Tuesday, March 24, 2026

How to Practice Lojong for Anxiety; An Interview with George Saunders; Guided Body Scan Meditation

 

Let’s Practice Together

 

03.13.2026

Let’s Practice Together


I’m truly delighted to be co-hosting a dynamic weekly live event in support of our new 21-Day Community Practice Challenge, starting this Monday, March 16. There are many reasons why it’s shared practice format excites me, but at the top of the list is the extra support and sense of form it offers as we dedicate ourselves to the practice of meditation in our day-to-day lives.

Like learning to play the piano, improving your tennis serve, or perfecting a meringue recipe for your favourite lemon pie, giving something time and steady attention is a wonderful way to grow your ability to have success with what can at times feel daunting. There is, after all, a reason why we refer to our commitment to meditation as a “practice.”

Form and commitment can gently build ease and skill, and this 21-day approach to meditation practice is intended to do just that. It helps create commitment and accountability, and even though I’m co-hosting, I’m looking forward to leaning into this structure myself — to keep strengthening my own confidence and routine around a practice that means so much to me, both in my role at Lion’s Roar and in my day-to-day life.

I truly hope you can join our host, Sharon Suh, and me, alongside the wealth of wonderful teachers who will share a daily practice with you. In these times especially, feeling a little less alone and a little more aligned with others can be deeply reassuring for all of us.

I’m confident that the combination of daily video teachings and practices you’ll receive by email will help keep us lifted, supported, and focused along the way. I hope you’ll sign up and come along for the journey.

Below are three pieces on beginning your daily meditation journey. I hope they’ll inspire you to join us. Looking forward to being together on Monday!

—Beth Wallace, associate publisher, Lion’s Roar

How to Establish a Daily Practice of Almost Anything


Whether it’s meditation, yoga, or art, you get more from doing it every day. Follow these six steps to enjoy all the benefits of daily practice.


Going to a retreat or program is a wonderful way to deepen our meditation practice. But how do we stay connected with these waking-up practices when we go home to the myriad projects, emails, responsibilities, and distractions waiting for us?

This is a question that applies not just to meditation, yoga, and other spiritual practices, but to any creative art we want to commit to, such as painting, writing, or playing an instrument. Paradoxically, the practices we know are most vital to our wellbeing are the very things that are usually pushed aside by daily tasks that feel more urgent.

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How to Create a Meditation Space


No matter your living situation, you can have a place to practice. Yaotunde Obiora explains.


Creating a meditation space in my apartment has been a wonderful way for me to find tranquility amidst the hustle and bustle of New York City. You, too, can create your own peaceful refuge, no matter where you live. Of course, you can dedicate a whole room to meditation—if you have the space—but it isn’t necessary. A small corner, lovingly set aside for meditation, can be just as nourishing.

How to Meditate Every Day


Diana Winston shares her advice on how to meditate every day, “even if you would rather me thrown into a shark-infested ocean.”


Your unforgiving alarm rings for all it’s worth. It’s 7AM. You crash out of bed, slamming your toe on your bedside table. You fumble for your zafu in the dark. “It’s over here somewhere,” you mumble. Hearing you awaken from the dead, your cat runs screeching. You are about to plant your still-zombiefied-self on the cushion when nature calls. Three minutes later your mother calls too, and you know you really shouldn’t answer it but she does have that crucial bit of information about the results of The Voice, and… that’s it, the day has started. You’re late for work, the shower’s running cold again, your toothbrush bristles are thoroughly chewed through, the cat is ripping apart your sofa, blackmailing you for food, and of course, as always, despite hundreds of clothes in your closet, you have nothing to wear. You leave the house agitated, jangled, caught in another shouting match with yourself: “You lazy… you didn’t meditate! Again. You’ll never change!”

Sound familiar? Sure it does. Despite all those resolutions — post-retreat, New Year’s, and otherwise — another day has gone by without sitting. You know it’s good for you, you know it’s probably the best thing you’ve ever done in your life and ever could do, but it’s really hard to do it.

No Mud, No Lotus

 

03.20.2026

No Mud, No Lotus


Today marks the first day of spring where I live. Earlier this week, I awoke in the middle of the night to a deluge of rain pounding on the windows, strong wind whipping through the bare trees outside in a whistling whirl. Thunder boomed, lightning struck, and the morning brought little relief. A sideways pour of heavy water continued through the next day, the sheer force of it all leading me to think that something must be shifting — the darkness of winter finally washing away for good.

When the storm cleared, winter’s remaining snow and ice had transformed into a muddy trail of muck in my neighborhood. “No mud, no lotus,” the famous Thich Nhat Hanh teaching goes, and though I’ve stepped in my fair share of too-soft ground this week, I’ve found myself unusually grateful for it.

This winter has been a near-constant tip-toe on slick ice and uneven snow banks, constantly shifting weight to avoid the ground coming out from beneath me. This week, I’ve found myself revelling in the way the softened earth has welcomed each footstep, allowing my feet to sink into it at last, no longer rejecting the path I wish to wear upon it.

The late Mary Oliver expresses a similar appreciation in her poem “Rice”:
It grew in the black mud.
It grew under the tiger’s orange paws.
Its stems thinner than candles, and as straight.
Its leaves like the feathers of egrets, but green.
The grains cresting, wanting to burst.
Oh, blood of the tiger.

I don’t want you just to sit down at the table.
I don’t want you just to eat, and be content.
I want you to walk out into the fields
where the water is shining, and the rice has risen.
I want you to stand there, far from the white tablecloth.
I want you to fill your hands with the mud, like a blessing.
So often we wish to bypass the difficult, messy parts of life, eager to reach the reward of the lotus on the other side. But just as a seed needs rain and mud to grow into a flower, we, too, have the potential to be wonderfully shaped by the challenges we face. The mud and muck will feed us eventually, bringing a nourishing bowl of rice to our table. 

The three teachings below capture this lesson beautifully. May they inspire you to embrace this new season, and when at last the bowl of rice arrives, to eat it with a smile.

—Lilly Greenblatt, digital editor, Lion’s Roar

No Mud, No Lotus


To truly take care of the planet, we need to take care of our own suffering, says Brother Phap Huu.


We’re here to grow and transform continually. And in transformation, we sometimes need mud. It’s a good ingredient to help nurture the lotus flower within us. Our practice involves taking care of the “mud,” learning to accept, see, feel, and even smell it. Then we nurture it into flowers of wisdom. The teaching of “no mud, no lotus” reminds us that suffering and happiness are intertwined, supporting one another.

The lotus may symbolize the beauty and happiness in life, but once you cut it and place it in a vase with clean water, it’ll only last for a few hours before wilting. However, the lotus thrives in the mud, knowing how to regenerate itself; it possesses the wisdom to be present and let go. Thanks to the mud, it can grow, bloom again, and offer itself to the world.

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The Miracle of Daily Mindfulness


Diana Winston shares her advice on how to meditate every day, “even if you would rather me thrown into a shark-infested ocean.”


When we look deeply we see that suffering and happiness inter-are, just as the mud and the lotus interpenetrate each other. A lotus can only grow in mud. If there were no mud, there would be no lotus flower. There’s a very close connection between suffering and happiness, just as there is between mud and lotus. Real happiness is possible when we have the right view of suffering and happiness. It’s the same as front and back, right and left. The right cannot exist without the left; the left cannot exist without the right. Happiness cannot exist without suffering.

When we live mindfully, we try to live in such a way that we can generate the energies of mindfulness, concentration, and insight throughout the day. These are the energies that bring us happiness and the clarity that we call right view. When we have right view, we’re able to practice right thinking. Right thinking is based on right view; it’s thinking that’s characterized by nondiscrimination and nonduality. According to right view, there can be no happiness without suffering. Our thinking can make us suffer, but it can also make us free. We need right thinking to help us stop our suffering.

The Garden Path


It takes root; it grows; it blooms. Cheryl Wilfong on how meditation practice is cultivated like a garden.


If you don’t have an established practice, I recommend beginning your meditation by softening the heart. First, visualize a place of still water. This feeling may last for only a second. Notice that. Next, express gratitude for the blessings of your life, even the common things that you take for granted. Third, practice loving-kindness toward yourself. This tenderizing of the heart is like preparing the soil in our garden — we turn the soil and add the compost of caring. Then we plant the seeds of mindfulness by focusing on the breath, sounds, or sensations. After your timer goes off, try to sit in a chair by a window with a nice view, or perhaps on a deck. With a cup of tea in hand, contemplate an aspect of a recent dharma reading. or stroll around a garden.