Joh’s Journal
Vedic Meditation vs. Mindfulness: What’s the Difference?
If you’re new to meditation, it can feel like there are endless styles out there and it’s natural to wonder what sets them apart. One question I often hear from New Yorkers considering learning to meditate is: “How is Vedic Meditation different from mindfulness?”
Mindfulness: cultivating awareness
Mindfulness practices usually involve bringing your attention to something specific: the breath, a body sensation, or what you can see, hear, or feel in the present moment. The idea is to gently return your awareness to the present whenever your mind wanders.
It’s a practice of training attention, and many people find it helpful for becoming more aware of thoughts, emotions, and patterns. Mindfulness can be a valuable tool for managing stress in the moment and for cultivating greater presence.
Vedic Meditation: accessing deep rest
Vedic Meditation is different. Instead of focusing or monitoring your thoughts, you’re given a mantra — a sound carefully chosen by a trained teacher. You use this sound in a very effortless way, and it naturally allows the mind to settle down into quieter and quieter states.
In Vedic Meditation, you don’t try to stay present, and you don’t watch your thoughts. Instead, the technique leads you into a deep state of rest — often deeper than sleep. When the nervous system gets this kind of rest, it can release built-up stress and fatigue. That’s why people so often report feeling calmer, clearer, and more energised after just a few weeks of practice.
Effort vs. effortlessness
Mindfulness asks for gentle concentration and attentional control. Vedic Meditation is designed to be completely effortless. You don’t need to focus, concentrate, or monitor your experience. The mantra does the work, and your role is simply to allow the process to unfold.
What is a Vedic Mantra?
One of the most common questions I hear from prospective meditators in New York City is about the mantra. What is it? How does it work?
In Vedic Meditation, a mantra is not an affirmation or a phrase with meaning. It is a sound, chosen with great care, that has a unique effect on the mind and body.
Sound as a vehicle
Everything according to the Vedic World View has a vibrational quality: your thoughts, emotions, physiology, even the chair you’re sitting on. A mantra is a sound that, when used in meditation, allows the mind to settle into quieter and quieter levels of awareness. Eventually, the sound itself fades, and you experience the stillness that is always there beneath the surface of thought.
The role of the mantra is simple: it’s a vehicle. Just as a boat carries you across water, the mantra gently carries your mind inward. You don’t need to concentrate or “make” anything happen. Used effortlessly, the mantra naturally does the work.
Why it’s personal
In the Vedic tradition, mantras are passed from teacher to student in person. Each mantra is carefully selected by a teacher trained in the art of mantra selection. This ensures the sound is suitable for you and your stage of life. This personal connection is part of what makes the practice so effective and reliable.
More than meaning
Another question I’m often asked is: “What does my mantra mean?” The answer is: it doesn’t have a meaning in the usual sense. The power of a Vedic mantra lies not in definition but in its sound quality and the effect that sound has on the nervous system. If your mantra had a meaning, your mind would stay busy thinking about it. Instead, the mantra leads you beyond thought, into the source of thought itself.
The impact in daily life
This might sound abstract, but its results are practical and immediate. By allowing the mind to dive into deep rest, the mantra helps the body release stress, tension, and fatigue. People often find themselves sleeping better, feeling calmer, and having more energy. Over time, this practice builds clarity, creativity, and resilience, qualities we all need to live fully.
This is the essence of Vedic Meditation: not an escape from life, but a way of being more engaged with it — clear, natural, and sustainable.