TLDR: In this conversation, Eckhart Tolle and consciousness teacher Peter Russell discuss a refreshingly simple approach to meditation centered on allowing—releasing effort, relaxing the mind, and gently returning to the present moment. Rather than forcing concentration or achieving specific states, this method emphasizes surrender and ease, making meditation accessible to those who struggle with traditional techniques and transforming practice into something naturally enjoyable.
Why Effort and Striving Undermine Meditation
A fundamental barrier many practitioners face is the assumption that meditation requires intense effort. The conventional narrative suggests that to meditate effectively, you must wrestle your mind into submission, maintain iron-clad focus, and achieve particular mental states. This approach creates an internal conflict: the very act of trying hard to quiet the mind often generates tension, restlessness, and self-judgment when the mind inevitably wanders.
Peter Russell's core insight addresses this paradox directly. By introducing the principle of allowing—rather than forcing—practitioners encounter meditation as a fundamentally different experience. Allowing acknowledges a basic truth about consciousness: the mind naturally gravitates toward the present moment when not impeded by our own resistance. The problem isn't that the mind is inherently chaotic; the problem is that we fight against its natural movement through excessive effort.
When someone sits to meditate with the intention to force concentration, they create an internal struggle. Part of consciousness focuses on the breath or a mantra, while another part judges whether the effort is "working." This division of attention actually produces the very restlessness practitioners are trying to escape. Tolle and Russell suggest that recognizing this dynamic—and releasing the effort entirely—is where real practice begins.
What Does Allowing Actually Mean in Practice?
Allowing is not passivity or laziness. It is an active, intelligent relaxation—a conscious decision to stop opposing your own experience. When you allow, you still sit in meditation. You still gently return attention to the present moment when you notice distraction. The difference lies in the quality of that return: it comes without force, without judgment, without the sense that something needs to be fixed.
Consider how allowing operates in everyday life. When you try to remember someone's name and can't, effort typically produces more forgetfulness. But when you relax and stop trying, the name often surfaces spontaneously. Meditation works similarly. The relaxed state of allowing creates the conditions for awareness to settle naturally into the present, rather than being dragged there by willpower.
In practice, allowing might look like this: you notice your attention has drifted to thoughts. Rather than criticizing yourself or forcing attention back to the breath, you simply notice the distraction with gentle curiosity and return. There's no judgment in the noticing, no tension in the return. This soft, accepting quality transforms meditation from a performance—where you're constantly evaluating whether you're "doing it right"—into a simple homecoming to what is already here.
Relaxing the Mind as a Gateway to Present-Moment Awareness
Russell emphasizes that one of the most practical entry points into meditation is relaxation itself. The mind becomes more settled not through forced concentration but through genuine ease. When the body is relaxed and the mind is permitted to soften, natural awareness of the present moment emerges without strain.
This distinction matters profoundly for practitioners who have struggled with meditation. Many people abandon practice because they interpret their wandering mind as failure. But if the goal is not concentration per se but present-moment awareness, then every instance of noticing that the mind has wandered is already a success—it's a moment of presence, a moment of seeing. The practice becomes about appreciating these moments of awareness rather than berating yourself for distractions.
Tolle, whose own teaching emphasizes the power of presence, underscores how allowing quiets the compulsive thinking that dominates ordinary consciousness. When you stop fighting against thoughts and simply observe them without engagement, they naturally settle. The mind begins to rest in awareness itself rather than in the content of thoughts. This shift is quiet, gentle, and available to anyone willing to release the effort to achieve it.
Gently Returning to the Present Moment
The phrase "gently returning" is crucial. In traditional meditation instruction, practitioners are sometimes encouraged to snap attention back sharply whenever the mind wanders, as if disciplining an unruly student. This approach, while potentially effective for some, can reinforce tension and effort.
The gentler approach invites a different quality of attention. When you notice distraction, the return to the breath or the present moment happens with the same ease you might use to turn your head toward a friend's voice. There is interest rather than correction, curiosity rather than correction. Over time, this gentleness actually strengthens awareness more effectively than force does, because it doesn't create resistance to the practice itself.
Practitioners who adopt this approach often report that meditation becomes something they actually enjoy rather than a discipline they feel obligated to endure. This enjoyment matters: it leads to consistency, and consistency compounds the benefits. A gentle ten-minute daily practice sustained over months will yield more insight than sporadic intense sessions undertaken with grim determination.
How Allowing Fits Into Eckhart Tolle's Teaching on Presence
For Tolle, who has long emphasized the power of being rather than doing, allowing in meditation represents a direct expression of his core teaching. Most human suffering arises from identification with the thinking mind and resistance to what is. Meditation, in this framework, isn't a technique to achieve something better; it's a recognition of the peace and awareness that already underlie all experience.
Allowing aligns with this perspective because it involves releasing the fictional story that something is wrong with your present experience. When you stop trying to force your mind into an imagined "perfect meditation state," you're freed to actually experience this moment as it is. And this moment, when met without resistance, naturally contains the clarity and peace that meditation practitioners seek.
Russell's approach, presented in his book How to Meditate Without Even Trying, translates this philosophical insight into straightforward practice. The genius lies in its simplicity: anyone, regardless of prior meditation experience or innate temperament, can access allowing. It requires no special equipment, no mystical belief, no years of training—only a willingness to stop struggling against your own mind.
Making Meditation Accessible and Sustainable
One of the most significant benefits of the allowing approach is that it removes a major barrier to meditation: the sense that you're "bad at it." People often quit meditation because they convince themselves they lack the ability to quiet their minds. But this belief misunderstands the purpose of practice. The mind doesn't need to be quiet for meditation to be effective; it needs to be allowed.
By reframing meditation not as achieving a special mental state but as allowing present-moment awareness to emerge naturally, Russell and Tolle make the practice accessible to restless minds, anxious practitioners, busy people, and anyone else who has felt that traditional meditation was somehow out of reach.
Additionally, this approach integrates more seamlessly into daily life. If meditation is about allowing rather than concentrating, then moments of presence can emerge during everyday activities—washing dishes, walking, listening to someone speak. The practice becomes less about carving out sacred time and more about cultivating a quality of awareness that gradually permeates all experience.
Where to Go From Here
To begin experimenting with allowing in your own practice, set aside five to ten minutes and sit comfortably. Close your eyes or soften your gaze. Rather than trying to meditate "correctly," simply allow yourself to be present with whatever arises—sensations in the body, the quality of the breath, sounds in the environment, thoughts. When you notice the mind has wandered, gently return without judgment.
The key is to release the internal standard you've been measuring yourself against. There is no "good" or "bad" meditation, only the simple practice of allowing and returning, over and over. As consistency builds, you'll likely notice that the mind settles more readily, that present-moment awareness becomes more accessible, and that the struggle with meditation itself softens and dissolves. Peter Russell's book How to Meditate Without Even Trying, selected by Eckhart Tolle for publication through New World Library's Eckhart Tolle Editions, offers detailed guidance for deepening this practice. The conversation between Tolle and Russell provides a foundation for understanding why allowing works and how to embody it in your own meditation.




