I find that the technical instructions of Chanmyay Satipatthana follow me into the sit, creating a strange friction between the theory of mindfulness and the raw, messy reality of my experience. The clock reads 2:04 a.m., and the ground beneath me seems unexpectedly chilled. I’m sitting with a blanket around my shoulders even though it’s not really cold, just that late-night chill that gets into your bones if you stay still too long. My neck is tight; I move it, hear a small crack, and then immediately feel a surge of doubt about the "correctness" of that movement. The self-criticism is more irritating than the physical discomfort.
The looping Echo of "Simple" Instructions
Chanmyay Satipatthana explanations keep looping in my mind like half-remembered instructions. Observe this. Know that. Be clear. Be continuous. Simple words that somehow feel complicated the moment I try to apply them without a teacher sitting three meters away. In this isolation, the clarity of the teaching dissolves into a hazy echo, and my uncertainty takes over.
I notice my breath. Or I think I do. It feels shallow, uneven, like it doesn’t want to cooperate. I feel a constriction in my chest and apply a label—"tightness"—only to immediately doubt the timing and quality of that noting. This pattern of doubt is a frequent visitor, triggered by the high standards of precision in the Chanmyay tradition. Without external guidance, the search for "correct" mindfulness feels like a test I am constantly failing.
Knowledge Evaporates When the Body Speaks
I feel a lingering, dull pain in my left leg; I make an effort to observe it without flinching. The mind keeps drifting off to phrases I’ve read before, things about direct knowing, bare awareness, not adding stories. A quiet chuckle escapes me, and I immediately try to turn that sound into a meditative object. Sound. Vibration. Pleasant? Neutral? Who knows. It disappears before I decide.
I spent some time earlier reviewing my notes on the practice, which gave me a false sense of mastery. On the cushion, however, that intellectual more info certainty has disappeared. My physical discomfort has erased my theories. The physical reality of my knee is far more compelling than any diagram. I search for a reason for the pain, but the silence offers no comfort.
The Heavy Refusal to Comfort
My shoulders creep up again. I drop them. They come back. My breathing is hitching, and I feel a surge of unprovoked anger. I note the irritation, then I note the fact that I am noting. Then I get tired of recognizing anything at all. This is where Chanmyay explanations feel both helpful and heavy. They don’t comfort. There is no "it's okay" in this tradition. There is only the instruction to see what is true, over and over.
I hear the high-pitched drone of an insect. I hold my position, testing my resolve, then eventually I swat at it. The emotions—anger, release, guilt—pass through me in a blur. I am too slow to catch them all. That realization lands quietly, without drama.
Experience Isn't Neat
The diagrams make the practice look organized: body, feelings, mind, and dhammas. Direct experience is a tangle where the boundaries are blurred. Sensation bleeds into emotion. Thought hides inside bodily tension. I try to just feel without the "story," but my mind is a professional narrator and refuses to quit.
I glance at the clock even though I promised myself I wouldn’t. 2:12. Time passes whether I watch it or not. The ache in my thigh shifts slightly. I am annoyed that the pain won't stay still. I wanted it to be a reliable target for my mindfulness. The reality of the sensation doesn't read the books; it just keeps shifting.
The technical thoughts eventually subside, driven out by the sheer intensity of the somatic data. I am left with only raw input: the heat of my skin, the pressure of the floor, the air at my nostrils. I wander off into thought, return to the breath, and wander again. No grand conclusion is reached.
I don't have a better "theory" of meditation than when I started. I am suspended between the "memory" of how to practice and the "act" of actually practicing. I am sitting in the middle of this imperfect, unfinished experience, letting it be exactly as it is, because reality doesn't need my approval to be real.