Why Screentime, Reading, and Eating Can Be Total Zen
We have been systematically lied to about mindfulness. Modern spiritual culture has turned presence into a sterile prison, enforcing a puritanical rulebook: “When eating, only eat. When sitting, only sit. If you dare look at a screen or open a book while chewing, you are spiritually bankrupt.”
This rigid dogma creates a deep, exhausting inner friction. We sit down to enjoy a simple meal, switch on a television show or open a novel, and instantly a violent mental split occurs. Half of our mind is enjoying the story; the other half is wielding a heavy club of self-judgment, whispering that we are doing it wrong.
The Death of the Spiritual Monitor
Zen is not the execution of a perfect behavior. True Zen is the absolute collapse of the barrier between the observer and the observed. When you create an artificial rule about how you "should" be meditating, you introduce a third entity into your mind: a microscopic spiritual security guard who stands in the corner, evaluating your holiness. That internal monitor is the true enemy of presence—not the television, and not the book.
If you are completely absorbed in the intertwining flavors of your food and the unfolding narrative on a screen, where is the split? If your mind has completely abandoned its plans for tomorrow, its regrets about yesterday, and its anxieties about identity, you are resting in an incredibly rare state of total alignment.
The core trap is making "mindfulness" an object to be achieved. When you are fully unified with what is happening right now, without wishing it were different, the friction stops. And when the friction stops, reality flows unchecked.
The Alchemy of Radical Presence
Let us strip away the dogma and look directly at the underlying mechanics of human consciousness. When you bring your full awareness into an activity—even a compound activity like reading while dining—something extraordinary happens to the nervous system. The mental divide completely vanishes.
The constant, exhausting background noise of the ego—the endless planning, judging, analyzing, and defending—finally goes quiet. This is the moment the mind lays down its heavy bags. When action and presence are unified into a single, cohesive current, it directly results in a profound state of deep internal relaxation.
The Kinetic Sequence of Consciousness:
Presence ──> Unified Action ──> Relaxation ──> Pure Pleasantness
The Birth of True Pleasantness
This state of relaxation is not a dull, lethargic sleepiness; it is a radiant, alive stillness. And it is precisely from this deep physical and mental relaxedness that a natural, unforced state of pleasantness emerges.
This pleasantness is not a loud, excited emotional high that you have to chase or manufacture. It is simply the quiet, beautiful, and undeniable joy of being completely unfragmented. It is the peace that rushes in to fill the empty space when your mind finally stops fighting its own reality.
So, turn on the screen. Open the book. Take a bite. But do it with such ferocious, undivided commitment that the "you" who is doing it completely disappears into the action itself. When the friction stops, true Zen begins.
Peace and harmony,
Sensei Maharaj 😊
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Thanks a lot for your support and response!
Peace and harmony,
Sensei M.Maharaj