[Daily OM]: Prayer and meditation are similar
practices in that they both offer us a connection to the divine, but
they also differ from one another in significant ways. Put simply,
prayer is when we ask the universe for something, and meditation is when
we listen. When we pray, we use language to express our innermost
thoughts and feelings to a higher power. Sometimes, we plumb the depths
within ourselves and allow whatever comes to the surface to flow out in
our prayer. At other times, we pray words that were written by someone
else but that express what we want to say. Prayer is reaching out to the
universe with questions, pleas for help, gratitude, and praise.
Meditation, on the other hand, has a silent quality that honors the art
of receptivity. When we meditate, we cease movement and allow the
activity of our minds and hearts to go on without us in a sense.
Eventually, we fall into a deep silence, a place that underlies all the
noise and fray of daily human existence. In this place, it becomes
possible for us to hear the universe as it speaks for itself, responds
to our questions, or sits with us in its silent way.
Both prayer and meditation are indispensable tools for navigating our
relationship with the universe and with ourselves. They are also natural
complements to one another, and one makes way for the other just as the
crest of a wave gives way to its hollow. If we tend to do only one or
the other, prayer or meditation, we may find that we are out of balance,
and we might benefit from exploring the missing form of communication.
There are times when we need to reach out and express ourselves, fully
exorcising our insides, and times when we are empty, ready to rest in
quiet receiving. When we allow ourselves to do both, we begin to have a
true conversation with the universe.