Recorded at the Vedanta Society of Western Washington on July 22, 2012.
In this lecture, Swami Atmajayananda reflects on meditation from the standpoint of lived spiritual practice rather than technique alone. He situates meditation within the broader Vedantic tradition, contrasting contemporary, results-oriented approaches with the patience and depth required for inner transformation. Using the metaphor of a “game” played between the outward-directed and inward-turning tendencies of the mind, he explains how meditation gradually refines attention, discipline, and discernment. Early efforts often reveal restlessness rather than peace, yet these struggles are presented as an essential part of the process, through which ethical living, steady effort, and guidance from a qualified teacher slowly bring clarity and balance.
The talk then places meditation within the classical eightfold path of yoga, emphasizing that sustained concentration cannot be separated from moral discipline, self-restraint, and gradual withdrawal from habitual distractions. Swami Atmajayananda highlights the role of mantra repetition, steady practice, and the cultivation of discrimination in quieting the mind and allowing deeper awareness to emerge. He stresses that meditation is ultimately not about forcing silence or grasping experiences, but about learning to let go—allowing the mind to become sufficiently calm and transparent for awareness of inherent divinity to reveal itself. As the sense of struggle diminishes, meditation ceases to be a technique and becomes a natural absorption, where distinctions between effort, meditator, and object fade, leaving a stable foundation of peace and clarity that transforms daily life.