When pain is present in the body, attention often narrows. Thoughts can become fixed on what hurts and why, pulling energy away from the rest of your experience. This meditation offers a different approach. Rather than pushing discomfort aside, you are invited to meet sensations with curiosity, allowing awareness to widen and soften around what is present.
Listen to the full practice here (~28 min).
This practice comes from a live Journey You Own Meditation Gathering, so you may notice natural pauses and gentle references to the group as you settle into shared practice.
What to Expect
The practice begins with breath awareness, noticing the lungs filling and the body gently responding with each inhale and exhale. If you are lying down, you may sense the body settling more fully into the surface beneath you. From this grounded starting point, attention is guided toward what is already asking for awareness in the body.
Rather than labeling pain as something personal, you are invited to notice how language shapes experience. For example, shifting from “I am in pain” to “this hip is in pain” allows sensations to be felt more clearly as temperature, pressure, tightness, or movement. This subtle change opens space to recognize yourself as more than the sensations you are experiencing.
From here, the meditation moves through a slow body scan, offering each part of your body attention and care. Throughout, breath acts as a steady companion, supporting relaxation and presence.
As awareness rests, you may notice stories or judgments arise about what you feel. The practice gently invites releasing those narratives and returning to direct sensation. Over time, a distinction may emerge between the one who is experiencing and the experience itself. This separation is not about distancing from the body, but about creating space for ease and compassion within awareness.
Toward the end of the practice, attention expands to include the body as a whole. Breath, warmth, and care are invited in as support, and the meditation gradually opens into a state of open awareness. Note that the practice begins and ends with a bell, offering a gentle cue for entering and completing the meditation.
After listening, you might reflect on:
- How does observing pain as sensation change your relationship to it?
- Where do you notice space or ease when attention softens?
- What supports you in staying present with physical experience?
You May Also Like
- Body Scan and Thoughts: A Guided Meditation for Mind-Body Connection
- Body Scan and Compassion: A Mind-Body Meditation Practice
May this practice support a more spacious and compassionate relationship with your body.
Join the JYO Meditation Gathering
If you’d like to explore more grounding practices in the community, you’re warmly invited to the Journey You Own Meditation Gathering. These free online sessions are held monthly and provide a supportive space to pause, breathe, and reconnect. Click here to register for the JYO Meditation Gathering