For the soul drowning in heavy emotions, Learn Buddha’s Vedanānupassanā (Mindfulness of Feelings) meditation
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For the soul drowning in heavy emotions, Learn Buddha’s Vedanānupassanā (Mindfulness of Feelings) meditation
A heavy wave of anxiety, sadness, or frustration hits you. Instantly, your internal alarm goes off.
You panic. You think, “I shouldn't be feeling this way. I need to make this stop.” You immediately reach for your phone to scroll and numb the feeling. You distract yourself with work, or you start a fight in your head, analyzing every single reason why you feel so bad.
We spend our entire lives running away from uncomfortable feelings, or drowning inside of them. We treat our own emotions like dangerous intruders. But the harder you fight a heavy feeling, the more exhausted you become.
It is called Vedanānupassanā (Mindfulness of Feelings).
The Buddha realized that we constantly confuse who we are with what we are feeling. When sadness arrives, you say, "I am sad." You turn the emotion into your entire identity.
This meditation is the ultimate psychological tool to detach your identity from the emotion. It teaches you how to sit inside the storm without getting wet. Here is exactly how to do this profound practice right now, even if your chest feels heavy and your mind is racing.
Step 1: Drop the Storyboard
When a heavy emotion hits, your brain immediately wants to tell a story about it. ("I am anxious because of my boss, and my boss hates me, and I am going to lose my job...") Stop. Turn off the TV. Put your phone away. Sit in a comfortable chair and close your eyes. Your first task is to completely drop the "why." For the next five minutes, you are not allowed to psychoanalyze the story behind the feeling. You are only going to look at the feeling itself.
Step 2: Locate the Physical Weight
Emotions are not just ghosts in your head; they live in your body. Scan your body and find exactly where the feeling is sitting. Is it a tight knot in your stomach? Is it a heavy pressure on your chest? Is it a hot, buzzing energy in your jaw and shoulders? Pinpoint the exact physical location.
Step 3: The Three Labels
The Buddha taught that every single feeling that passes through a human body falls into one of three simple categories. It is either:
1. Pleasant
2. Unpleasant
3. Neutral (neither pleasant nor unpleasant)
Look at the knot in your stomach or the weight on your chest. Gently, without any judgment, label it. Silently tell yourself: "There is an unpleasant feeling happening right now."
Step 4: The Grand Separation
This is where the true liberation happens. Notice the change in language.
You are no longer saying, "I am anxious." You are saying, "I am experiencing an unpleasant physical sensation in my chest."
Do you feel the massive shift? You have just separated yourself from the emotion. You are not the anxiety. You are the silent, safe observer watching the anxiety happen.
Step 5: Watch the Wave Break
Now, do absolutely nothing. Do not try to push the unpleasant feeling away. Do not try to fix it. Do not try to replace it with a happy thought. Just watch it.
Breathe normally and observe the sensation like a scientist watching a chemical reaction. You will notice a profound truth the Buddha discovered: No feeling is permanent. If you do not feed it with stories, the tight chest will slowly loosen. The wave will crest, break, and naturally pull back into the ocean.
Watch how quickly your heavy emotions lose their grip on you when you stop fighting them.
Your entire life, you have been diving into the turbulent water, wrestling with the waves, trying to punch the ocean into submission. Vedanānupassanā teaches you how to step out of the water and sit safely on the shore
.
When you stop treating a bad mood like a life-or-death emergency, it loses its power to ruin your day. You realize that a feeling is just a temporary visitor in your nervous system. You do not have to serve it tea, and you do not have to kick it out. You just let it pass through.
The Lesson: You are the vast, open sky. Your feelings are just the weather. A dark cloud passing through does not mean the sky is broken.
You never know which friend is scrolling right now, completely overwhelmed and drowning in heavy emotions they don't know how to handle. Give them the gift of the shore. Click Share. Be the reason they find their breath today. 
Words by:
Sahan Vishvajith
Image Courtesy:
Walk for Peace
Did you need to hear this today? Follow The Mindful Walk for more daily wisdom. 
Lark Batteau
Thank you for this. I practice it. Buddhist teachings have transformed my life. You’ve made it simple to understand… not always easy to do, but still, I will share it.
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Rose Westmeyer Sowka
Omg I’ve been looking for something like this not a religion or political it is fine peace within myself
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Maura Beck
As a 9/11 survivor who never really left the area where the first responders were and already had so much trauma in my life before that, and of course during but then after as well. It has taken me a long time to allow myself to mourn and sit with my feelings and let myself be sad and anxious. It’s ok and normal to feel these feelings. I was always expected to be strong and take care of everyone except myself. Physically moving to a place where I am closer to nature has also helped me heal and be able to move forward finally with my life and not feel guilty because I am finally happy. I also began reaching out to those whom I lost touch with and now our connections are stronger than ever. I wish I was able to do this sooner but it is never to late!
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Deloris Wendt
I have copied this. I will use this for my mindfulness of feelings. Thank you 
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Joey Reith
Cass Speck, I wonder if any of this is useful for you?
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Dora Morrow
This is what saved me after my husband died 
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Fran Clemens Rinehuls
Really grateful for all of your posts. Humbled and grateful.
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Barbara Barrett
We live ed in such frenzied states we do not know any other way but to react as if the emotions we are feeling are life or death. Taking our minds mindfully out of the chaos around us allows us to focus mindfully on the breath and put our emotions into perspective in a calm peaceful manner allowing us to realign our emotive state and bring equilibrium fir a peaceful day. 





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Karen Eachus
Thank you. I have needed this for quite some time.

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