Early on in our first lockdown I decided to run some online meditation sessions. I did that as part of my vision for Devon and Dorset Meditation (creating and supporting a community of people who would like to learn and practice meditation). But more and more as these online meditations have continued I realise that I’m not just doing it to help, support and guide people in their own meditations. I have developed a real community that is as important to me as it is to all of those who join the sessions.
Meditation is often viewed as a solitary activity, which indeed it is in that nobody can meditate for us; in meditating we are coming to our own stillness, finding our own inner peace. However there is something about meditating in a group that can enhance your own experience. Initially I thought that group meditations just wouldn’t work online but increasingly I realise that the community of people who meditate with me online is as important to me as I am to them.
Finding that community has, for me, been a vital part of creating a new normal - staying grounded, staying sane. It doesn’t have to be a meditation community it can be any community that is important to you. It doesn’t have to be online; circumstances are simply pointing that as the best way to deal with the current situation. So whether it’s a community of people to meditate with, a group of people to walk with, people to read poetry together, a knit and natter group - just whatever it is we are beings that benefit from doing stuff together, sharing energy, believing in each other. That doesn’t mean that being on your own is a negative thing. Far from it, being at peace with oneself is vital whatever is happening in our external world, but having that sense of community is also very important to us.
Spend some time reflecting on what are your communities that help you feel connected, and make the effort to develop and support the ones that are important to you. If someone is there for you then you are almost certainly there for them too!