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Glossary›Here And Now

Glossary

Here And Now

The practice of anchoring awareness in present-moment experience, free from past rumination or future projection—a foundational principle in meditation, mindfulness, and contemplative traditions worldwide.

What is Here And Now?

“Here and now” refers to the state of consciousness in which attention rests fully in present-moment experience, without engaging mental narratives about past or future. Rather than a technique, it describes both a quality of awareness and the temporal-spatial coordinates of lived experience. The concept holds that suffering arises largely from mental departure from present reality—through memory, anticipation, regret, or fantasy—and that freedom emerges from repeatedly returning attention to immediate sensory, emotional, and cognitive experience as it unfolds.

The phrase functions simultaneously as descriptor (“this is where experience always occurs”), invitation (“return your attention here”), and philosophical assertion (“only this moment is real”). Across contemplative traditions, practitioners cultivate present-moment awareness through formal meditation, breathwork, and inquiry practices designed to interrupt habitual mental time-travel.

Origins & Lineage

While the concept pervades ancient contemplative traditions, its modern Western articulation emerged through multiple streams. Buddhist vipassanā meditation, rooted in the Pāli Canon’s Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta (circa 1st century BCE), instructs practitioners to maintain continuous awareness of body, feelings, mind, and mental objects in the present moment. The Tibetan Dzogchen tradition speaks of rigpa—immediate, non-conceptual awareness—as humanity’s natural state, obscured by distraction.

In 20th-century Western psychology, Gestalt therapy founder Fritz Perls popularized “here and now” as therapeutic language in the 1960s, emphasizing present-focused awareness over historical analysis. His work influenced the Human Potential Movement at Esalen Institute. Simultaneously, Vietnamese monk Thích Nhất Hạnh brought present-moment practice to Western audiences through teachings on “the miracle of mindfulness,” coining phrases like “washing dishes to wash dishes” that grounded ancient practices in contemporary life.

The phrase gained mass cultural penetration through Eckhart Tolle’s The Power of Now (1997), which synthesized Buddhist non-duality, Christian mysticism, and modern psychology into accessible prose. Ram Dass’s 1971 memoir Be Here Now, blending Hindu Vedanta with psychedelic counterculture, established the phrase as a defining slogan of Western spiritual seeking.

How It’s Practiced

Present-moment practice takes multiple forms across traditions. In seated meditation, practitioners anchor attention on a primary object—breath, body sensations, sound—and notice when the mind departs into thought, gently returning focus to the anchor. Vipassanā retreats may involve labeling mental activity (“thinking,” “planning,” “remembering”) to recognize how attention leaves the present.

Somatic practices emphasize bodily sensation as a gateway to nowness. Body scans systematically move awareness through physical regions; walking meditation coordinates attention with each footfall. Practices like Gendlin’s Focusing or Hakomi psychotherapy use present-moment body awareness to access implicit emotional knowledge.

Inquiry methods ask practitioners to investigate the actual texture of now-experience. Byron Katie’s “The Work” questions stressful thoughts by examining whether they’re true “in this moment.” Advaita teachers like Rupert Spira guide students to notice the ever-present awareness in which all experience appears.

Daily life becomes practice through bringing full attention to routine activities—eating, listening, walking—treating each moment as an opportunity to interrupt autopilot consciousness.

Here And Now Today

Contemporary seekers encounter present-moment training through multiple channels. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), developed by Jon Kabat-Zinn in 1979, teaches secular present-moment awareness in medical settings, corporate offices, and schools. Insight Meditation Society and Spirit Rock Meditation Center offer intensive vipassanā retreats emphasizing moment-to-moment awareness.

Digital platforms have democratized access: apps like Headspace, Insight Timer, and Waking Up deliver guided present-moment practices to millions. Online courses from teachers like Tara Brach, Jack Kornfield, and Adyashanti blend traditional teachings with contemporary psychology.

Integrative approaches combine present-moment awareness with trauma therapy (Somatic Experiencing), addiction recovery (Mindfulness-Based Relapse Prevention), and performance optimization. Neuroscience research on meditation’s effects—demonstrating changes in default mode network activity and attention regulation—has legitimized the practices in mainstream contexts.

Common Misconceptions

“Here and now” does not require blanking the mind or achieving special states. Thoughts about past and future naturally arise; the practice involves recognizing when attention is captured by these thoughts rather than eliminating them. Planning, learning from history, and imagination remain valuable—the distinction lies in whether these mental activities serve present needs or operate as compulsive avoidance.

The practice is not about forced positivity or denying difficulty. Present-moment awareness includes uncomfortable emotions, physical pain, and challenging circumstances—the invitation is to experience these directly rather than through layers of reactive thinking.

Present-moment focus does not mean rejecting memory or intention. Buddhist psychology distinguishes between wholesome recollection/planning (serving present wisdom) and proliferative thinking (papañca) that generates suffering through identification and elaboration.

Finally, “living in the now” is not a permanent achievement but an ongoing return. Even experienced practitioners find attention repeatedly departing; the practice consists of noticing and returning, not arriving at a final state.

How to Begin

Start with short periods of deliberate present-moment attention. Set a timer for 5-10 minutes, sit comfortably, and rest attention on breath sensations at the nostrils or abdomen. When you notice attention has moved to thought, silently note “thinking” and return to breath—without judgment, hundreds of times if necessary.

Eckhart Tolle’s The Power of Now offers accessible entry to the philosophy, while Jack Kornfield’s Meditation for Beginners provides practical instruction. Local Insight Meditation or Zen centers typically offer introductory classes and sitting groups.

For daily life practice, choose one routine activity—morning coffee, commuting, showering—and commit to bringing full sensory attention to it each day, noticing when your mind narrates rather than experiences. This trains the capacity to recognize and interrupt habitual distraction, building the muscle of present-moment awareness that extends across all experience.

Related terms

mindfulnessvipassanapresencenon dualitymeditationawareness
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