The Discipline of Mind Training
Who’s in Charge of This Mind?
There’s an old Zen saying:
If the student understands the martial art, they will succeed—some of the time.
If they understand the art and their opponent, they will succeed—most of the time.
But if they understand the art, their opponent, and themselves—there can only be success.
Why? Because when we understand ourselves, everything becomes part of deepening that understanding. Even failure becomes fuel for insight. Even stumbling becomes part of the process.
In the Japanese contemplative art of Kyūdō, or meditative archery, the practitioner begins just one arrow’s length from the target. Obviously, success is guaranteed. But the real inquiry is: Where was the mind during that moment?
The point isn’t the target.
The point is the mind.
Training the mind is the process of coming to understand it—so that we can understand ourselves. This isn’t about controlling reality or forcing outcomes. True agency means having the capacity to recognize when we’ve been led astray and the skill to return to center, to clarity.
Who is in control here?
Who is the master of this ship?
And where are we heading?
Without training, we’re dragged by impulse: desire leading to desire, followed by frustration and disillusionment. With training, we begin to steer.
Like a ship’s captain navigating turbulent seas, we don’t engage each wave or obsess over every danger. We maintain internal balance and guide the vessel. This is the function of discipline: to cultivate the strength and steadiness needed to navigate life—not from reactivity, but from clarity.
A serious student of meditation gives themselves to training—as any martial artist, craftsperson, or professional would. Repetitive, often boring, daily practice is the path. This is what allows great artists, writers, and musicians to face their inner demons and still show up.
Meditation is not an escape, a state, or a lifestyle hashtag. It is a practice—a method for developing mastery over the mind, so that we can reclaim agency in our lives.
Stability, Clarity, Strength and Wisdom
We begin by learning to take our seat.
Taking our seat means we accept the moment as it is. We let the fears, triggers, and emotional currents rise—but we do not chase them. We notice. We return. Again and again, we come back—until something in us begins to settle.
That stability becomes the ballast for a turbulent mind. And from that ballast, clarity arises.
Clarity doesn’t come from avoiding confusion, but by sitting through it—training our mind to stay upright as we pass through briars and storms. This work is worth it because we are gaining strength through wisdom. And with this training, there is only success. You have a hard session, that’s great. You have an amazing session, that’s fine. You don’t want to be here, that’s fine. Be here not wanting to. Build strength so our mind doesn’t push us around.
This is the rhythm of the path:
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Daily practice is the method.
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Awareness is the outcome.
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Awareness reveals space—mental, emotional, existential.
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In space, wisdom appears.
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And wisdom returns us to deeper awareness.
The cycle is self-reinforcing, never final, always deepening. And always predicated on returning to the present in practice.
RETURNING TO PORT: Confidence, Not Control
Each return to center strengthens us. Each foray into the wilds of the mind builds experience. This is mastery with the mind—not domination, but partnership. We don’t suppress the mind. We steady it. We navigate with it.
When we lose our seat, we lose access to the space that reveals awareness—and we lose confidence. Without confidence, there is no agency. We become reactive, trapped in our assumptions, convinced our view is the view. And as the mind narrows, we begin to build an echo chamber—around us, and inside us.
We become susceptible to victimization, as we are so easily led. Locked in our mother’s basement we conjure doom for the world. And feeling to helpless, we will follow any easy way out. But, let me be clear, this is no way out. The way out is the way in. Meditation training is changing the only thing we can change – our mind. And the process is long and slow, like learning the cello, or getting a black belt. But unlike other forms of mastery, meditation has no requisites, other than the breath.
Standing 5 feet something, we may never be a basketball player. Without college level science we might never calculate the weight of the universe. But there are no necessaries to gain mastery over the mind, aside for a willingness to try.
Life can be overwhelming. So, cut it all back, and begin at the beginning. The beginning is now. There is where we start. You can’t change the world in this moment. But you can change your mind through training. And the mind becomes strong through training.
One breath at a time.