Why Space Is Superior to Traditional Meditation Objects
Most meditation traditions teach practitioners to focus on discrete objects: the breath, a mantra, a visual focal point, or bodily sensations. Eckhart Tolle proposes that space itself—the emptiness in which all phenomena arise—functions as a superior meditation object. Space does not distract from presence; it is presence itself made palpable.
The advantage of using space as an object is that it requires no effort to maintain focus on something that is everywhere at once. Your attention does not need to be sustained through willpower or concentration techniques. Instead, awareness naturally recognizes what has always been here: the open, spacious quality of existence itself. Space is not something you must conjure or imagine; it is the medium through which perception occurs.
Traditional objects like the breath or a visualization demand active mental engagement. You must remember to return attention to the chosen focal point each time the mind wanders. Space, by contrast, is so fundamental and all-pervasive that directing awareness toward it dissolves the boundary between the meditator and the object of meditation. There is no "you" observing space from outside it; you are already immersed in it.
The Night Sky as a Gateway to Vastness
Looking up at the night sky serves as the most immediate and powerful way to access space as a meditation object. The night sky makes space visible. Unlike daytime, when blue atmosphere obscures the depth of space, darkness reveals the inconceivable vastness that extends infinitely in all directions. This vastness is not merely intellectual—it can be felt, sensed, and directly known through awareness itself.
When you gaze at the night sky, the mind's usual preoccupations—thoughts about the self, worries, plans, narratives—tend to dissolve naturally. The sheer scale of what you are perceiving overwhelms the small, personal sense of self that normally dominates consciousness. This is not dissolution through force or suppression; it is dissolution through being confronted with reality itself: a vastness so immense that personal concerns appear insignificant by comparison.
The night sky also demonstrates that space is not empty in the conventional sense. It is full—full of light from distant stars, full of galaxies, full of the totality of existence. This paradox—that emptiness is fullness, that nothingness contains everything—points to the non-dual nature of reality that Eckhart Tolle frequently emphasizes. Space is not a void; it is the ground of all being.
How to Practice Meditation Using Space
To use space as a meditation object, begin by finding a location where you can observe the night sky with minimal light pollution. If direct observation of the stars is not immediately available, you can begin indoors by simply directing your awareness toward the space around you—the empty space in your room, the space between objects, the space within your own body.
The practice is simple: allow your attention to rest in space itself. Notice the quality of openness. Notice how space does not demand anything from you; it simply contains all experience. Feel the inconceivable vastness that, while invisible during daytime, is continuously present around the Earth. This vastness is not separate from you; your awareness is itself a manifestation of this spaciousness.
As you continue this practice, you may notice that the boundary between inner and outer space begins to dissolve. The space "out there" and the spacious quality of your own awareness are not fundamentally different. Both are expressions of the same infinite presence. This realization, accessed through direct perception rather than abstract thought, is at the heart of contemplative practice.
There is no technique to perfect, no achievement to measure. Space is already present and already complete. Your only task is to redirect attention away from thought-generated content and toward what is always here: the spaciousness in which all experience occurs.
Space and the Dissolution of Ego
One of the most significant effects of meditating on space is the temporary dissolution of ego-identification. The separate self—the "I" that believes itself to be trapped in a body, isolated from the rest of existence—depends on a sense of internal division and separation. When awareness rests in infinite space, this illusion becomes transparent. You cannot locate a fixed self within a vastness that extends infinitely in all directions.
This is not a depressing annihilation but rather a liberation. The dissolution of the egoic sense of self is the removal of a constraint that has caused suffering. In space, there is no anxiety about maintaining the self, no need to defend against threats, no exhausting effort to prove your significance. There is only presence—eternal, unchanging, and complete.
The ego will attempt to return; this is its nature. But each time you access the spaciousness beyond it, even briefly, you begin to recognize that your true nature is not the small self but the vast consciousness in which all experience arises. This recognition, repeated and deepened, is transformative in the most fundamental sense.
Space as Access to the Present Moment
One of Eckhart Tolle's central teachings is that the present moment is the only reality and that most human suffering stems from identification with past and future. Space is the meditation object most directly aligned with the present moment because space is always now. Space does not have a history; it does not anticipate the future. Space simply is.
When you meditate on space, you are meditating on the very substrate of the present moment itself. This is why space is more effective than objects that exist in time, such as visualizations that must be constructed and maintained, or the breath, which flows through past and future moments. Space is the unchanging ground in which time itself appears to arise.
By resting awareness in space, you simultaneously anchor yourself in the present. Thought cannot follow you there because thought requires temporal structure—memory and anticipation. Space is thought-resistant precisely because it is so vast and immediate that the mind cannot grasp it through its usual conceptual mechanisms.
Where to Go From Here
If you are interested in exploring space-based meditation, begin this week by spending ten to fifteen minutes gazing at the night sky. If this is not possible, spend time observing the open space in a room, between trees, or above water. Notice what happens to your sense of self, your thoughts, and your sense of time. Return to this practice regularly, not with the goal of achieving something, but simply to deepen your recognition of the spaciousness that is already your true nature.
Consider also how you can integrate awareness of space into daily life. Even in an urban environment, space is present—above you, within you, between all things. By periodically shifting attention from the content of consciousness (thoughts, sensations, emotions) to the spacious awareness in which all content arises, you begin to live increasingly from a place of presence rather than mental reactivity.
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