Lezione 1
Listening As Meditation
This session introduces the core foundation of the course: meditation does not begin by controlling thoughts, but by learning how to listen. Instead of forcing concentration or trying to quiet the mind, you will discover how sustained listening naturally stabilizes attention. Sound becomes a gentle anchor that organizes perception and reduces mental effort. As you listen, the brain automatically detects patterns and textures, allowing awareness to remain present without strain. This first practice establishes a new understanding of meditation — one rooted in receptivity rather than control.
Lezione 2
Listening And Restlessness
In this session, you explore how restlessness is not an obstacle to meditation, but a natural expression of the nervous system. Instead of trying to suppress physical impulses, wandering thoughts, or inner agitation, you learn to include them within the listening experience. Sound becomes a steady anchor that supports attention, even when the body feels unsettled or the mind is active. By allowing restlessness to coexist with listening, you develop greater emotional regulation, patience, and confidence in your ability to remain present without force or control.
Lezione 3
Listening Through Fatigue
In this session, you discover how listening can sustain meditation even when you feel mentally or physically tired. Fatigue often weakens concentration and makes traditional practices feel effortful. Here, sound becomes a gentle support that holds your attention without requiring control or intensity. You will learn how the auditory system continues to process patterns and textures even when energy is low, allowing awareness to remain present in a natural way. By meditating through fatigue rather than resisting it, you build resilience, reduce self-judgment, and experience how presence does not depend on high energy or strong focus.
Lezione 4
Listening Between Sounds
In this session, you learn to recognize that listening is not only about hearing sound, but also about perceiving the silence within and between sounds. These subtle pauses deepen attention and expand awareness beyond constant stimulation. Instead of searching for the next tone or change, you practice remaining present with the space that surrounds the sound. This develops a more refined and stable form of attention, one that does not depend on continuous activity. By discovering silence inside sound, you cultivate calm, sensitivity, and the ability to stay present even when nothing seems to be happening.
Lezione 5
Expectation And Listening
In this session, you explore how expectation shapes attention and often pulls the mind away from the present moment. Anticipating changes in sound, waiting for a result, or hoping for a particular experience can create subtle tension and distraction. Through guided listening, you learn to notice these impulses without following them. Sound becomes a neutral anchor that supports awareness without promising reward or outcome. By releasing the need for something special to happen, you develop a more open, relaxed, and stable attention that remains grounded in what is actually unfolding, moment by moment.
Lezione 6
Listening And Letting Go
In this session, you explore how listening supports awareness as the mind begins to soften and let go. As attention relaxes—especially toward the end of the day—it is common to drift, lose focus, or approach sleep. Instead of resisting this natural shift, you learn to allow it while remaining gently present with sound. The practice shows that meditation does not require constant alertness or control. By trusting the sound to hold your awareness, you cultivate a relaxed yet continuous presence, discovering that letting go and staying aware can happen at the same time.
Lezione 7
Listening Beyond The Sound
In this final session, you discover that listening does not depend on strong or constant sound. As the music becomes softer and less central, attention begins to expand beyond the object itself. You explore how awareness remains present even when stimulation is minimal, subtle, or barely noticeable. This practice shifts from focusing on sound to recognizing the capacity to listen. By the end of the session, you understand that meditation is not tied to ideal conditions or specific tracks — listening is already available in any moment of experience.