What Happens When You Meditate — What You Should Actually Feel
Most descriptions of meditation focus on what you should do. Few describe what you should actually feel. This gap leaves practitioners wondering whether they are doing it right, or whether anything is happening at all.
In the early stages of practice, the most honest answer is: not much that is dramatic. You feel calmer. The mind slows. There is a quality of restfulness that ordinary sleep does not produce. This is real and valuable, but it is the beginning, not the destination.
As the practice deepens and Dharna does its work — as the nervous system stabilizes, as the attention becomes more refined, as the awareness begins to concentrate at the internal center — something qualitatively different begins to emerge. There is a shift from experiencing the external environment to experiencing an inner space. This inner space has a quality of vastness, of stillness, of presence that is unmistakably different from ordinary mental quiet.
The energy of consciousness, when contacted, is not subtle in the way people expect. It is vivid. It is felt as a kind of aliveness, a vibrational quality, a profound sense of being that is entirely independent of circumstance or thought. There is no confusion when you encounter it — you know something real is happening.
Then there is the Sound Current. When the inner listening opens, the Current begins to be heard. It starts subtly — a hum, a tone, a melody that does not come from outside. As the Consciousness merges with it, the experience becomes complete. There is a feeling of being pulled upward, drawn toward something, filled from within. The emptiness that drives so much seeking simply ceases to be a question.These are not poetic descriptions. They are experiential markers. If you are practicing sincerely and progressing, these are what you are moving toward