Saturday, February 12, 2011

Coffee as Meditation

by Edward Espe Brown

(originally published in the September/October 2001 issue of Yoga Journal (entitled, A Jolt of Meditation, The author finds common ground between his morning cup of joe and his daily meditation routine.)

During the years I lived in a meditation center, I rushed through my morning coffee.  After all, if I didn't drink it fast enough, I'd be late for meditation.  It was important to get to meditation on time; otherwise, one had to endure the social stigma of "being late" (lacking the proper spiritual motivation), as well as the boredom and frustration of having to wait to meditate - until latecomers were admitted.

When I moved out of the center, I had to learn how to live in the world.  I had been institutionalized for nearly 20 years.  I had been "committed."  Now I was out and about.  What did it mean?  There was no formal meditation hall in my home.  I could set my meditation cushion in front of my home alter, or I could sit up in bed and cover my knees with the blankets.  There were no rules.  So I soon stopped getting up at 3:30 a.m.  Once I did awaken, I found that a hot shower, which had not really fit with the previous routine, was quite invigorating.  Of course, getting more sleep also helped.

Then I was ready for coffee: hot, freshly brewed, exquisitely delicious coffee.  Not coffee in a cold cup from an urn; not coffee made with lukewarm water out of a thermos; not coffee with cold milk, 2 percent milk, or nonfat milk: coffee with heated half-and-half!  Here was my opportunity to fulfill the frustrated longings of countless mornings of my past.  I would have not just any old coffee, but Peet's Garuda Blend - a mixture of Indonesian beans, brewed with recently boiled water and served in a pre-heated cup.

Unfortunately by the time I finished the coffee, I had been sitting around so long that it was time to get started on the day, but I hadn't done any meditation.  With this heavenly beverage in hand, who needed to meditate?

The solution was obvious: Bring the ceremoniously prepared coffee, in the pre-heated cup, to the meditation cushion.  This never would have been allowed at the center or in any formal meditation hall I have visited, but in my own home it was a no-brainer.  Bring the coffee to the cushion - or was it the other way around?

I light the candle and offer incense.  "Homage to the Perfection of Wisdom, the Lovely, the Holy," I say.  "May all beings be happy, healthy, and free from suffering."  I sit down on the cushion and place the coffee just past my right knee.  I cross my legs and then put the cup right in the middle in front of my ankles.  I sit without moving, so I don't accidentally spill the coffee.

I straighten my posture and sip some coffee.  I feel my weight wettling onto the cushion, lengthen the back of my neck, and sip some coffee.  Taste, enjoy, soften, release.  I bring my awareness to my breath moving in, flowing out.  If I lose track of my breath, I am reminded to take a sip of coffee - robust, hearty, grounding.  Come back to the coffee.  Come back to the breath.  A distraction?  A thought?  A judgment?  Sip of coffee.  Enjoy the coffee.  Enjoy the breath.  Focus on the present moment.  And, remembering the words of a vipassana teacher of mine ("Wisdom, in Buddhism, is defined as the proper and efficacious use of caffeine"), I stabilize my intention: "Now, as I drink this cup of coffee, I vow with all beings to awaken body, mind, and spirit to the true taste of the Dharma.  May all beings attain complete awakening this very moment."  As I visualize the whole world awakening, my mind expands into the vastness.