#791: How to Feel at Peace Amidst High Stress — Guided Meditation with Zen Master Henry Shukman - podcast episode cover

#791: How to Feel at Peace Amidst High Stress — Guided Meditation with Zen Master Henry Shukman

Jan 27, 202512 minEp. 791
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Summary

This episode introduces a new 'Meditation Monday' segment, featuring Zen Master Henry Shukman. Shukman guides listeners through a meditation technique focused on recognizing and welcoming stress sensations in the body, rather than trying to eliminate them. The goal is to develop a greater capacity for self-awareness and kindness towards one's own discomfort.

Episode description

This episode is part of a new experiment called Meditation Monday. The teacher, Henry Shukman, has been on my podcast twice before. He is one of only a few dozen masters in the world authorized to teach Sanbo Zen, and now, he’ll be your teacher.

In addition to my long-form interviews each week, every Monday I’ll bring you a short 10-minute or so meditation, which will help you for the rest of the week.

Over this four-episode series, you’ll develop a Zen toolkit to help you find greater calm, peace, and effectiveness in your daily life.

Henry’s app, The Way, has changed my life since I first started using it. Unlike other meditation apps, where you’re overwhelmed with a thousand choices, The Way is a clear step-by-step training program guided entirely by Henry. Through a logical progression, you’ll develop real skills that stick with you.

I’ve been using it daily, often twice a day, and it’s lowered my anxiety more than I thought possible.

As a listener of my podcast, you can get 30 free sessions by visiting https://thewayapp.com/tim and downloading the app.

See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

Hello boys and girls, ladies and germs, this is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of The Tim Ferriss Show. This episode is a brand new experiment called Meditation Monday. That means in addition to my long-form interviews each week,

Every Monday, I will be bringing you a short 10-minute or so meditation, which will help you for the rest of the week. Over this four-episode series, you'll develop a Zen toolkit specifically to help you find greater calm, peace, and effectiveness in your daily life.

The teacher, Henry Schuchman, has been on my podcast twice before. He is one of only a few dozen masters in the world authorized to teach what is called Sambo Zen. And I have found this particularly interesting and effective. And now he'll be your teacher. I've been using Henry's app, The Way. often twice a day for the last few months, and it has lowered my anxiety more than I thought. possible as a listener of the show you yourself can get 30 free sessions

by visiting thewayapp.com slash Tim. So if you like what you hear in these meditations, which will be valuable in and of themselves, you can get 30 free sessions by going to thewayapp.com slash Tim. And for the time being, please enjoy this Meditation Monday with Henry Shookman. Welcome back to Meditation Monday with me, Henry Shuchman. Thank you for joining.

So I've already said that meditation can be an extraordinary journey of discovery. I believe that its deepest purpose is to reveal aspects of who we are and what our true relationship to the world really is. which can kind of blow our minds when we taste them. And of course, meditation is not the only way of finding out that kind of stuff, but it's an incredible way of grounding it into our lives and integrating it into the way we actually live. However...

The vast majority of us, myself included, come to meditation. Not for those reasons, but to handle stress. We may not even realise we've got stress, we're just kind of miserable. I was in that category in my early to mid-twenties. when i started meditating i was just really unhappy and had a good friend who meditated who was much less unhappy than i was and i decided to

try out what he was doing and it changed my life. Here's what we're going to do today. The tool we're going to be picking up is around how to handle stress, how to recognize stress and what to do about it. through meditation. And essentially, the main thing we're going to be working on is recognizing the signatures of stress in our bodies. Coming into the body, getting to know it in the body and...

just that recognition starts to dial it right down. So let's come into our comfortable seated position. You can close your eyes or you can lower your gaze. And as always, we're going to start by really arriving. So kind of catching up with ourselves. You know, here we are with this little space, this little gap in our day when we get to be still and quiet. And really, it can be a kind of refuge. So just take stock. How are you doing right now?

We've all just jumped in from our busy lives outside this space. What are we carrying? What's in our bodies right now? What kind of momentum from the day? We're not seeking to get rid of anything or change anything. We're just starting to recognize what's going on for us. Now let's give the body a chance to relax, to come into some kind of rest. So letting your shoulders settle. letting the seat receive the weight of your body, letting the floor beneath you receive the weight of your legs.

Letting your whole upper body be at rest, so either balanced or really giving the weight of your upper body to whatever support it has. You get to unwind right now. You get to sort of unbind yourself from the threads of your days, your busy days. So now, we may not particularly want to think about stress right now, but it's really helpful to, in this space, this kind of shelter almost of meditation. we can get to know what happens in our bodies when we feel anxious or stressed.

you might just think about some minor stressor like There's an email you haven't answered yet or a phone call or maybe the tyre pressure on your car needs to be checked. Just some minor thing. and just feel what happens in your chest, or your diaphragm just below the chest, or perhaps in your throat. Is there some sensation that you can notice in your torso? that seems to associate, correlate with stress. just do a kind of gentle scan of your torso

Is there some kind of energy, some kind of sensation? Could be a tension. Tightness might be a sense of heat. or some kind of agitation. Sometimes there's a certain density. Or it might be more like weather. There's a little high pressure system in the torso. Whatever you're finding, or even if you're not finding much of anything, let it be the way it is. keeping one part of your attention open to whatever's going on in your torso. At the same time, let your shoulders be soft.

Let the flanks of your body be soft. Let it almost be like the whole of your torso is made of warm wax. There's a warmth surrounding your chest area, your diaphragm area. Feel that warmth. and feel how it can hold any uncomfortable feeling within. If there is a tightness or a heat or a density, any kind of unease, Notice that there's a softness, a warmth in your body as well. that can welcome and hold any discomfort. We're learning to let things be, not to get rid of them, to let things be.

to be with our sometimes anxious, troubled heart. We don't need to banish them or suppress them or change them. We ourselves can learn to allow them. to bring a kindness towards our discomforts. So just resting a moment with a soft body and a sense of allowing. of kindness and patience toward any stress we might be feeling. that we really can kindly welcome it and sort of tend it. As if we might almost be rediscovering a kind of kind attentiveness that we've always had.

and can turn it toward ourselves, our own experience. Okay, so let's, you know, in your own time, come out of the meditation, come back to the space you're in. Sometimes people like to stretch a little bit after coming out of a sit. Whatever feels good for you. as we're proceeding with these sessions. Probably, or maybe, a counterintuitive one. When we're feeling stressed,

We don't try to get rid of it. Instead we try to recognize it as sensation in the body and do maybe the last thing we want to do which is welcome it. Allow it. Let it be part of what our experience currently actually is. And in doing that, we discover that we ourselves have a greater capacity than we might have remembered. to give ourselves loving, kind awareness. Thanks so much for joining me. See you on the next Meditation Monday.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.