A Year of Waking Up

2016  is our Year of Waking Up, and we have an even wider range of events than ever before.

As well as old favorites like our "Sit Breathe Love" meditation challenge, we'll bring you events like "The Conscious Couple," "Optimize Your Brain," and "Stress Reduction Through Mindfulness." Check it out!

Open your heart!

Living with Compassion is a 28 day online meditation event, Apr 1-28, in which we’ll be developing compassion and bringing it into our everyday lives.

In cultivating compassion, we learn to accept the reality of suffering, and to surround it with kindness.

Sit Breathe Love!

Sit Breathe Love is a 28 day meditation challenge, Apr 1-28, helping you to set up the habit of meditating daily.

But it’s not easy to set up a regular meditation practice, so we’re here to help you!

New Hampshire Retreat

How to Stop Beating Yourself Up is a retreat in Newmarket, New Hampshire, from Apr 22-24, 2016.

On this weekend retreat, Bodhipaksa will introduce a step-by-step guide to self-compassion, so that we can learn to be more gentle with and understanding of ourselves.

Sit Love Give

Sit with us as you learn meditation.

Love as you practice lovingkindness and compassion in daily life.

Give back by supporting Wildmind, helping us to teach meditation to more people. We have rewards for donors who give $15 a month or more.

Our Posture Workshop

Our posture workshop is where we suggest you start if you don't already have a meditation practice (and perhaps even if you do). We'll take you step-by-step through the process of setting up a meditation posture that will allow you to be both alert and relaxed.

The mindfulness of breathing

The mindfulness of breathing is a fundamental meditation practice that everyone should know. The benefits? You'll find that this practice helps you to calm your mind so that there's less inner chatter (especially the stuff that makes you unhappy). You'll find also that you're less distractible and better able to pay attention.

The development of lovingkindness

The development of lovingkindness (metta bhavana) works directly on our emotional habits, helping us to become more emotionally positive. You'll learn to be kinder to yourself: more patient, more understanding. You'll find that you're more considerate to others and that it's easier to forgive. You may even find (as others have) that others around you mysteriously become easier to be around. Hmmm.. wonder why that is?

Walking meditation

Walking meditation is a great way to bring more meditation into your daily life; it's a practice that can be done even in a busy city street. In this form of practice we develop greater mindfulness of the body, but we also become more aware of our thought patterns, our emotions, and even of the outside world. It's a calming practice. Walking meditation can also be a lovingkindness practice, especially when you're walking in a public place.

Mantra meditation

Our mantra meditation section is the most popular destination for our visitors. Mantras are simply phrases that we repeat (usually internally, but they can also be chanted out loud). As well as occupying the mind and thus calming it by preventing it from getting up to the usual mischief that causes us pain, mantras also have a symbolic value that evokes spiritual qualities.

The six element practice

The six element practice is a profound reflection on interconnectedness and impermanence. It's a very beautiful form of meditation. It not only helps us to calm the mind and give us a reassuring sense of our place in the great scheme of things, but it can be unsettling and challenging as well. Yes, I know. Reassuring and unsettling. That's Buddhist practice for you!

Subscribe to our Newsletter

About Buddhist meditation

In a way there's nothing very "Buddhist" about the meditation you'll find on Wildmind. When you pay attention to your breath, or to the sensations in your body as you walk, or when you cultivate feelings of love for another person, you won't have a sense that you're doing anything very "religious." In a way these are simply "human" meditation practices -- ways that a human being can pay attention to his or her own experience, and gently cultivate greater awareness and love.

The simplest form of meditation we teach here is mindfulness of breathing. The essence of this practice is that we simply bring our attention to the sensations of the breathing, and when the mind wanders, as it will, we gently steer it back to the breath once again. However in the form we teach here, there are four stages, each of which has a specific purpose in helping us to develop calmness, energy, continuity of awareness, or one-pointedness.

The other main form of meditation that we teach is the cultivation of lovingkindness, in which we take responsibility for our emotions, and encourage the development of qualities of empathy, patience, kindness, and compassion.

We also teach you how to set up your meditation posture (an essential consideration in any form of meditation practice), as well as walking meditation.

And outside of these structured guides to meditation, we have a blog with a vast collection of news stories about meditation, articles on practice, and reviews of books, CDS, and videos.

Support our activities!

Wildmind is largely supported by donations from people who appreciate our work. Please consider making a regular contribution. We have a rewards program for anyone contributing $15 or more monthly.


Monthly donation



Recent Posts

Set up a rock-solid daily meditation habit!

Our 14 Day Mindfulness Meditation Challenge (May 1-14) is an introductory 14 day meditation event. It is an opportunity to experience the benefits that come from setting up a rock-solid daily meditation habit. We’ll be exploring the practice of mindfulness….

Exploring the quality of mudita, or joyful appreciation (May 1-28)

Living With Appreciation: Exploring the Joy of Gratitude begins Sunday, May 1st! Living with gratitude and appreciation has been shown in studies to be one of the most important factors in creating happiness and well-being. The more we are capable…

Power of positive thinking skews mindfulness studies

Anna Nowogrodzki, Scientific American: There’s a little too much wishful thinking about mindfulness, and it is skewing how researchers report their studies of the technique. Researchers at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, analyzed 124 published trials of mindfulness as a…