Reminds me of Logan Strohl’s use of meditation for brainstorming, orienting, etc.:
For some reason nobody I talk to does the kind of meditation I do. In case that’s because nobody knows about it, I thought I’d explain it.
When I was about nineteen or twenty, I spent a summer practicing Soto Zen at a residential temple in North Carolina. The Soto style of meditation is called “shikantaza”, and it’s sometimes referred to as a “methodless method”. I wasn’t really given any instructions for how to meditate because, well, for shikantaza, no instruction is appropriate. “Sit down, don’t talk, don’t fall asleep.” That is how you meditate in Soto Zen. (For real, in the founder’s “Instructions for Meditation”, pretty much all of the concrete instructions are about stuff like how to arrange your limbs. ( https://global.sotozen-net.or.jp/eng/practice/zazen/advice/fukanzanzeng.html ))
I’ve tried a variety of meditations over the years. I got a degree in religious studies. I’ve gone to a few kinds of temples, I’ve learned yogic breathing and chakra meditations, I’ve invented a lot of my own attentional kata and cognitive techniques. But what have I actually ended up doing on a regular basis ten years later?
What I’ve actually ended up doing is a little more formalized and strategic than shikantaza, but it’s basically the same: Sit down, don’t talk, don’t fall asleep. What does my mind do? Whatever it wants. Really? Yes. Like when you’re in a boring lecture and haven’t heard a word the teacher’s said for the past twenty minutes because you were daydreaming about your crush? Yes, exactly like that.
I mostly do it in the morning, to decide what kind of day I’m going to have. I stare at a wall and let my mind wander, and as I do, I take some notes (often on paper) about what sorts of thoughts and experiences I’m having. I note things like “imaginary argument with Kevin”, “buzzing in my right arm”, and “tangled up”. Afterward, I make a little summary: “I seem to be attempting a lot of problem-solving this morning”, or “That sure looks like the mind of a person who is overwhelmed by their responsibilities.” Then as I plan my day, I cater to a version of me with those particular things going on for them, which usually means adding a couple opportunities and re-ordering things, but sometimes means throwing out my plans entirely so I can eat ice cream and binge Netflix.
When I ask someone whether they meditate and they say yes, sometimes I ask them what sort of meditation they do. Usually they describe a form of mindfulness like Vipassana, or breath meditation, or emotional processing, or metta, or a tantric thing. And when I ask them, “Do you ever just, like, let your mind wander and see what happens?”, every person I’ve so far asked has said “no”.
So, I dunno, maybe give that a try. I think it’s pretty good.
Reminds me of Logan Strohl’s use of meditation for brainstorming, orienting, etc.: