Sitting Meditation:The Progressive Stages of Jhānic States

Date:12/07/2024   12/08/2024

Location: Star Lake Meditation Center

Teacher: Sara

Sitting Meditation

The Progressive Stages of Jhānic States

Jhāna is not a single experience but a gradual refinement of mind from coarse to subtle. Without discernment, relaxation or concentration may be mistaken for true absorption, leading to attachment or confusion.

1. Initial Settling

Attention withdraws from external distraction.
Thoughts lessen but still arise.
This is preparatory concentration.

2. Sustained Unification

The mind remains with one object.
Distraction weakens but persists.
Stability begins to form.

3. Emergence of Ease and Joy

Lightness and pleasure arise naturally.
These reflect deepening stability.
They are not final attainment.

4. Equanimous Balance

Joy softens into steadiness.
The mind is less reactive.
Absorption matures.

5. Interior Quietude

External and internal stimuli fade.
The mind grows silent and unified.
Dullness must be guarded against.

6. Clear Awareness Within Stillness

Stillness remains lucid.
Neither blank nor vague.
This defines right absorption.

7. Non-Attachment as Test

No identification with any state.
No claim of attainment.
Otherwise absorption becomes obstruction.

8. Integration in Activity

Stability extends beyond sitting.
Movement does not disturb absorption.
This marks maturity.

Summary

Jhānic stages serve orientation, not fixation. Clear discernment prevents attachment and allows concentration to support awareness.