
Forest Refuge meditation hall, Barre, Massachusetts built around a stone outcropping

Absorption -- First Jhana
Jhanas Advice From Two Spiritual Friends: Concentration Meditation As Taught by Ven. Pa Auk Sayadaw (Tina Rasmussen & Stephen Snyder)
Jhana [meditative absorption] only appears when the conditions for it are ripe. A beginning jhana practitioner cannot force the awareness into full absorption or make it happen. The student must be vigilant while relaxing into the process. The meditator is either pulled into the jhana spontaneously or uses a resolve for the first time entering a jhana.
Do not become discouraged as you focus on the anapana nimitta [an internal light at the upper lip that signifies intense concentration on the breath], allowing concentration to build, but also do not become overly zealous and use the resolves repeatedly to the point that your concentration wanes.
Jhanas Advice From Two Spiritual Friends: Concentration Meditation As Taught by Ven. Pa Auk Sayadaw (Tina Rasmussen & Stephen Snyder)

Do not become discouraged as you focus on the anapana nimitta [an internal light at the upper lip that signifies intense concentration on the breath], allowing concentration to build, but also do not become overly zealous and use the resolves repeatedly to the point that your concentration wanes.

There is an awareness of being in jhana while in jhana. It is not an unconscious state. One is aware only of the meditation object [the nimitta, which is the sign of the breath]. In full absorption, there is no awareness of time, the body, or the physical senses.
However, due to the deep concentration, the beginning meditator's mind may be able to quickly shift from absorption to access concentration... In this case, the meditator may have a slight sense of time, the body, or the physical senses. (From pp. 65-66 of the 1st edition, now re-released as Practicing the Jhanas).
Master: "Do not take your earthly experiences too seriously. The root cause of sorrow is in viewing the passing show with too much emotional involvement" (Man’s Eternal Quest, SRF, pg. 239).
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