Mindfulness of Breathing
Practices

Mindfulness of Breathing

Buddhist (All Traditions)

Status · Anusandhāna
Source · Uncited
Period · Eternal

⚠️ CONTENT VERIFICATION STATUS: This draft is UNVERIFIED. All citations require validation.

Anapanasati (अनापानसति — Mindfulness of Breathing)

Overview

Anapanasati — "mindfulness of breathing" or "awareness of the breath" — is the foundational Buddhist meditation practice. It is found in the Pali Canon (Anapanasati Sutta, MN 118) and is practiced across all Buddhist traditions: Theravada, Mahayana, Vajrayana, Zen, and others.

The practice involves simply observing the breath — not controlling it, not trying to achieve anything special, just noticing. Through this practice, the meditator develops calm, concentration, and insight into the nature of reality.

The Buddha taught this practice in his first sermon (after enlightenment) and returned to it as the core method for developing the mind. The Anapanasati Sutta describes a progression of 16 steps through four tetrads (groups of four), developing mindfulness of the body, feelings, mind, and phenomena.


Practice Information

Type: Daily practice (nitya) — universal, available to all

Who May Perform: Anyone, regardless of tradition, caste, gender, or belief. Unlike some Buddhist practices, anapanasati does not require initiation.

Materials Needed:

  • A quiet place
  • A comfortable seat (chair, cushion, bench)
  • Timer (optional — 5–20 minutes recommended)
  • Willingness to sit with yourself

The Breath

The breath is:

  • Natural: No need to control or manipulate
  • Available: Always present, everywhere
  • Anchoring: Connects body and mind
  • Universal: Works for everyone, regardless of belief

Procedure

Basic Instructions

  1. Sit Comfortably

    • Spine straight but not rigid
    • Hands resting in lap or on knees
    • Eyes closed or slightly lowered
    • Shoulders relaxed
  2. Settle

    • Take a few deep breaths
    • Release tension
    • Allow the body and mind to calm
  3. Observe the Breath

    • Notice where you feel the breath most clearly:
      • The nostrils (cool/warm air)
      • The chest (rising/falling)
      • The abdomen (expanding/contracting)
    • Choose ONE place to focus
    • Simply notice: "in" ... "out"
  4. When the Mind Wanders

    • It will! This is normal
    • Notice: "thinking"
    • Gently return to the breath
    • No judgment, no frustration
  5. Continue

    • Maintain awareness of the breath
    • Notice the quality of the breath (long/short,粗/smooth)
    • Return to breath when mind wanders
  6. End Gracefully

    • Open eyes slowly
    • Take a moment to rest in awareness
    • Carry the practice into daily life

The Sixteen Steps (from the Sutta)

The Anapanasati Sutta describes a progression:

First Tetrad (Body)

  1. Breathe long, knowing "I breathe long"
  2. Breathe short, knowing "I breathe short"
  3. Experiencing the whole body, breathe
  4. Calming the body-process, breathe

Second Tetrad (Feelings)

  1. Experiencing rapture, breathe
  2. Experiencing pleasure, breathe
  3. Experiencing the mental formations, breathe
  4. Experiencing equanimity, breathe

Third Tetrad (Mind)

  1. Experiencing the mind, breathe
  2. Satisfying the mind, breathe
  3. Stilling the mind, breathe
  4. Releasing the mind, breathe

Fourth Tetrad (Dhammas)

  1. Contemplating impermanence, breathe
  2. Contemplating fading of passion, breathe
  3. Contemplating cessation, breathe
  4. Contemplating letting go, breathe

Textual Basis

  • Anapanasati Sutta (MN 118): "Discourse on Mindfulness of Breathing" — the primary Pali text [Pali Canon, Majjhima Nikaya, Sutta 118]
  • Sati Sutta (SN 47.35): On the four foundations of mindfulness
  • Mahasatipatthana Sutta (DN 22): The four foundations of mindfulness, including breath

For Tibetan Buddhism:

  • Kangyur: Various texts on breath meditation
  • Jamgon Kongtrul: "The Nine Yanas" on breath practice

Variations Across Traditions

Theravada (Burmese Vipassana):

  • Dry insight (sukkha-vipassana) without visualization
  • Emphasis on noting technique (labeling phenomena)
  • Retreats often begin with anapanasati

Zen/Chan:

  • Breath counting (数息 / shūxī): Count exhalations 1–10, restart if you lose count
  • "Just sitting" (shikantaza) sometimes preceded by breath practice

Tibetan Buddhism:

  • Breath of Naropa (Tummo/introduction to inner heat)
  • Visualization may accompany breath
  • The "nine-round" method (nyungne): dividing breath into three parts, three rounds

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR):

  • Secular adaptation of anapanasati
  • Used in hospitals, schools, corporations
  • Focus on present-moment awareness

Common Misunderstandings

  1. "I can't meditate — my mind is too busy": A busy mind is normal; the practice is noticing the busy mind and returning to breath
  2. "I should stop thoughts": No — just notice and return; the return IS the practice
  3. "I should feel something special": Not necessarily; calm and peace may come, or not; the practice is the noticing
  4. "I need to sit for hours": Even 5–10 minutes daily is beneficial; consistency matters more than duration

What Requires Initiation vs. What Can Be Explored

Requires Initiation:

  • Tantric breath practices (Tummo, etc.)
  • Advanced Tibetan practices with deity visualization

Can Be Explored Today:

  • Basic anapanasati as described here
  • Mindfulness of breathing in daily life (walking, eating, waiting)

Practice You Can Begin Today

5-Minute Beginner Practice:

  1. Set a timer for 5 minutes
  2. Sit comfortably, spine straight
  3. Close eyes gently
  4. Breathe naturally — don't control
  5. Notice: "breathing in" ... "breathing out"
  6. When mind wanders, notice and return
  7. Continue for 5 minutes
  8. Practice daily, gradually extending to 10, 15, 20 minutes

DivineLens presents perspectives from within this tradition, curated for authenticity. For personal spiritual direction, initiation, advanced study, or questions about tradition-specific practice, we recommend finding a qualified teacher. Our Advisory Council reviews all content for theological accuracy.


Known Limitations

  1. Citations require verification.
  2. The variations across traditions are simplified.
  3. Health warnings (e.g., for those with trauma, certain mental health conditions) are absent.
  4. The relationship between anapanasati and vipassana is underexplored.

Recommended reviewers: A Theravada teacher, a Zen teacher, a Tibetan Buddhist practitioner.