Daily, as it is part of standard Stoic practice (specifically, the technique of negative visualization, which I employ during before-sleep meditation).
Also curious about this. Have found meditating before bed can ruin a nights sleep and so am wary of experimenting with it.
Usually, when I mention meditation people have something like mindfulness meditation (or other Buddhist styles) in mind, but Stoic meditation is very different. You are in no way trying to empty your mind; actually it should be quite active.
The style I use involves replaying my entire day from waking in fast-forward with an imaginary observer-sage commentating on my actions, asking open-ended questions like “did it really make sense to worry about something over which you have no control?” or “don’t you think you should have waited until you calmed down first before trying to talk about [emotional issue]?”, etc...
It doesn’t negatively impact my sleep very much, since it only takes 10-15 minutes and it has a definite end-point (just when my “ghost” enters my room to go to sleep) which makes me feel a sense of finality (if anything, I would guess this makes sleep easier).
Daily, as it is part of standard Stoic practice (specifically, the technique of negative visualization, which I employ during before-sleep meditation).
Also curious about this. Have found meditating before bed can ruin a nights sleep and so am wary of experimenting with it.
Usually, when I mention meditation people have something like mindfulness meditation (or other Buddhist styles) in mind, but Stoic meditation is very different. You are in no way trying to empty your mind; actually it should be quite active.
The style I use involves replaying my entire day from waking in fast-forward with an imaginary observer-sage commentating on my actions, asking open-ended questions like “did it really make sense to worry about something over which you have no control?” or “don’t you think you should have waited until you calmed down first before trying to talk about [emotional issue]?”, etc...
It doesn’t negatively impact my sleep very much, since it only takes 10-15 minutes and it has a definite end-point (just when my “ghost” enters my room to go to sleep) which makes me feel a sense of finality (if anything, I would guess this makes sleep easier).
Other than the negative visualization technique, how else does your before-bed mediation differ from your normal meditation and why?
My before-bed meditation is my only meditation, so it is normal (for me).