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Mastering Basic Rotation
Hold the balls away from you. Notice how heavy the balls feel in your hand. It wouldn’t feel very good to drop one of them on your foot. To prevent accidents, sit at a table or keep your hand away from your body. Don’t use the balls over glass or any other breakable objects you have, either.
Place the balls in your hand. Hold your hand flat. Place one ball between your pinky and ring fingers. Follow up by setting the second ball between your middle and pointer fingers. Go ahead and curl your fingers over the tops of the balls. When you’re starting out, you’ll need to rely on your finger strength to get the balls moving.
Rotate the balls clockwise with your fingers. The goal is to have the balls swap places. Use your thumb to push the outermost ball towards your body. At the same time, use your smaller fingers to shift the other ball to your larger fingers. Continue swirling the balls in your hand as long as you can.
Practice rotating the balls until you can do it smoothly. As you master the movement, the balls will collide with each other less and less. If yours have chimes, listen for them to ring smoothly and without interruption. Once this happens, you’ve successfully mastered the basics. Feel free to continue practicing so the balls don’t touch at all.
Getting Meditation Balls
Pick balls that fit your hands. As a beginner, look for balls around 40 millimetres (1.6 in) wide. This size, which is slightly less than a golf ball, is enough for the balls to hit all pressure points on an average hand. Balls smaller than this are better for children or adults under 5 feet 2 inches (1.57 m), while larger balls are better for experienced users and people over 6 feet 2 inches (1.88 m). Ball sizes are usually measured in millimeters. Try 35-40 mm if you have small hands or are a beginner; if you have bigger hands, try a 40-50mm pair. You should be able to comfortably balance one ball between ring finger and little finger while holding the other with the remaining fingers and thumb.
Choose the type of ball material you prefer. Meditation balls are made of material ranging from wood to metal. Metal balls are heaviest, so they’ll stimulate your hands more, but are generally the cheapest option. Stone balls, such as ones made with jade or marble, are rarer and more expensive. Hardwood balls are the rarest type and are very light, so they’re not used as often as other varieties.
Get balls with chimes for greater sound feedback. Balls that have chimes are hollowed out. A hollowed steel ball is far lighter than a whole one, but this allows the chime to make noise when the ball is moved. Some practitioners like the soothing sound that chimes provide. As a beginner, the chimes let you hear how smoothly you’re moving the balls in your hand. For example, a smooth and even chime sound informs you that your movements are fluid. In normal balls, you can hear this when the balls no longer clack together.
Performing Advanced Tricks
Spin the balls with minimal finger contact. As you get accustomed to using the meditation balls, you’ll gain better control of your muscles. Instead of using your fingers, set the balls in your palm and try moving them. Raise one side of your palm and lower the other so the balls start rolling. It’s difficult, but the amount of strength and concentration you learn is a nice reward. Remember that you’re providing empty space for the ball to roll into rather than pushing it into that space.
Turn your palm downwards while rotating the balls. The angle you hold your hand can make using the balls a lot harder. Normally you’d have your hand flat, but try inclining it upwards. The more your hand faces the ground, the more you’ll have to work your muscles to control the balls. Keep going until you’re ready to try controlling the balls while your palm faces the floor. This exercise is for building more strength and quickness in your fingers.
Move the balls in the opposite direction. Instead of sending the balls in the direction of your thumb, send them towards your smaller fingers. Rotate the balls in your hand as you would normally. It’s a basic trick, but it’ll feel strange and difficult the first time you try it. You’ll still get full hand stimulation by the balls while also increasing your ability to control them.
Add more balls to the rotation. Start with a third ball, then, once you master that, add a fourth. You’ll spin them in your hand the same way you did with two. It’s similar to juggling in that the difficulty increases with more balls, but so does your skill level. Once you can handle three balls, you can even set a fourth ball on top of them and keep it spinning.
Move onto bigger balls. Bigger meditation balls are tougher to handle. They’ll press on your hands more, which some practitioners might prefer. It can also be worthwhile when you’ve mastered the meditation balls you own and would like a new challenge.
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