There is the case where a disciple of the noble ones abandons wrong livelihood and maintains his life with right livelihood.
Gotama (The Buddha).
Our vocation can nourish our understanding and compassion, or erode them. We should be awake to the consequences, far and near, of the way we earn our living.
Thich Nhat Hanh.
Episode 61 – Skilful Livelihood a biological necessity
An AI-generated ‘deep dive’ into this aspect of the RAFT to Freedom
In this Training stage of our journey, having established our direction, ethics, and energy, we arrive at the seventh factor of Gotama’s Middle Way Programme – ‘Mindfulness’. We might reasonably ask, ‘Haven’t we already worked with mindfulness?’ We have explored mindfulness through many different lenses – but its function has matured as our raft took shape.
At this stage, mindfulness means something simple and practical. It is the capacity to remember what we are doing while we are doing it – not losing the plot. It is remembering our values in the middle of a conversation, our intention in the middle of an urge, and the wider direction in the middle of a small emotional storm. Mindfulness keeps us awake to what is happening now, so that we are not simply swept along by habit, craving, fear, or resentment.
We have trained this capacity in different forms along the way:
‘Grounding Mindfulness’ (Chapter 07) steadied the body when the waves were high, helping us come back to breath, posture, and present-moment contact before reactivity took command.
‘Affective Mindfulness’ (Chapter 27) helped us recognise pleasant, unpleasant, and neither pleasant nor unpleasant feeling tones, so that liking and disliking did not automatically drag the raft off course.
‘Healing Mindfulness’ (Chapter 31) strengthened and protected our capacity to stay close to challenging experiences, allowing pain, difficulty and disappointments to be known without being turned into another wound.
‘Monitoring Mindfulness’ (Chapter 36) watches the movements of thought without being swallowed by them, noticing stories, assumptions, memories, and confusion as passing mental events rather than commands.
‘Liberating Mindfulness’ (Chapter 44) widened mindfulness into a spacious, non-reactive awareness, giving experience room to arise and pass without the compulsion to grasp, resist, or identify with it.
‘Ethical Mindfulness’ (Chapter 53) sharpened mindfulness into remembering-to-remember in moments of choice, helping us bring our values, intentions, and commitments into speech, action, and relationships.
Now in this chapter on Skilful Mindfulness, these strands converge. Mindfulness becomes the integrating capacity that keeps the training aligned as we live, choose, speak, and act.
If Skilful Application (Chapter 62) is the engine of the raft, Skilful Mindfulness remembers why the engine is running and in which direction we intend to travel. If Skilful Perspective (Chapter 57) is our realistic view of how things work, Skilful Mindfulness remembers to see through that lens when pressure rises. If Skilful Intention (Chapter 58) sets the rudder straight, then Skilful Mindfulness notices any subtle drift. And when Skilful Speech, Skilful Action, and Skilful Livelihood (Chapters 59–61) are our chosen ways of moving through the world, Skilful Mindfulness checks whether the next word or step aligns with those commitments.
Without Skilful Mindfulness, the operating protocols drift apart. Application becomes blind striving. Perspective narrows under stress. Intention fades. Action slips into habit.
With Skilful Mindfulness, the Middle Way Programme functions as one coordinated system, keeping the view clear, the rudder steady, the engine purposeful, and the platform stable.
Remembering in real time
The Pali word sati is often rendered as mindfulness, but its original meaning leans closer to remembering or recollection – a quality of not-forgeting when pressure rises.
That nuance matters here. We have already clarified Perspective, set Intention, committed to Speech, Action, and Livelihood, and understood how Application and Collectedness support our journey. The challenge now is not learning something new, but keeping what we know onboard in heated moments.
Forgetting happens quietly.
We forget when we are tired. We forget when we are praised. We forget when we are hurt. We forget when something feels urgent.
Skilful Mindfulness interrupts that drift. It does not argue with or suppress our experience. It simply brings the training back into view. ‘This is pleasant – do not cling.’ ‘This is unpleasant – do not react.’ ‘This is a mood – not an identity.’
When Skilful Mindfulness is present, the training stays active. When it collapses, we fall into what Gotama called heedlessness – acting without remembering consequences or direction.
Skilful Mindfulness is gentle, but it is not sleepy. Gotama described the mindful traveller as ardent, clearly comprehending, and mindful. Ardent does not mean tense or aggressive; it means awake enough to care. It is the warmth of attention that keeps the watch from becoming dull. Without this quiet energy, mindfulness can slide into passive noticing while the raft keeps drifting.
Remembering and clear comprehension
Mindfulness does not travel alone. In the early teachings it is paired with clear comprehension (Chapter 10): knowing what we are doing, why we are doing it, whether it fits the situation, and where it is likely to lead. Mindfulness remembers the map; clear comprehension reads the present conditions. Together they stop awareness becoming vague or passive.
This matters because we can be aware and still drift. We might know, ‘anger is here,’ but clear comprehension asks, “What happens if I speak from this?” We might know, ‘craving is here,’ but clear comprehension asks, “Where does this current lead?” In RAFT terms, Skilful Mindfulness keeps the mission alive on the bridge; clear comprehension checks the weather, the depth, and the next safe manoeuvre.
Ethical attention in motion
When remembering becomes steady, something else begins to happen. We do not just recall the instructions – we begin to see more clearly what fits them and what does not. Mindfulness at this stage is not neutral drifting. It is not blank awareness. It is remembering with care for consequences. Because we know where certain channels lead, attention becomes quietly discerning. We start to notice the direction of things.
We notice how one thought tightens the body and narrows the mind. We notice how another softens the breath and steadies the mood. We notice how certain impulses leave a clean wake behind them, while others create turbulence that lingers.
This is not moral harshness. It is practical navigation. When Skilful Mindfulness is active, we are not scanning for faults – we are actively tracking the consequences. We know that each small movement shapes the crossing.
Throughout this journey, we have practised spaciousness – allowing experience to arise and pass. That remains important. But now spaciousness is joined by discernment. We are not only observing waves; we are noticing which ones are pulling us toward the reef. This is why Skilful Mindfulness has an ethical dimension. It does not judge who we are. It simply recognises what leads toward harm and what leads toward freedom. And because it remembers, it can respond early – before the drift becomes a collision.
The keeper of the watch and the stowaway
We have met this pattern before (Chapter 14) – Mara – not as a mythic figure, but as the familiar voice of self-justification. It is the movement in the mind that tells us exactly what we most want to hear when we are unsettled. It rarely arrives dramatically. It begins as something small.
‘It doesn’t really matter.’ ‘No one will know.’ ‘I’m not angry, I’m just being honest.’ ‘This is who I am. I’ll never really change.’
Without mindfulness, these thoughts feel reasonable. They slide into the stream of thinking unnoticed. We act before we realise that a direction has already been chosen. With Skilful Mindfulness, something subtle shifts. We recognise the pattern. Not with alarm. Not with hostility. Just with familiarity.
‘Ah, I have seen this before!’
This recognition is Skilful Mindfulness at work.
It remembers what usually follows. It remembers the tightening in the body, the narrowing of the mind, the restless aftertaste that lingers. It remembers how a small drift becomes a larger one. And because it remembers, it does not need to argue. It simply pauses. It keeps hold of the wheel.
Imagine the raft set on a steady course. The sea is calm, and the direction is clear. But beneath the surface, there are slow-moving currents. They do not feel dramatic. They do not announce themselves. They just begin to carry the vessel slightly sideways. Without attention, we look up and find ourselves far from where we intended to be.
Mindfulness is like noticing the current early. It feels the slight change in direction. It senses the subtle pull. It adjusts before drift becomes distance. This is how mindfulness is protective. It catches movement at the beginning rather than correcting course much later. We are not trying to eliminate currents or silence thoughts. We are learning to recognise them quickly. Often, that is enough.
At the sense doors
Skilful Mindfulness often works earliest at the sense doors (Chapter 55). A sight, sound, smell, taste, touch, or thought enters our experience, and the chain begins: contact, feeling-tone, pull, story, action. If mindfulness arrives late, we wake up halfway through the reaction. If it arrives early, we can notice the first drift of the system before it becomes an unintended diversion.
This is why small moments matter. We hear an edge in someone’s voice. We see a message on our phone. We feel a body sensation. We remember: ‘This is contact. This has a feeling-tone. I do not have to follow the first pull.’ The captain’s memory returns before the current carries us too far.
How we practice – the patrol and the protocol
At this training stage, practising mindfulness does not mean concentrating harder or trying to silence the mind. It means staying gently aware of what is happening as it unfolds. We are learning to catch experience early, checking in before it gathers speed. Rather than waiting until we are already reactive, we notice what is present and remember where it tends to lead.
This is not constant self-analysis. It is light, steady monitoring. We are not searching for problems. We are staying oriented. The early teachings describe four steady reference points that help us do this – body, feeling tone, mind state, and patterns of experience. These are not abstract categories. They are practical places to look when we want to remain balanced and deliberate.
We check:
Body – Is the body braced, restless, slumped, buzzing? The body often signals a shift before the story in the mind fully forms. When we notice tension, we soften deliberately. When we notice collapse, we straighten and breathe. (Chapters 7-13)
Feeling tone – Is this moment pleasant, unpleasant, or neither? Pleasant can quietly turn into grasping. Unpleasant can quickly turn into resistance. Neither can drift into distraction. Simply naming the tone steadies us. (Chapter 27)
Mind state – Is the mind contracted, scattered, irritated, dull, bright? We recognise that mind states are conditions, not identity. They are weather passing through the sky. (Chapter 36)
Principles – Are the familiar patterns becoming visible? Are the Five Hazards beginning to stir – Sensual Desire, Ill Will, Tuning Out, Anxiety and Agitation, and Immobilising Doubt (Chapters 37-42)? Are the Seven Supports available – Liberating Mindfulness, Penetrating Inquiry, Enthusiasm, Energetic Joy, Deep Calm, A Unified Mind, Balancing Equanimity (Chapters 43-50)? Are we seeing cause and effect clearly? The fourth anchor of mindfulness remembers the map of practice, not as theory, but as a way of recognising what is unfolding (Chapter 53).
These four areas function like the dashboard of our raft. We do not stare at the instruments obsessively. We glance at them often enough to stay oriented. Small adjustments made early prevent larger corrections later.
To keep this practical, we use a simple hinge – Feeling-tone → Breath → Choice.
Feeling-tone: we name the tone of the moment. Pleasant. Unpleasant. Neither.
Breath: we take one conscious breath. Not to escape – just to create a gap.
Choice: within that gap, we choose the next small step and quietly ask, ‘Does this move keep us on course towards the Safe Shore?’
Often, that single breath keeps the wheel in our hands. It slows the chain reaction just enough for clarity to return. When a compelling urge tightens its grip, we do not panic. We pause. We name what is happening. We recall where this path has led before.
‘I see you.’ ‘I remember where this goes.’ ‘I am steering the Middle Way.’
In that small space between impulse and action, Mindfulness interrupts carelessness. We do not eliminate urges. We simply refuse to drift with them. This is how Skilful Mindfulness becomes protective. Not through force, but through steady remembering. Not by fighting every wave, but by noticing the conditions early and adjusting our course appropriately.
Over time, this watchfulness becomes natural. We no longer need to strain to remember. The lookout is kept lightly, and the crossing becomes steadier because of it.
A secular dharma perspective – Mindfulness
In Stephen Batchelor’s reworking of the eightfold path, Mindfulness is not treated simply as a technique of bare attention, nor as a mystical state to be cultivated for its own sake. It functions as a capacity of recollection within an ethical project: remembering the framework of care within which we are trying to live. In Batchelor’s cartography of care, Mindfulness helps keep the path from fragmenting into isolated practices, so the different dimensions of training remain available as one integrated way of practising.
Rather than retreating from experience into neutrality, Mindfulness becomes a form of engaged awareness: remembering what matters in the middle of ordinary life. It does not float above experience; it participates in it. It remembers the commitments we have already made and the consequences we have already learned. Mindfulness, then, is not merely a private state of calm. It is the lived practice of keeping the path in mind while navigating relationships, speech, work, and choice – the steady recollection that allows care to remain active when conditions are unstable.
The remembering log: Write about one moment today when you forgot your practice and were carried by anger, craving, or distraction. Then write about one moment when remembering returned. What helped the remembering happen?
Feeling-tone → breath → choice record: Describe three small moments where you named the feeling-tone and took one conscious breath. What changed in the next step you took?
The four-area check: Write a brief status report on your current state:
Body – what is it doing right now?
Feeling-tone – pleasant, unpleasant, or neither?
Mind state – contracted, restless, spacious, bright, dull?
Patterns – is any familiar loop beginning to form? What do you notice when you look at all four together?
The early signal: Describe a recent reaction that gathered momentum. At what exact point could remembering have entered? What was the earliest signal in the body, feeling-tone or mind’s mood?
Rewrite with a pause: Take one recent unhelpful interaction. Rewrite it with a single added breath and one moment of remembering. What would realistically have changed?
Watching a thought: Choose one thought you noticed today. Was it moving toward steadiness or away from it? How did you respond when you saw it clearly?
One lens for the day: Choose one guiding lens for tomorrow – examples include impermanence, kindness, restraint, patience, clarity… At the end of the day, write how viewing events through that lens shaped your choices.
Supporting material: scientific and philosophical perspectives
For those interested in the scientific and philosophical underpinnings of ‘Skilful Mindfulness’ the following overview highlights some key connections.
Neuroscience: From a neuroscience angle, mindfulness asks us to keep a chosen direction alive while new stimuli keep arriving. This relies on working memory and attention control – not as one single brain ‘box,’ but as distributed networks that help us hold intentions, filter distraction, and guide behaviour. Under stress, these control systems are harder to access. That is why mindfulness is not simple a pleasant state; it is training in remembering under pressure.
Research on mindfulness suggests modest but meaningful effects in networks involved in attention, salience detection, emotion regulation, and self-related thinking. The evidence is not perfectly uniform, and mindfulness is not a magic repair job. But the practical pattern is clear enough: when we repeatedly notice drift and return to what matters, we strengthen the capacity to stabilise attention, interrupt automatic loops, and choose a wiser next step.
Psychology: Psychologically, mindfulness is very close to metacognition – the mind becoming aware of its own activity and then using that awareness to guide the next step. In the classic literature, metacognition is not only ‘thinking about thinking’; it includes knowledge about how our mind works and the ongoing monitoring and control of memory, comprehension, judgement and strategy. Later models describe a loop between what the mind is doing and a higher monitoring level that watches performance, updates confidence and adjusts behaviour. In simple terms, it is the difference between being inside a thought and realising that a thought is currently shaping us. Mindfulness research often describes that shift as decentering. When we de-centre, we become aware of experience, identify with it less completely, and react less automatically to what the thought or feeling is saying. Reviews of the field describe three recurring elements – meta-awareness, disidentification from inner events, and reduced reactivity – and experimental work on self-distancing shows that this stance can reduce emotional escalation. Recent work on self-control adds an important nuance: good regulation depends not only on effort, but on metacognitive knowledge about our patterns, our vulnerabilities and the strategies that genuinely help. So psychologically, mindfulness is not passive observation; it is the supervisory capacity that turns awareness into choice.
Philosophy: Philosophically, one close Western parallel is the Stoic practice of prosochē – vigilant attention to impressions, judgements and actions. The basic Stoic idea is simple: we do not control the first flash of an impression, but we do have responsibility for whether we agree with it and act from it. That is why Stoic attention is not mere noticing. It is an ethical watchfulness that keeps our governing centre aligned with reason and with what is actually in our control. Stoic texts treat it as something that must extend into every part of life, not just moments of formal reflection. The comparison with Buddhist mindfulness is illuminating, but it should not be flattened into sameness. Scholarship on mindfulness and sati shows that these terms travel with different assumptions about selfhood, ethics and practice, and scholars of Stoicism themselves disagree about how closely prosochē maps onto modern mindfulness. Even so, the family resemblance is real enough to be useful: both traditions ask us to remember a discipline at the exact moment when appearances feel most convincing. The Stoic version tells us to test an impression before assent; the Buddhist version tells us to remember the path before craving or aversion takes over. In both, attention is an active safeguard rather than a passive stare.
Remember to remember
Skilful Mindfulness is the quiet thread that keeps the whole training intact. It is not just watching what happens – it is remembering what matters while it is happening. It remembers our direction when the mood shifts. It remembers our values when the urge speaks loudly. It remembers that feeling-tone precedes reaction, that actions have consequences. Crucially, it remembers that we have chosen a different way to live.
Without this remembering, the factors scatter – effort strains in the wrong direction, intention fades, and we drift into old weather before we notice. With it, the system holds together. We do not need to be dramatic. We simply need to remember, again and again, what we are practising.
In RAFT terms, Skilful Mindfulness keeps the journey alive. It remembers the map, checks the compass, and notices when the rudder has slipped a few degrees. It protects the crossing not by force, but by presence. When we maintain the watch, we protect ourselves – and in doing so, we protect everyone who travels with us. Each time we remember instead of drifting, mindfulness grows from a fragile faculty into a reliable power. Carefulness replaces carelessness. Over time, the path is no longer something we try to remember – it becomes the way we naturally move: steady, aware, and quietly committed to arriving at the Safe Shore.
Mindfulness isn’t difficult. What’s difficult is to remember to be mindful.
Sharon Salzberg
My experience is what I agree to attend to.
William James,
Sutta references
Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta (MN 10) – The Four Foundations of Mindfulness
Summary: The definitive text. It instructs the practitioner to “abide contemplating the body, feelings, mind, and dhammas, ardent, clearly comprehending, and mindful, having removed covetousness and displeasure concerning the world.”,
Mahācattārīsaka Sutta (MN 117) – The Great Forty
Summary: The Buddha explains that Mindfulness circles around every other factor. It is the quality that notices: “This view is wrong, this view is right.” This confirms Sati as the manager of the path.
Sedaka Sutta (SN 47.19) – The Acrobat
Summary: Uses the metaphor of two acrobats balancing on a bamboo pole. The Buddha teaches that the best way to look after the other acrobat is to maintain one’s own balance perfectly. This grounds the social ethics of mindfulness: my stability is my gift to you.
The shimmering, quivering mind, hard to guard, hard to check – the wise one straightens it like a fletcher straightens an arrow.
The Dhammapada
There is no collectedness for one without wisdom; no wisdom for one without collectedness. One in whom there are both collectedness and wisdom is near to freedom.
The Dhammapada
Episode 64 – Stay steady in your daily life
An AI-generated ‘deep dive’ into this aspect of the RAFT to Freedom
In this Training stage of our journey, we have clarified our Perspective (Chapter 57), set our Intention (Chapter 58), aligned our Speech and Action (Chapters 59 – 60), aligned our Livelihood (Chapter 61), engaged our Application (Chapter 62), and established the Captain’s Memory with Skilful Mindfulness (Chapter 63). Now we arrive at the eighth and final factor of Gotama’s Middle Way Programme – Skilful Collectedness.
The traditional Pāli word samādhi can be understood, in plain terms, as collectedness – sometimes translated as composure, concentration, or a gathered mind. It is the capacity of the mind to remain stable rather than scattered. It is not a trance. It is not zoning out. It is not suppressing thought. It is the steady unification of attention, allowing us to remain present without being pulled into fragmentation.
Although this chapter gives particular attention to formal practice, the purpose is not to become calm only on the cushion. We cultivate collectedness so that its steadiness can travel with us into ordinary life – helping us be present for this conversation, this decision, this difficulty, rather than being lost in yesterday’s regret or tomorrow’s fear.
Earlier in our journey – especially in the practice of ‘A Unified Mind’ (Chapter 49) – we experienced moments of unity and flow as a natural support. Here, we cultivate collectedness deliberately as a skill. Not because calm is impressive, but because stability is necessary. Without composure, insight flickers. Without steadiness, wisdom does not land deeply or stay available under pressure.
Collectedness has matured across our journey. In the Abandoning stage, it was defensive – gathering the mind so we were not hijacked by turbulence (Chapter 32). In the Feel stage, it became unified – the deck running true as agitation reduced (Chapter 49). Now, in this Training stage, it becomes integrated – composure that shows up in speech, decision, conflict, and pressure. What began as protection has become reliability. What began as effort has become steadiness.
Skilful Collectedness provides the stable platform on which discernment can operate. When attention is dispersed across worries, memories, plans, and reactions, it lacks precision. When attention is gently unified, perception sharpens and reactivity softens. This is not narrowing life down. It is gathering ourselves enough that we are not internally divided.
Gathering, not suppressing
There is an important distinction here. Skilful Collectedness is gathering, not suppressing.
Suppressing happens when we try to force the mind into stillness through tension. We clamp down on thought. We strain for silence. We try to manufacture calm through control. This usually produces the opposite of what we want – agitation beneath the surface and subtle aversion toward our own experience.
Gathering is different. It is the patient act of returning attention – again and again – without hostility. When attention wanders, we notice. When it drifts, we gently regather. The focus is steady, not strained. The repetition itself builds continuity.
Over time, this continuity creates coherence. The body settles. The breath smooths. The mind becomes unified enough to stay with one chosen object while still open to the wider field. In that coherence, subtle shifts become visible earlier. We recognise any drift before it takes us off course.
This is composure as training – not an escape from life, but a way of meeting life without scattering.
Unified does not mean narrow
Collectedness is sometimes described as one-pointedness, but this does not have to mean a hard, narrow stare. A gathered mind can be spacious. The point is not to exclude life, but to stop being pulled apart by every passing stimulus. When the crew is unified, the raft moves as one vessel. In the same way, collectedness gathers body, breath, attention, and intention into a single coherent direction.
A note on deep collectedness
In the early teachings, Skilful Collectedness is often described through the four jhānas – the progressively deeper states of gathered attention. The language varies, but the movement is broadly from joy and ease, into deeper calm, and then into equanimity and clear, steady mindfulness. This chapter does not try to make jhāna into a performance goal. For our purposes, the important principle is simpler: the more scattered the mind is, the harder it is to see clearly; the more gathered it becomes, the more available wisdom becomes. Deep collectedness may come gradually, but the training begins wherever we are: one breath, one body, one return.
Everyday collectedness
Collectedness is not confined to formal sitting. It is strengthened in small intervals throughout the day.
We pause for two minutes between tasks. We feel three breaths before replying to a message. We notice the body while walking from one room to another.
These short re-gatherings prevent cumulative fragmentation. They stabilise the system before strain builds. Rather than waiting for collapse and then rebuilding, we maintain steadiness in small, sustainable doses.
Collectedness and wisdom
Collectedness and wisdom support one another. When the mind is scattered, even Skilful Perspective fades under pressure (Chapter 57). When the mind is composed, we can apply what we already know. This is why the early teachings link collectedness with freedom – not because calm is the goal, but because stability allows insight to deepen and endure.
If Skilful Application is the engine (Chapter 62), and Skilful Mindfulness (Chapter 63) is the captain’s memory, then Skilful Collectedness is the stable deck beneath our feet. When the deck is steady, the crew can work efficiently. The navigator can consult the map without being thrown off balance. Adjustments can be made precisely. We do not lurch from one side of the vessel to the other. Collectedness does not eliminate the weather. It stabilises the vessel within it.
Over time, composure becomes less an effort and more a baseline. The mind gathers more easily. The platform steadies more quickly. And because of that steadiness, wisdom is no longer occasional. It becomes reliable. That reliability is what carries us toward the safe shore.
The clean deck
Collectedness is easier when the deck is clean. If our speech, actions, and livelihood are generating secrecy, guilt, conflict, or fear, the mind has to keep scanning the horizon. Ethical conduct is therefore not separate from collectedness; it is one of the conditions that makes composure possible. Fewer aftershocks mean fewer disturbances. Fewer disturbances mean the mind can gather without so much resistance.
How we practise – the rhythm of collectedness
When practicing collectedness meditation, we do not force the mind into composure. We invite it.
A helpful rhythm to remember is Gladden – Settle – Gather.
Gladden: If the mind feels dull, pressured, or resistant, it will not settle willingly. So we begin by brightening it gently. We might recall something wholesome – gratitude, kindness, relief, beauty. We might simply acknowledge, ‘Right now, all is well.’ We make the present moment hospitable. This is not artificial positivity. It is creating conditions in which the mind is willing to stay.
Settle: Next, we widen into the body. Rather than narrowing attention immediately to a tiny point, we feel the whole torso breathing. We notice the weight of the body. The contact with the chair or floor. The hands resting. The body provides a stable container. When awareness is grounded in embodied presence, the mind is less likely to spin upward into abstraction.
Gather: Only then do we gently rest attention on a chosen anchor – examples include, the breath, sounds, the body as a whole, or simple presence itself.
When attention wanders – and it will – we gather it back. Not with criticism. Not with frustration. Just with a friendly and caring repetition.
If the mind is sleepy, we narrow the focus slightly to sharpen clarity.
If the mind is restless, we widen the field slightly to include more space.
These small adjustments keep the system balanced. Over time, this repeated gathering builds continuity. Attention becomes less brittle. Presence becomes more stable.
A secular dharma perspective – Focus
In Stephen Batchelor’s practical rendering of the eightfold path, this factor becomes Focus. Where the traditional language often speaks of concentration. Batchelor’s word points to something direct and usable: the capacity to gather attention around what matters. Focus is not a special state removed from ordinary life, and it is not calm as a private achievement. It is the steadiness that allows us to remain available when conditions are uncomfortable, complex, or unclear.
Focus is closely related to composure: the ability to stay gathered enough that practice does not fall apart under pressure. In RAFT language, the crew stops rushing from side to side, the vessel steadies, and the next wise manoeuvre becomes easier to discern. This does not require perfect silence or an impressive inner state. It begins wherever attention can be gently collected again: one breath, one body, one conversation, one choice. The test of Focus is practical rather than mystical: does this steadiness reduce reactivity, make care more available, and help us respond rather than merely repeat ourselves?
The distraction map: During one practice period, note where attention goes – planning, replaying, worrying, imagining. What patterns repeat?
Natural collectedness: Describe an activity where you felt quietly unified – reading, walking, creating, working. What conditions made that possible?
Carry-over effect: Practise ten minutes of collectedness, then move into an ordinary task. How does the quality of attention change?
From scattered to gathered: Describe what it feels like when your mind is dispersed. Then describe what it feels like when it gathers. What shifts in the body, breath, and mind?
The stable platform: Write about a difficult emotion you are currently facing. How does it look different when viewed from steadiness rather than reactivity?
Gladdeners: List five simple experiences that reliably brighten and steady your awareness. How could you use them deliberately, not to escape difficulty, but to support a more gathered mind?
Collectedness under pressure: Recall a recent moment when pressure, irritation, craving, or fear pulled you off centre. What happened in the body and mind? What might have changed if you had paused, gathered yourself, and taken one steady breath before responding?
Supporting material: scientific and philosophical perspectives
For those interested in the scientific and philosophical underpinnings of ‘Skilful Collectedness’ the following overview highlights some key connections.
Neuroscience: – Contemporary neuroscience suggests that collectedness is not the mind going blank, and it is not a simple on–off switch between one brain network and another. The Default Mode Network (DMN) is associated with self-referential thinking, autobiographical memory, and mental time travel. It is active when the mind wanders into stories about ‘me’, the past, or the future. But newer research makes clear that this network is not a ‘bad’ system that needs to be shut down. It plays important roles in imagination, planning, and meaning-making. What changes with trained attention is not elimination, but balance. In focused-attention meditation studies, researchers repeatedly observe a cycle: the mind wanders, we recognise the wandering, we shift attention back, and we sustain it again. This process appears to involve dynamic cooperation between the Default Mode Network, the Salience Network (which detects what matters), and Executive Control networks (which help redirect attention). In simple terms, Skilful Collectedness strengthens our ability to notice distraction and regather. It is not switching off the self – it is improving coordination. In RAFT language, this supports ‘steadying and regathering’ rather than ‘tuning out’ or ‘silencing the mind’.
Psychology: In contemporary psychology, the closest secular analogue to collectedness is the research on flow associated with Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. Flow is not trance or dissociation. It arises when challenge and skill are well matched, goals are clear, feedback is immediate, and attention is fully engaged. In such states, action and awareness merge, and self-consciousness recedes – not because awareness disappears, but because it is fully used. This helps us understand collectedness as immersion with clarity, not withdrawal from life. Modern therapies reinforce the same lesson from a clinical angle. Mindfulness-based approaches reduce rumination and worry partly by lowering cognitive and emotional reactivity. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) strengthens psychological flexibility and present-moment awareness. Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT) teaches doing one thing at a time – ‘one-mindfully’. By contrast, decades of research on thought suppression show that trying to forcibly push thoughts away often produces a rebound effect, especially under stress. The implication is clear: grinding does not work. Gathering does. Skilful Collectedness is not forceful control. It is steady coherence.
Philosophy: The Stoic tradition adds an essential ethical frame. For Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius, attention was not a technique for calmness alone. It was a disciplined way of examining impressions before assenting to them. One paused, tested the judgement, and asked whether it aligned with reason and virtue. Attention served character. It was not a neutral observation for its own sake. This influence carries directly into modern cognitive therapy. Both Albert Ellis and Aaron T. Beck explicitly acknowledged Stoicism as a philosophical precursor to cognitive-behavioural approaches. As the Stoicism scholar John Sellars has argued, Roman Stoic ‘mindfulness’ was the practice of keeping guiding principles ready to hand so that action could remain deliberate and proportionate. From this perspective, the test of collectedness is not ‘How focused can I become?’ but ‘Does this steadiness help me test impressions, reduce reactivity, and respond with care?’
Remember to remember
Skilful Collectedness is what makes the rest of the training dependable. Perspective may be clear, Intention sincere, Ethics aligned, and Mindfulness alert – but without collectedness, these qualities fragment under pressure. Collectedness is the steadying that allows what we know to remain available when it matters. It is the difference between insight that appears occasionally and wisdom that can be applied reliably. We do not need to be perfectly calm. We need to be gathered enough that attention does not splinter at the first surge of emotion or distraction. Collectedness keeps the training intact. It gives Perspective somewhere to stand, Intention somewhere to hold, and Mindfulness somewhere to land.
On our raft, this is the stable deck beneath our feet. Weather will still come. Currents will still pull. But when the platform is steady, we can respond deliberately rather than react impulsively. We are not thrown from side to side by every shift in the wind. We can adjust the rudder without panic. We can consult the map without losing our balance. Over time, this steadiness becomes less effortful and more natural. The mind regathers more quickly. Drift is recognised earlier. Reactions shorten. Recovery speeds up. And because of that growing reliability, wisdom is no longer occasional or fragile. It becomes embodied. Collectedness does not remove the waves – it allows us to remain upright within them, steering with clarity toward the Safe Shore.
Think of attention as a mental muscle that we can strengthen by a workout.
Daniel Goleman
You have power over your mind — not outside events. Realise this, and you will find strength.
Marcus Aurelius, Meditations
Sutta references:
Samādhi Sutta (SN 22.5) – Concentration
Summary: The Buddha explicitly links concentration to wisdom. He does not say ‘Concentrate to bliss out’; he says ‘Concentrate to know things as they really are.’ This confirms that Collectedness is a tool for insight, not an escape,.
Kāyagatāsati Sutta (MN 119) – Mindfulness of the Body
Describes the practice of immersing the mind in the body ‘like a bucket of water filled to the brim.’ It lists the benefits, including the ability to endure pain and conquer dissatisfaction. This is the source of the ‘Whole-Body’ approach,.
Cūḷavedalla Sutta (MN 44) – The Small Set of Questions
Summary: The nun Dhammadinnā explains that Samādhi is ‘one-pointedness of mind,’ its signs are the four foundations of mindfulness, and its equipment is Right Effort. This shows the inter-connectedness of the training
How do we love our enemies? First, we must develop and maintain the capacity to forgive. He who is devoid of the power to forgive is devoid of the power to love.
Martin Luther King, Jr
There are those who do not realise that one day we all must die. But those who do realise this settle their quarrels.”
Gotama
Episode 65 – Forgiveness an essential practice
An AI generated ‘deep dive’ into this aspect of the RAFT to Freedom
This chapter is a work-in-progress that we hope to publish later in the year. In the meantime, we thought that you might be interested in an audio ‘deep dive’ into forgiveness.