WTS Tarver:
What exactly is the difference between access concentration and the first samatha jhana?
To give a typical answer… “It depends.” Everyone seems to experience access concentration and any of the jhanas somewhat of a unique way, but there are some deep features.
When one begins to relax in a receptive way during sit, the mind starts to unwind and generate a bunch of words and images, and it doesn’t feel like it’s happening on purpose. If you continue to relax and allow yourself just to pay attention to what’s happening, at some point the lines of thoughts and sequences of imagery more or less drop away, and there’s a kind of felt-shift that takes place. It doesn’t have to be dramatic. The calm and collected state shows up is one way of conceiving of access concentration.
From here, focusing on the qualities of the state (tingling, calm, lightness, etc.) can lead to their intensification. Sometimes this leads to another shift, which can feels for some people like moving into another space entirely. It’s like access concentration, but more stable and intense. That’s one way of describing the transition from access concentration to first jhana.
Some people recognize the signs of concentration (i.e. how they know what state they are in) in a visual way, and others more in the feelings in their physical body. Neither are better than the other, so whatever comes up naturally is often easier to work with.
Also, there’s no guarantee that one will move from access concentration to first jhana in sequence. One can end up in one of the insight stages instead, even when there’s no intention to do so. Lots of repeated practice is really the only way to start sorting out what’s what.
-Jackson