Failing At Meditation Was Exactly What I Needed To Succeed At It

It's impossible to do meditation wrong but I did…
a boy lost  in the forest

Don’t laugh. I failed at one thing no one can fail at. Meditation is not an achievement. Meditation starts with letting go of all achievements, including intellectual and spiritual ones. Meister Eckhart, the 13th-century mystical theologian, captured the essence of meditation quite well:

Spiritual life is more about subtraction than addition.

Whatever you think you can add is an impediment. If you internally say: “Oh, I think I did it!” you probably didn’t. However, if you find yourself saying: “Good heavens, it didn’t go very well!” chances are you are right on target.


What is mindful breathing and why it works...or doesn't?

An emerald wave

Breathing is one bodily function that we don’t control. It’s automatic. The idea is — when you intentionally shift your focus from your wandering thoughts to breathing, your thoughts eventually calm down.

But, believe it or not, as soon as I started focusing on my breath, I started feeling anxious. Couldn’t tell why. I felt some inner resistance to what was happening, which intensified as I pushed on.

When I first heard about breathing meditation, I loved the theology behind it — God is the ultimate breath, the pneuma of the world. I was instructed to just breathe in and out—while refocusing my roaming thoughts on the gap between the breaths.

Theologically speaking, I knew the process pretty well — having read a lot on the mystical tradition of Hesychasm, so revered in the Orthodox church for its contemplative approach.

But after struggling with it for a while, I had to drop watching my breath entirely and switched to other forms of contemplative practice like listening to guided meditations, listening to music, listening to the sounds of nature, centering prayer, watching wildlife, playing the guitar, writing, being in silence.


What are the things you should not do in meditation?

A foaming stream

Over time, I noticed that with all these other forms of meditation, I don’t actually care whether I succeed or not. Some days, my monkey mind is all over the place, and I just watch its frantic skipping from one thought to another. Other days, it’s pretty quiet. 

But I don’t really care what my mind does as long as I see it doing it. Seeing, however, doesn’t require an effort on my part. Rather, it requires letting go of all effort. To paraphrase Thomas Keating, who talks a lot about meditation and contemplative prayer,

“there’s only one prerequisite to contemplative prayer — get yourself out of the way.”

If I catch myself “trying in any way” during meditation, I let it go. Because my trying is getting in the way of God. If I catch myself straining over something, I let it go. When I catch anything at all that I can “subtract” — whether it’s a desire to “hear God,” “have an experience,” “become something,” “change my inner state” — I subtract it until there’s nothing left.


How do you get yourself out of the way? By continually letting go of inner resistance to what is. There’s usually too much of me. Too much of what I think I know. Too much of what I think I can do. I am addicted to controlling the outcome of my “spiritual experiences.”

Well, I can’t control them. I can only see what’s going on in my mind. And seeing is entirely effortless action. Seeing happens when you don’t do anything else. Over time, I realized that my anxiety with the breathing technique came from “trying.”

I still prefer other methods of meditation though. With the breathing technique, there’s too much of me. 


What is inner stillness and how to practice it?

A leaf on a branch

According to Psalm 46:10, stillness is a way of knowing:

"Be still and know that I am God."

Clarity, or true knowledge, comes in stillness. When there’s some agitation in me, my seeing is blurred. Stillness only comes with the inner surrender to what is — whether my mind is franticly hopping from one train of thought to another or falling asleep.

In some sense, my job is to “fail completely” at trying to do meditation right. It’s like hitting the bottom — suddenly you realize the futility of all your effort. And then, what’s left? Nothing.

This nothing is everything. Failing is the complete surrender. It’s the stillness that Psalm 46 talks about.

It’s the Damascus road fiasco that opens your eyes — while making you blind to everything that’s going on around you. As long as I “try” to do meditation right, I do it wrong. When I renounce all trying, it happens. The seeing happens. The knowledge of God comes over you like a tidal wave.


Failing at meditation was an important milestone in my spiritual journey. It was a sweet surrender. Can I, please, fail at everything else too? Yes, actually, I can. Failing is the starting point of everything. Just like God created the world out of nothing, nothing is the beginning of everything.

My job is to keep subtracting. 

All great spirituality teaches about letting go of what you don’t need and who you are not. Then, when you can get little enough and naked enough and poor enough, you’ll find that the little place where you really are is ironically more than enough and is all that you need. Richard Rohr.


What is the true meaning of meditation?

Properly speaking, meditation is not a tool, though we are used to seeing it that way. Meditation is not a means to an end. As soon as I start “using it” to achieve something else — a certain state of mind, a feeling, an experience — it slips right through my fingers.

Here’s a shortlist of things I DON’T do in meditation:

  • I am not performing.
  • I am not pursuing any goals.
  • I am not trying to achieve anything.
  • I am not using this time as a means to an end.

Meditation is allowing myself to be — and watching for whatever may arise both inside and outside. A Carmelite friar William McNamara called contemplative prayer “a long, loving look at the real.” 


What happens when I let go of control?

Beautiful View Under Sunset

When I “cease striving,” I start seeing the real. There’s no need to jump to the next moment — there are no results to achieve. Everything is now. Thomas Merton called this inner poverty “the point of nothingness.”

“This little point of nothingness and of absolute poverty is the pure glory of God in us…”

In fact, the same famous verse from Psalm 46 runs in another translation like this:

“Cease striving and know that I am God.”


Now I am free to go back to the breathing meditation and fail. It will be the end of my effort and fertile ground for a lot of new growth. It will be my point of nothingness — which is the beginning of every good thing.

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Opinions and Perspectives

Their experience with anxiety during breath focus is exactly what happened to me.

8

Really appreciate the author's vulnerable sharing about their own struggles.

5

This article gave me permission to stop being so hard on myself during meditation.

4

The concept of stillness coming from surrender rather than effort is eye-opening.

5

Love the idea that there's no right or wrong way to meditate.

7

I think I finally understand what true meditation means after reading this.

1

Always felt guilty about my wandering mind during meditation. This perspective changes everything.

2

The idea of watching thoughts without judgment makes so much more sense now.

3

Now I understand why forcing myself to meditate never worked for me.

8

This helps explain why I feel more peaceful during activities like gardening than formal meditation.

3

The author's honesty about struggling with traditional methods is refreshing.

2

I've had similar experiences with different forms of meditation. Some work better than others for me.

3

Interesting how failure can actually be the path to success in meditation.

5

The part about getting yourself out of the way really resonates with me.

1

This reminds me so much of my own journey with meditation. Had to learn to let go.

6

Finally, someone who understands that meditation isn't about reaching some perfect state!

4

The concept of subtracting rather than adding is exactly what I needed to hear.

8

Been struggling with meditation for years. This gives me hope that I'm not doing it wrong after all.

4

That Richard Rohr quote at the end perfectly sums it all up. Less really is more.

7

Love how this challenges the achievement-oriented approach to meditation.

7

The idea of meditation as seeing rather than doing is revolutionary to me.

7

Never considered that trying too hard could be the problem. This explains a lot.

6

Such an important message about letting go of control. That's where true meditation begins.

5

I can relate to the anxiety about breathing meditation. Thought there was something wrong with me!

0

This makes me want to try meditation again with a completely different mindset.

1

What a beautiful way to look at failure in meditation. It's not really failure at all.

0

The author's experience mirrors mine exactly. I couldn't get comfortable with breath meditation either.

8

My whole approach to meditation has been wrong. I've been trying to force relaxation.

2

This feels like permission to stop trying so hard. What a relief!

3

Really appreciate the emphasis on not needing to achieve anything. Takes so much pressure off.

5

Wonder if anyone else has experienced similar anxiety with breathing meditation? I'd love to hear others' experiences.

4

The connection between surrender and stillness really speaks to me. It's when I stop fighting that peace comes.

0

Been meditating for years and still learning new approaches. This article gave me fresh insights.

4

Never thought about meditation as seeing rather than doing. That's quite profound.

7

The monkey mind description is so accurate. Mine never seems to stop jumping around!

2

I appreciate how the author incorporates different religious perspectives while keeping the message universal.

4

This article perfectly describes my journey with meditation. I kept failing until I learned to embrace the failure.

4

My meditation practice improved dramatically when I stopped trying to achieve something specific.

2

The idea of subtraction rather than addition in spiritual life is revolutionary to me. Completely changes my approach.

2

What works for me is walking in nature. I don't try to meditate, it just happens naturally.

2

I find the theological connections fascinating, especially the reference to God as the ultimate breath.

4

This reminds me of the zen concept of beginner's mind. Sometimes knowing too much gets in our way.

6

The part about spiritual experiences being uncontrollable really hit home. I've been trying to force them for years.

5

Reading this made me realize I've been treating meditation like a task to complete rather than a state of being.

4

Can someone explain what they mean by the point of nothingness? I'm not quite getting that concept.

2

Love the idea of seeing as an effortless action. Never thought about it that way before.

8

This changed my whole perspective on meditation. I've been trying too hard to do it right.

4

The concept of letting go of control is what I struggle with most. My mind always wants to take charge.

7

I disagree with the premise. Meditation requires discipline and practice like any other skill. You can't just fail your way to success.

8

Playing guitar as meditation? That actually makes perfect sense to me. I feel most present when I'm making music.

2

The author's journey really resonates with me. I've been struggling with traditional meditation techniques for years.

7

That's exactly what happens to me too! I get more anxious when I try to focus on my breathing. Glad I'm not alone.

5

Interesting point about anxiety increasing when focusing on breath. I thought I was the only one who experienced that!

6

I love that part about watching wildlife as meditation. I do this naturally and never considered it meditation before.

6

Anyone else find it liberating to read that we don't need to achieve anything in meditation? I've been putting so much pressure on myself.

2

Not sure I agree with this perspective. How can you improve at anything without trying? Seems counterintuitive to me.

1

The quote about spiritual life being more about subtraction than addition really struck me. Makes me think about how I've been approaching meditation all wrong.

1

I tried focusing on my breath for months and felt increasingly frustrated. Now I understand why that approach wasn't working for me.

8

This is such a refreshing take on meditation. The idea that failing at it is actually succeeding makes so much sense to me.

1

I really connect with this article. I've always felt like I was doing meditation wrong because my mind wouldn't stop racing.

0

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