When Sovichet Tep headed to Kompong Cham province for his first Vipassana meditation course, surprisingly he was no stranger to the practice. In fact, his grandfather had taken the same course over a decade ago and his older siblings had also practiced it.
At the center, the Vipassana Organisation of Cambodia (VOC), 21-year-old Tep, in April, was introduced to the foundations of one of India’s most ancient techniques that the Buddha brought back into practice 2,500 years ago.
The programme spanned 10 days. The whole time, he needed to abide by the “code of discipline”, which included the five core rules of no killing, stealing, lying, participating in sexual activity or using intoxicants.
The code also included the noble silence. This meant that Tep couldn’t talk to anyone, except with his meditation teacher and head of the programme. His only company was himself and his experience was the acute awareness of the changes happening in his body.
The actual Vipassana meditation started on the third day. Before then, he was instructed to only observe the natural flow of his breath, specifically the area around his nose as each breath enters and leaves. There was no deep breath or chanting in-and-out, and no visualisation. The mind was to be blank and silent.
The “monkey in our minds”, as he put it, inevitably made him wander to other thoughts. When that happened he simply needed to bring his attention back by focusing on his breath.
The Vipassana meditation was a full body scan from the head down to the toes. When pain or discomfort occurred, at any area, he wasn’t to ignore it – but rather to focus intently on the source.
Vipassana meditation has been recommended for cancer patients and a study published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology documents that breast cancer survivors who practiced it were found to have less physical pain – after learning to overcome it through mindfulness.
“In meditation, there is suffering. One will sweat, feel itchy, hot and cold, and have all kinds of pain in their body,” Tep said. “When we meditate, we observe all of this. When it happens and when it goes away, we don’t react to it.”
So, for instance, if his legs hurt, he had to stop himself from moving them or feeling angry.
“When the pain comes, we were taught to just observe and focus on it. Then just as fast as it appears, it disappears,” Tep said.
“It’s in one of Buddha’s teachings. Nothing is permanent and everything is in a state of flux.”
Pain could also come from one’s habits. A lot of the time, Tep is in front of his computer. When focusing on his eyes during Vipassana meditation, he felt how weary they were and a squeezing pain came on.