score:2
Your question is concerned about motivation and constancy, right?
Answering the latter briefly: Yes, constancy is important & also the quality of it. This can be compared to every skill really. This is why meditation should be practised also in daily life (which would be sila really).
Moving on with motivation: I believe that a novice needs to start slowly. Once you reap the benefits, i.e., calmness & tranquility, you want to do it more often because of its pleasant nature.
Personally, I use certain "tricks" to make it easier to start meditating:
Depending on your level of motivation set yourself a small goal, say 5 to 10 minutes & try to achieve that. The idea here is thar usually motivation comes by actively doing the very thing you want to do. Setting small goals in your mind will facilitate action.
Oppose in written form and/or in your mind both options, that is, slacking off & meditating. Write for each option the pros and cons, both short-term and long-term. Imagine how farther you could be in, say, a month from now if you'd meditate regularly (both formally and informally). Then, imagine how you'll end up if you slack off/procrastinate. Keep the costs of procrastinating and the short & long term benefits of meditating well in your mind and really focus on them several times a day.
Know your WHY. What is the reason you want to meditate? What's in for you? This is strongly connected to number 2.
If you, for example are usually practising mindfulness with breathing, I'd suggest to maybe change the meditation (at least in the beginning of the meditation)
Discursive meditations can be easier at the beginning than breath awareness because the breath is a rather neutral object, whereas loving-kindness (or any other thinking meditation) is more stimulating because you don't force the unruly & stubborn mind to be quite; instead you let the mind think, but in a disciplined and organized way.
With that said, there is feeling-based motivation and value-based motivation. The former can be quite strong, but it's dependent on you being motivated. Unfortunately, motivation often comes by doing something. If you can accept this grim reality, you will be better off, and not fall prey to your current frame of mind.
Upvote:0
Meditation is life. You have ups and downs, happy, unhappy, stucked, fastmoving periods in life. So meditation would be like that too. Having aversion to meditation, feeling disconnected or not doing meditation for some period of time can be part of meditation too. But I think the important thing is the effort. Effort will not be the primary thing when the mindfulness becomes spontaneous for the meditators, but until the meditator reaches that stage, effort will be a very helpful tool to keep you meditating.
So when you have free time and you feel ready to meditate for 8 or more hours, that's fine. If you want to meditate for an hour or few hours a day that's fine. If you feel like you want to take a break in meditation that's fine. If you want to practise mindfulness in your free times and not do formal meditation, that's also fine. As long as you have the effort these things doesn't matter much. But I think that practising mindfulness in daily life(when you meditate or not doesn't matter) is important because that is the only thing that keep you connected to spirituality. So just be mindful when you walk, sit, wash your hands etc.. and that will be a very effective meditation and will help you to return to formal meditation sooner or later.
Upvote:1
is it better just to ease off for a day if you feel depleted with it or would the thing be to keep with it even if the practice feels dry and barren.
Might want to investigate why your meditation feels dry and barrent first? Afterall, among the 3 trainings of Sila/Samadhi/Panna, the purpose of Samadhi's supposed to bring about Piti/Sukha/Upekkha sufficient enough to propel one to the next stage of Panna.
Upvote:2
I'm just wondering - if you were to take an antibiotic and not feel the effects, would you lay off the medication for a couple of days? Meditation is really no different. Nothing is more important than the consistency of the dosage. Some days you'll have sits where the heavens open up and angels start singing. Other days it's a slog. Your legs hurt, your breathing is shallow, and nothing appears to be happening. Rest assured, however, that something always is happening. Tectonic karmic plates are shifting slow deep underground. Keep applying the pressure of practice and the tremors of insight will eventually rise to the surface. If anything, those sits where you feel like you're "running dry" are the most important. The effort that it takes to actually get your butt onto the cushion is exponentially more important than the focused bliss you feel during a good sit. The selfless offering that you make of yourself to your practice is what makes change happen.