HCS wrote: "If i mirror this to my job in IT (strangely enough that seems possible), i would actually call it envisioning. The process of coming to an inner view of solving all (potential) information related problems at once. This can never be resulting in a real IT solution, because such is live. However, it kind of gives me a similar feeling as the process you are describing here (and which i'm beginning to experience myself). I am not sure this makes sense
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I am a system programmer who migrated into database engineering and finally into content aggregation, where I stayed until I retired. There is synergy here, but definitely a semantic problem, but something more as well. When you have time, look through my own voyage of discovery of photography + mind-training in this free e-book called: “Mahamudra, A Story” at this link. Also in paperback on Amazon.com. Scroll upward to find the book.”
http://spiritgrooves.net/e-Books.aspx#PhotographyWhat I am describing here is connected to what is called Insight Meditation which, combined with another meditation technique called Shamata Meditation produces Mahamudra Meditation, which is what I practice.
When we work at typical IT jobs (or very detailed photography!), where a LOT of concentration is required over long periods of time, we develop the basic mental-muscle needed to actually meditate, a type of meditation called Tranquility Meditation (Shamata). When that mental-muscle is combined with Insight Meditation, the “Seeing” I described in the earlier post CAN be the result, an extreme clarity of mind that allows us to do some pretty wonderful things.
When I teach this kind of meditation, I came up with this analogy, which might help: It is like trying to thread a small needle with very shaky hands. The concentrative Shamata-style meditation we can learn from IT takes the shakiness out of the hands, so that we can thread the needle (Insight Meditation). When I am doing photography, I am doing a form of Insight Meditation where I am looking at and focusing on whatever object I am photographing, yet at the same time allowing my mind to come to rest, not on the subject I am photographing, but rather on the nature of that subject, which is the same as the nature of the mind itself.
I admit, this is a very technical, for me way more difficult than the techniques of photography, but the two go together very well indeed! I imagine that many highly-skilled photographers are doing a form of meditation, but perhaps are not aware of it.
Nikon D810, Zeiss Otus 55mm APO, Zerene Stacker