Sittings of strong determination — commitment to stillness

Commit to not moving, opening the eyes, or adjusting for a fixed period, developing steadiness under discomfort.

Why it works

The urge to fidget, reposition, or escape is itself a reactivity response — a small-scale version of the aversion pattern the whole practice targets. Staying still through mild-to-moderate discomfort creates direct evidence that the discomfort is tolerable and temporary. This is a structured form of distress tolerance training: each minute of remaining equanimous in discomfort updates the nervous system’s threat model of that sensation.

How to do it

  1. Choose a sitting length (20 minutes to start, building toward an hour) and commit in advance not to adjust your position.
  2. When discomfort arises, redirect attention to observing it as sensation: location, quality, intensity — not its meaning or narrative.
  3. Do not suppress or brace against the sensation; observe it with the curiosity of a researcher, not the urgency of a sufferer.
  4. After the sit, note whether the discomfort that felt unbearable at minute 10 had already changed by minute 20.

Evidence

Distress tolerance training — learning to tolerate aversive internal states without escape behavior — is a component of DBT with clinical support for anxiety and emotional regulation. The "strong determination sitting" applies this principle in a meditative context; direct trials of this specific format are limited. (mechanistic)

People with chronic pain or joint problems should not practice stillness to the point of injury. The mechanism is evidence-based; the format-specific evidence is practitioner-tradition rather than clinical.

Common mistake

Using strong determination to prove toughness rather than to observe reactivity — forcing through pain while gritting your teeth is the opposite of equanimous observation.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach can track the length and quality of your still-sitting practice over time, noting your growing capacity to observe discomfort without immediately escaping it.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).