Thursday, March 5, 2026 | Madhu Bazaz Wangu
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Thursday, March 5, 2026

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Myths and Misconceptions about Meditation 

  1. Mindfulness is relaxation. Relaxation may be one of the outcomes of our practice but it seeks  attention andawareness. The goal of the mindfulness meditation (Vipassana) is insight into our true nature. We practice and transform our ordinary day life into an extraordinary life. 
  2. Meditation puts you in a trance. No, it is not hypnosis. When we meditate we are very much under our own control. The attention and awareness are simply stepping-stones on the route to heightened awareness which cultivates mindfulness.
  3. Meditation is Mysterious. Meditation deals with levels of consciousness that are deeper than conceptual thought. Such things can be understood without words or logic such as walking, swimming and biking. We learn them by practicing. Similarly we experience meditation by practicing. Meditation is an adventure every time we practice because we can never predict exactly what will come up during any particular session. Each moment is a new moment. If voices and visions pop up, we just notice them and let them go without getting involved.
  4. Meditation is Dangerous and you should avoid it. Properly done, meditation is a gentle and a gradual process. it develops easily, slowly and naturally. The first several sessions of meditation dredge up various nasty matters from our past. Our eyes well up, we might cry, feel fear, anger or experience other negative emotions. Exploring them is highly profitable, an exercise in self-discovery. 
  5. Meditation is not for regular people but saints and spiritualists. You meditate not because you are a spiritualist. You might become a spiritualist because you meditate. Meditation teaches you to focus, to pay attention. It teaches what is right and wrong. You learn what integrity, decency and justice mean. When you regularly mediate you automatically restrain from thoughts, words and deeds that might harm you or others even when there is no one to smack you. But every time you break any “rule,” you smack yourself. Simply put meditation cultivates healthy mind and reduces mental chaos. It makes you kinder and wiser and helps solve problems. 
  6. Meditation is running away from reality. Nope! The practice allows you to delve deeply into life. You fully experience life’s ups and downs just as they are and cope with exactly what you find. You don’t make up stories about any situation. This frees you from the polite little lies you tell yourself and others. You free yourself from your own weaknesses.
  7. Meditation is a great way to get high. Meditation does produce pleasurable or blissful feelings sometimes. But that is not the purpose of meditation they are its pleasant byproducts. The more you meditate the more frequently you experience the blissful feelings.
  8. Meditation is selfish and makes you think of lofty thoughts. Mindfulness meditation helps you observe your life unfold from moment to moment without biases, without wearing colored glasses. What comes up, comes up. It is that simple.
  9. If I meditate for couple of weeks or months all my problems will go away. No, meditation is not a quick cure-all. Profound changes take place after years of meditation. Nothing worthwhile is achieved overnight. Meditation is tough. It requires discipline and daily practice. At each sitting you gain some results but they are subtle. They occur deep within the mind and only manifest years later. For any profound change to take place patience and persistence are the keys. 

{“Misconceptions and Myths about Meditation” Adapted from Meditation in Plain English by Bhante Gunaratana, Wisdom Publications, (First Pub. 2011)}

6 Comments
  • Lorraine

    Now that I’ve been meditating for a few years, some of these make me chuckle… meditation is a way to get high, takes all your problems away, is running away from reality… Meditating has brought awareness, insight and calm to my day, even when I’m not in structured meditation time. It has transformed my life in many ways.

    March 5, 2026 at 10:58 am
  • Good morning, Madhu! Thank you for sharing this list of myths and misconceptions about meditation. It can be hard to sit still and make time to practice, but the rewards are boundless.

    I used deep breathing techniques on a trip Harry and I enjoyed in Costa Rica. Paradise? Yes! I meditated on the sublime beauty. I also needed to breathe because of the wild drivers and confusing road system there. Holy moly! I feared for our safety on two heavy driving days and focused breathing kept my fearful commentary at bay and heart rate controlled.

    March 5, 2026 at 11:02 am
  • Jennifer D. Diamond

    Thank you for dispelling the myths, Madhu. It took me quite a while to get over the misconception that creating time to meditate was selfish… it felt like “me time” and that was time away from family obligations, but now I know meditation helps me be a better, more patient, more compassionate family member, so it is definitely NOT selfish. 🙂

    March 5, 2026 at 5:18 pm

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