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Practice

Shamatha

Calm-abiding — the Buddhist practice of developing stable, tranquil concentration on a single object.

theravada buddhismtibetan buddhism

Shamatha (“calm abiding”) trains the mind to rest stably on one object — typically the breath. The nine stages of shamatha trace the increasing ease of this resting, from restless beginning to effortless absorption.

Traditional Buddhist training pairs shamatha and Vipassana: stability makes clear seeing possible; clear seeing ripens what stability alone cannot. The Tibetan traditions often begin with extensive shamatha cultivation before insight practices.

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