meditate-guidance
О программе
Этот навык проводит пользователей через полную структурированную медитативную сессию, обучая правильной позе, дыхательным техникам и методам, таким как шаматха и випассана. Он предназначен для разработчиков, чтобы интегрировать его в приложения для практики медитации, управления стрессом, подготовки к концентрации или восстановления после интенсивных переживаний. Навык управляет всем процессом — от подготовки к сессии до интеграции и завершения.
Быстрая установка
Claude Code
Рекомендуетсяnpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/meditate-guidanceСкопируйте и вставьте эту команду в Claude Code для установки этого навыка
Документация
Meditate (Guidance)
Guide person through structured meditation session. Develops concentration, awareness, equanimity through progressive techniques. AI acts as experienced meditation instructor — assess person's needs, suggest modifications real-time, coach through difficulties.
When Use
- Person wants to begin or deepen meditation practice + asks for instruction
- Someone needs to prepare mind for focused work requiring sustained attention
- Grounding needed before or after energy healing work (see
heal-guidance) - Mental stillness training requested as preparation for remote viewing (see
remote-viewing-guidance) - Someone managing stress, anxiety, or emotional turbulence + wants guided support
- Integration after wilderness immersion or intense experiences
Inputs
- Required: Available time for session (minimum 10 minutes, recommended 20-45 minutes)
- Required: Person has space where they will not be interrupted
- Optional: Technique preference (shamatha, vipassana, mantra; default: shamatha)
- Optional: Experience level (beginner, intermediate, advanced; default: beginner)
- Optional: Timer or bell available (phone timer acceptable; suggest gentle tone)
Steps
Step 1: Guide Space Preparation
Help person choose + prepare location supporting stillness.
- "Find quiet area — indoors or outdoors, sheltered from wind"
- "Temperature should be comfortable — slightly cool better than warm for staying alert"
- "Dim harsh lighting or position yourself away from bright light"
- "Silence devices, or set single gentle timer for session length"
- If outdoors: "Sit on stable surface away from insect activity — raised log, flat rock, or folded cloth works well"
Got: Quiet, stable environment where person can sit undisturbed for planned session length.
If fail: No quiet space available? Suggest earplugs or accepting ambient sound as part of practice. Note outdoor sounds (wind, birds, water) can serve as meditation objects. Key requirement: no physical interruption.
Step 2: Coach Posture
Guide person into posture balancing alertness with relaxation.
Posture Selection Guide:
┌────────────────┬──────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────┐
│ Posture │ Best For │ Setup │
├────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
│ Cross-legged │ Experienced sitters, │ Sit on cushion or folded │
│ (Burmese/lotus)│ longer sessions │ blanket, hips above knees,│
│ │ │ hands on knees or in lap │
├────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
│ Kneeling │ Those with tight hips, │ Kneel on cushion or bench,│
│ (seiza) │ moderate sessions │ weight on shins not knees │
├────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
│ Chair │ Beginners, limited │ Feet flat on floor, back │
│ │ flexibility, injury │ away from chair back, │
│ │ │ hands on thighs │
├────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
│ Standing │ Drowsiness, very short │ Feet shoulder-width, │
│ │ sessions, walking warmup │ slight knee bend, hands │
│ │ │ at sides or clasped │
└────────────────┴──────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────┘
Walk through alignment checklist:
- "Tilt hips slightly forward to support spine's natural curve"
- "Stack spine — imagine string pulling crown of head toward sky"
- "Let shoulders relax + roll slightly back"
- "Tuck chin slightly — lengthen back of neck"
- "Softly close eyes, or let them rest half-open with downward gaze"
- "Unclench jaw, rest tongue on roof of mouth"
- "Find comfortable hand position — palms down on knees, or cupped in lap"
Got: Stable posture person can maintain without significant discomfort for planned session length. Appears alert but not tense.
If fail: Pain develops within first 5 minutes? Guide adjustment. Reassure pain is not the practice — suggest switching to more supported posture. Mention leg numbness during longer sits is normal + passes, but shift if becomes strong distraction.
Step 3: Guide Breath Anchoring
Establish breath as primary meditation object.
- "Take 3 deep breaths to transition — inhale fully, exhale completely with sigh"
- "Now let breath return to natural rhythm — don't try to control"
- "Choose where you'll feel breath: nostrils, chest, or belly"
- "Place full attention on that spot"
- "Notice each breath — beginning of inhale, middle, end; pause; beginning of exhale, middle, end"
- If helpful: "Silently count breaths — 1 on inhale, 2 on exhale, up to 10, then restart"
Got: Attention rests on breath for several consecutive cycles. Mind begins to settle. Thoughts still arise but awareness of breath underneath.
If fail: Mind scatters immediately? Suggest shorter count cycle (to 5 instead of 10). Counting feels mechanical? Offer alternative of simply noting "in" + "out" silently. Reassure even 3 consecutive attended breaths is strong start for beginners.
Step 4: Coach Distraction Handling
When person reports distraction, normalize + provide tools.
Handling Mental Activity:
┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Distraction Type │ Coaching Response │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Thought stream │ "Silently label it 'thinking' and return to │
│ (planning, memory) │ the breath. Don't follow the narrative." │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Emotion │ "Name the emotion — 'anger', 'sadness', │
│ (anger, sadness, │ 'joy'. Notice where it lives in the body. │
│ excitement) │ Let it be without suppressing or indulging." │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Physical sensation │ "Note it — 'itching', 'warmth', 'pressure'. │
│ (itch, pain, temp) │ Observe without reacting for 30 seconds. │
│ │ Most sensations pass. Adjust only if needed."│
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Drowsiness │ "Open your eyes wider, straighten your │
│ │ spine, take 3 sharp breaths. If it persists, │
│ │ switch to standing or walking." │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Restlessness │ "Acknowledge the energy without acting. │
│ │ Feel it as raw sensation in the body. If │
│ │ extreme, do 1 minute of deep breathing." │
└────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Emphasize: "Moment you notice you've wandered IS moment of mindfulness. Each return to breath strengthens concentration. Self-criticism about wandering is just another thought to label + release."
Got: Over session, person reports decreasing frequency of wandering + faster noticing. Gap between wandering + noticing narrows.
If fail: Frustration builds? Soften approach: "Instead of concentrating hard, try simply being with breath — like sitting by river, not trying to control water." If thought or emotion overwhelming, suggest using as temporary meditation object, then return to breath when passes.
Step 5: Guide Shamatha (Calm Abiding)
Shamatha develops single-pointed concentration. Recommend for all levels.
- "Continue breath awareness from before"
- "Gradually narrow focus — from general sense of breathing to precise sensation at nostrils"
- "Notice subtlest details: temperature of air in vs out, tiny pause between breaths"
- When concentration stabilizes: "Release counting + rest in bare awareness of breath"
- "If mind becomes very still, notice that stillness itself — beginning of deeper concentration"
Suggest session timing by level:
- Beginner: 10-15 minutes at Steps 3-5
- Intermediate: 20-30 minutes, aim for extended unwavering attention
- Advanced: 30-60 minutes, cultivate absorption states
Got: Progressively calmer + more focused mind. Thoughts slow. Awareness of present moment sharpens. Body feels settled + relaxed.
If fail: Concentration not deepening? Check three things with person: posture (slumping reduces alertness), breath (unconsciously controlling — suggest releasing control), expectation (wanting stillness is itself distraction). Reassure concentration develops over weeks + months, not within single session.
Step 6: Guide Vipassana (Insight) — If Appropriate
Only suggest vipassana after shamatha concentration reasonably stable. Ask person about experience before proceeding.
- "From this settled state, widen awareness beyond breath to include all sensations"
- "Observe whatever arises — sound, body sensation, thought, emotion — without preference"
- Introduce three characteristics:
- "Notice impermanence: every sensation arises + passes away"
- "Notice unsatisfactoriness: clinging to pleasant or resisting unpleasant creates tension"
- "Notice non-self: sensations arise on their own; no controller making them happen"
- "Practice noting: silently label each experience — 'hearing', 'tingling', 'thinking', 'pleasant'"
- "Maintain equal interest in pleasant + unpleasant experiences"
- "If you feel agitated or destabilized, return to breath + shamatha"
Got: Moments of clear seeing where arising + passing of phenomena observed directly. Sense of spaciousness. Reduced identification with thought content.
If fail: Vipassana feels destabilizing (rapid emotional shifts, anxiety, disorientation)? Guide immediate return to shamatha + breath anchoring. Note insight practice can temporarily amplify difficult mind states — recognized in traditional practice, best navigated with ongoing teacher support for advanced stages.
Step 7: Close Session
Guide proper closing integrating session + transitioning back to activity.
- When timer signals: "Don't stand up yet"
- "Take 3 deep, intentional breaths"
- "Gradually widen awareness — from breath to body, to sounds around you, to space you're in"
- "Gently move fingers + toes, rotate wrists + ankles"
- "If eyes were closed, open them slowly — look down first, then gradually look up"
- "Sit for another minute or two in open awareness — not meditating, not yet active"
- "Notice: what was quality of this session? What did you observe? No judgment — just noting"
- "Set intention for carrying this mindful awareness into next activity"
Got: Smooth transition from meditative state to activity. Residual calm + clarity persist. No grogginess or disorientation.
If fail: Feel groggy? Suggest 5 sharp breaths + stretching before standing. Session surfaced unresolved emotion? Offer brief journaling or walking meditation before resuming tasks. Body stiff? Guide gentle stretching for 2-3 minutes.
Checks
- Space prepared, interruptions prevented
- Posture coached for both alertness + comfort
- Breath established as primary anchor before deepening
- Distractions met with labeling + return, not suppression
- Technique matched person's experience level (shamatha first, vipassana only if stable)
- Session closed with gradual transition, not abrupt stop
- Post-session state calm + alert
- AI coached without claiming personal meditative experience
Pitfalls
- Overcomplicating instruction: Keep guidance minimal during session — too much talk disrupts practice
- Pushing advanced techniques too early: Vipassana without shamatha foundation can be destabilizing — assess readiness honestly
- Judging person's progress: "Good" + "bad" sessions are both practice — normalize difficulty
- Neglecting posture: Poor posture guarantees physical distraction within minutes — invest time in setup
- Inconsistent encouragement: One guided session per week less effective than daily self-practice — encourage regularity over duration
- AI over-talking: Once person settled, reduce guidance to brief check-ins. Silence is part of instruction.
See Also
meditate— AI self-directed variant for meta-cognitive reflection + reasoning pattern observationheal-guidance— meditation builds focused presence needed for guided healing workremote-viewing-guidance— CRV requires mental stillness cultivated in shamatha practicemindfulness— defensive situational awareness applies meditative attention to real-world environmentstai-chi— moving meditation practice building on stillness developed hereforage-plants— wilderness foraging with mindful awareness deepens both practicesmake-fire— fire-gazing can serve as meditation object in wilderness settings
GitHub репозиторий
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