Sitting Meditation:Contemplation of the Impure Body~Softening Attachment to the Body

Date: 06/21/2025   06/22/2025

Location: Star Lake Meditation Center

Teacher: Shilin Long

Sitting Meditation

Contemplation of the Impure Body: Softening Attachment to the Body

Contemplating the body as “not entirely pure” is a traditional Buddhist practice aimed at weakening attachment, desire, and false identification with the body. This contemplation is not about rejecting the body, but about seeing it clearly and relating to it with wisdom and balance.

1. The True Nature of the Body: A Clear and Realistic View

1. The body is a compound of conditions

Skin, bones, blood, and organs are temporary arrangements—not “me” or “mine.”

2. The body is always changing

Growth, aging, sickness, and decay reveal its impermanence.

3. The body cannot be fully relied upon

It gets tired, injured, or ill, offering no lasting security.

2. Why Contemplate the Impure Body: Reducing Attachment

1. Reducing obsession with appearance

Beauty and ugliness are impermanent.

2. Weakening sensual desire

Understanding the body’s true nature softens craving.

3. Loosening the identification “this body is me”

The body is a vehicle, not an identity.

3. Basic Method: Observing the Body From Outside to Inside

1. Begin with external features

Skin, hair, nails, and teeth are imperfect and constantly changing.

2. Move inward

Bones, muscles, organs, and blood reveal the body’s true physical structure.

3. Observe bodily functions

Breathing, digestion, and circulation show the body as a biologicalmachine, not an idealized image.

4. Applying This Practice in Meditation: Balanced and Calm

1. No aversion—only clarity

The aim is to remove illusion, not to cultivate disgust.

2. Do not reject the body

Value the body without clinging to it.

3. Combine with breath awareness

Breath stabilizes the mind, preventing extremes.

5. Psychological Benefits: Freedom From Desire and Anxiety

1. Reduced craving

Desire weakens when the body is understood realistically.

2. Less appearance anxiety

Aging becomes natural rather than fearful.

3. Greater clarity

Awareness sharpens when illusions fade.

6. Common Misunderstandings: Avoiding Extremes

1. Misunderstanding: This practice means hating the body

Correct view: It means not clinging to the body.

2. Misunderstanding: The body has no value

Correct view: It is impermanent but useful.

3. Misunderstanding: This contemplation is negative

Correct view: It brings freedom, balance, and mental ease.

7. Bringing This Practice Into Daily Life

1. Observe natural aging

Wrinkles and fatigue are normal processes.

2. Notice bodily needs

Hunger, pain, or desire are physiological—not identity.

3. Respond with awareness

This keeps the mind from being overly swayed by physical conditions.

Conclusion

Contemplating the impure body does not deny the body’s function—it frees the mind from excessive attachment and unrealistic expectations.
Through gentle and clear observation, practitioners learn to use the body wisely without clinging to it. This balanced perspective is a profound expression of meditative insight and inner freedom.

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