all of this with equanimity. You are, in fact, annoyed.

She calls this “the monkey mind,” and rather than suggesting you suppress it or wait for it to pass, she essentially says: this is the practice. The thoughts are not a sign that you’re doing it wrong. They are the material you’re working with. That reframe — so simple, so obvious once stated — is what finally made sitting still feel possible rather than an elaborate form of failure. (I wrote about my struggles with the monkey mind in this blog post.)

The book is structured as a progression: it begins with the basics of posture and breath, moves into working with thoughts and emotions, and gradually introduces more nuanced concepts such as compassion and openness. Chödrön’s background as a Tibetan Buddhist nun is present throughout, but she wears her tradition lightly. The terminology remains accessible, and the spiritual dimension never overwhelms the practical. This is a book you can use.

I do think the later chapters are somewhat less grounded than the first half. As the book moves from technique into broader ideas about the quality of awareness, it occasionally becomes more abstract in ways that felt harder to bring directly into practice. The early sections have an almost instructional clarity — sit here, do this, expect that — that gives way to something slightly more elusive. That’s not entirely a criticism; some of those concepts may simply require more time to settle. But the shift is noticeable.

What stayed with me most, though, was the gentleness of the approach. Not gentleness in the sense of being soft or avoiding difficulty — Chödrön is clear-eyed about how uncomfortable it can be to sit with one’s own mind — but in the sense of not making the whole enterprise feel like something you could fail at. And that, for me at least, was what all those previous books had inadvertently done. They had turned meditation into a test. This one turned it into a practice. The difference, it turns out, is enormous.

I mentioned this book briefly in a post about the Medito app — which I’d been using as a companion to my morning practice — but it deserved more than a paragraph. If you’ve tried meditation before and found yourself drifting away after a week, or if you’ve read the instructions a hundred times and still feel like you’re missing something, this is the book I’d hand you.


Pema Chödrön (b. 1936) is an American-born Tibetan Buddhist nun and one of the most widely read Western teachers of Tibetan Buddhism. She is the author of numerous books, including When Things Fall Apart and The Places That Scare You, and served as a senior teacher at Gampo Abbey in Nova Scotia, Canada.


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Struggling With Meditation? Try Medito!

Medito meditation app

Like many of us, I’ve struggled with meditation. But then I found Medito, a free-forever meditation app available on both iOS and Android. I still can’t believe such a valuable resource is freely accessible!

No ads, no spam, no need to sign up or pay. The app includes courses to help you develop your practice, including a 30-day challenge. It also includes a sleep section with sounds, stories & meditations to help you drift off to a peaceful slumber. There are hundreds of sessions to choose from, including breathing exercises, walking meditations, mantra meditations and sessions to help you deal with stress, anxiety, pain and low-mood.” Created by the Medito Foundation.


One of the things I love about Medito is its versatility. It’s not just a meditation app, it’s a companion that helps me navigate through the different phases of my day. Whether I need to focus at work, unwind in the evening, or prepare for a restful sleep, Medito has it.

I use Medito to meditate in the morning, at work during the day (I use The Nature sounds section and, sometimes, Meditative music if I need calming down) and to help me falling asleep at night (you can choose from Meditation for sleep, Sleep stories, Meditative music or Nature sounds).


Speaking of work, another favorite of mine is Tim Wheater‘s album Whalesong (1991). It’s beautiful, soothing music that is intertwined with whale sounds. The song of the Southern Humpback Whales was recorded live at Platypus Bay on the east coast of Australia in 1989.

I used to listen to it a lot when I was still working at Microsoft as it calmed me down (I did need a lot of calming down those years, I kept an insane pace), and I still do now and then.


On “Whalesong,” Wheater weaves four or five layers of music: the chirps, squeals, and cries of the whale (whose song can last for ten minutes), a repetitive bass organ drone sequence that sets some sort of cadence, two or more flute lines that weave and float above, and interesting sonic accents such a vocalise or high pitched bubbly sounds. The whole is so well integrated and heart-centered, the music almost breathes for you. Near the end, Wheater begins a stately melody, which almost makes the whales fly. The first section of “Whale Echoes” has a deeper resonance, almost like stately Tibetan overtone chanting. Joining Wheater on his smooth flutes and rhythm bass is Gary Thomas on handdrum. The second section brings Thomas in on didgeridoo, which snarls like the watery depths and sometimes mimics the snorts of the whales. The mournful cries, deep growls, and breathing of the whales are accented by clicks of feeding shrimp and high-pitched temple bells. Both pieces are very peaceful and suitable for relaxation, meditation, or massage. – From the All Music review.

If an app is not your thing, try a book! I found it challenging to meditate despite reading many meditation books, but this particular one made all the difference for me. I cannot recommend it highly enough. It is insightful, easy to read, and practical, explaining meditation in straightforward and applicable terms.

Pema Chödrön, How to Meditate. Pema Chödrön is treasured around the world for her unique ability to transmit teachings and practices that bring peace, understanding, and compassion into our lives. With How to Meditate, the American-born Tibetan Buddhist nun presents her first book exploring in depth what she considers the essentials for a lifelong practice. This step-by-step guide shows readers how to honestly meet and openly relate with the mind, embrace the fullness of our experience, and live in a wholehearted way.

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