
5 Roots - Meditation and Stillness as Your Birthright
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What prevents us from accessing the stillness that already resides within us? MyongAhn Sunim tackles this profound question in our continuing exploration of the Five Roots, focusing today on Jong Kun—the root of meditation, stillness, and quietude.
This episode unpacks a revolutionary perspective: we already possess everything needed for transformation. The root of meditation isn't something external to acquire but an innate quality waiting to be consciously activated. When we recognize and intentionally direct this inherent capacity for stillness, it transforms from a passive root into an active power (Orlyok)—specifically, the power of meditative absorption (samme).
MyongAhn Sunim illuminates a fascinating paradox of human experience: our minds can effortlessly leap between thoughts in ordinary circumstances, yet become paralyzed when gripped by strong emotions or rigid viewpoints. "I stand in my own way," he explains, pointing to the ego as the primary obstacle to accessing our innate qualities. This insight offers a liberating truth—we're not fundamentally blocked from our inner resources by external barriers, but by our own unconscious patterns of thinking.
The teaching extends beyond meditation to challenge how we approach spiritual growth itself. "You cannot read yourself into enlightenment," Myung An Sunim emphasizes, cautioning against mistaking intellectual understanding for embodied wisdom. True transformation requires practice, not just consumption of information—a timely reminder in our knowledge-hoarding culture.
Perhaps most practical is the discussion of noticing the subtle gaps of silence between thoughts, those hairline fractures in our mental chatter where stillness already exists. Meditation practice trains us to recognize these momentary spaces of quietude that have always been present but typically go unnoticed in our busy mental landscape.
Share your experiences or questions with us by submitting a recording for future episodes. How has this perspective on meditation as an innate quality changed your approach to practice? We'd love to hear from you as we continue exploring the transformation of roots into powers.
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Dr. Ruben Lambert can be found at wisdomspring.com
Ven. MyongAhn Sunim can be found at soshimsa.org