chanmyay pain doubt wrong practice keeps circling my sits, like i’m failing something basic again

It is deep into the night, 2:18 a.m., and my right knee has begun its familiar, needy throbbing; it’s a level of discomfort that sits right on the edge of being unbearable. The floor feels significantly harder than it did yesterday, an observation that makes no logical sense but feels entirely authentic. The only break in the silence is the ghost of a motorbike engine somewhere in the distance. A thin layer of perspiration is forming, though the room temperature is quite cool. The mind wastes no time in turning this physical state into a technical failure.

The Anatomy of Pain-Plus-Meaning
Chanmyay pain. That phrase appears like a label affixed to the physical sensation. I didn't consciously choose the word; it just manifested. The sensation becomes "pain-plus-meaning."

The doubt begins: is my awareness penetrative enough, or am I just thinking about the pain? Or am I clinging to the sensation by paying it so much attention? The actual ache in my knee is dwarfed by the massive cloud of analytical thoughts surrounding it.

The "Chanmyay Doubt" Loop
I attempt to stay with the raw sensation: heat, pressure, throbbing. Then, uncertainty arrives on silent feet, pretending to be a helpful technical question. Maybe I'm trying too hard, forcing a clarity that isn't there. Maybe I am under-efforting, or perhaps this simply isn't the right way to practice.

Maybe I misunderstood the instructions years ago and everything since then has been built on a slight misalignment that no one warned me about.

That thought hits harder than the physical pain in my knee. I catch myself subtly adjusting my posture, then freezing, then adjusting again because it feels uneven. My back tightens in response, as if it’s offended I didn't ask permission. I feel a knot of anxiety forming in my chest, a physical manifestation of my doubt.

Communal Endurance vs. Private Failure
I remember times on retreat where pain felt manageable because it was communal. Back then, the pain was "just pain"; now, it feels like "my failure." Like a test I am failing in private. “Chanmyay wrong practice” echoes in my head—not as a statement, but as a fear. The fear is that I'm just hardening my ego rather than dissolving it.

The Trap of "Proof" and False Relief
I encountered a teaching on "wrong effort" today, and my ego immediately used it as evidence against me. It felt like a definitive verdict: "You have been practicing incorrectly this whole time." That thought brings a strange mixture of relief and panic. I'm glad to have an answer, but terrified of how much work it will take to correct. Sitting here now, I feel both at once. My jaw is clenched. I release the clench, but it's back within a minute. It’s an automatic reflex.

The Shifting Tide of Discomfort
The pain shifts slightly, which is more annoying than if it had stayed constant. I wanted it to be predictable; I wanted something solid to work with. It feels like a moving target—disappearing only to strike again elsewhere. I attempt to meet it with equanimity, but I cannot. I notice the failure. Then I wonder if noticing the failure is progress or just more thinking.

This uncertainty isn't a loud shout; it's a constant, quiet vibration asking if I really know what I'm doing. I remain silent in the face of the question, because "I don't know" is the only truth I have. The air is barely moving in my chest, but I leave it alone. I know from experience that any attempt to force "rightness" will only create more knots to undo.

The clock ticks. I don’t look at it this time. A small mercy. My limb is losing its feeling, replaced by the familiar static of a leg "falling asleep." I remain, though a part of me is already preparing to shift. It’s all very confused. All the categories have collapsed into one big, messy, human experience.

I am not leaving this sit with an answer. The discomfort hasn't revealed a grand truth, and the uncertainty is still there. I just sit here, aware that this confusion is part of the territory too, even if I don't have a strategy for this mess. Still breathing, still uncomfortable, still here. That, at least, is the more info truth of the moment.

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