Mindfulness vs Meditation: What's the Difference Between Meditation and Mindfulness?

Jay Michaelson
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July 24, 2018
Blue bright sky shows the peace that comes through mindfulness and meditation in everyday life

Article Summary: In this newsletter article, Jay Michaelson defines the difference between meditation and mindfulness and how to practice.

Understand the Difference Between Meditation and Mindfulness

You may be confused: are meditation and mindfulness the same thing? If not, how are they different? Well, the good news – or maybe it’s bad news – is that you’re not alone. In fact, lots of people use the two words interchangeably, and mean different things by each one. Here, then, is our attempt to clear it up.

Meditation vs Mindfulness: When to Use Which Practice

Joseph Goldstein defines mindfulness as “the quality and power of mind that is deeply aware of what’s happening – without commentary and without interference.” Another popular definition, from Jon Kabat-Zinn, aligns mindfulness is with mindfulness practice and describes it as “paying attention in a particular way, on purpose, in the present moment and nonjudgmentally.” In other words, mindfulness is a capacity of the mind. It’s a way of relating to whatever is happening: paying attention, noticing, not judging, not thinking. (Just as an aside, these definitions are recent ones. Mindfulness has been around for over two thousand years, and it’s been defined in different ways over time. For our purposes, we’re going to stick with these contemporary definitions.)

Meditation, on the other hand, is an action or activity akin to practicing mindfulness. If mindfulness is like strength or flexibility, meditation is like running or going to the gym. Often, meditation means you’re sitting still, noticing the sensations of breath, and coming back, repeatedly, as you get distracted. Other times it means paying attention while eating, or walking, or falling asleep. Sometimes it means not focusing on any one particular thing at all, but building “open awareness” that is like a mirror held to everything you experience. But in general, you can think of meditation as an activity of focused mindfulness or focused attention.

Mindfulness can be Practiced Formally and Informally

Another way to think about it is that mindfulness is the mindset of meditation applied to the rest of life. For example, Jud Brewer’s course on “mindful eating” is basically a form of meditation that you can do any time you’re sitting down to eat. It doesn’t need to be a set period of time. Maybe for a few bites of each meal, you practice mindful eating, with all the steps involved. It’s building mindfulness not in a dedicated activity of meditation, but in the context of something we all do every day: eat. You can practice this form of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy, focusing on the meals you have all day.

Benefits of Mindfulness and Meditation

Now, to get one layer more complicated, some forms of meditation are intended to build mindfulness – but other forms have other purposes. If you go back to the definitions of mindfulness above, you’ll see that they are about paying a kind of bare attention to whatever is happening. But there are other skills you might want to build, like relaxation, especially for someone who suffers from chronic stress. Sometimes, you’re less interested in noticing stuff and more interested in calming down and getting some relief from anxiety. To do that, you might choose a meditation practice and mindfulness-based stress reduction methods that are about calming and focusing the mind. Or just take a few deep breaths. That won’t build mindfulness, but it will build calm, centeredness, relaxation, and other good stuff.

For example:

Try 'Gathering Focus' (in the Ten Percent Happier app)

To take another example, some kinds of meditation are intended to cultivate qualities like loving-kindness or joy. When you practice meditation, you’re not mindfully noticing things as they are — on the contrary, you’re cultivating something that might not be there already. That, too, is a very beneficial form of meditation that isn’t mindfulness.

Hopefully, this distinction is helpful to you. It’s not important to use the ‘correct’ terminology, but it is helpful to know what you’re doing and why. Like: okay, I’m sitting down for a few minutes and collecting myself, because I just got home and haven’t “shaken off” the commute yet. Or I’m training the mind to just notice things as they are, because when I do that, I find all kinds of stuff going on that I hadn’t seen before.

Happy meditating!  Or mindfulness-ing!  Or whatever!

Dr. Jay Michaelson has been teaching meditation for fifteen years in secular, Buddhist, and Jewish communities. Jay is a journalist on CNN Tonight and at Rolling Stone, having been a weekly columnist for the Daily Beast for eight years. Jay was also an editor and podcast host for Ten Percent Happier for four years. He's an affiliated professor at Chicago Theological Seminary. Jay’s eight books include "The Gate of Tears: Sadness and the Spiritual Path" and the brand new "Enlightenment by Trial and Error".

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