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Articles from mindfulness
Monday, December 07, 2009
mindfulness and money

by guest blogger Stephanie Moulton Sarkis, Ph.D.,


You may be thinking that mindfulness and money don’t really go together—how could a practice focused on non-materialism apply to the source of materialism? But in fact, the practice of mindfulness can be applied to your daily money management practices.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Monday, December 07, 2009
Friday, December 04, 2009
responding to emotions

Excerpt from The Mindful Path through Shyness


That we have emotions is a given. How we react or respond to them is a matter of choice. Victor Frankl offered the important insight that there’s a space between stimulus and response, and if we can pause and bring the full light of our awareness into it that space, we can free ourselves from automatic reactions that are often dysfunctional. Mindfulness practice will allow you to recognize that space and use it to respond to your emotions with clarity, compassion, and skillfulness.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Friday, December 04, 2009
Thursday, December 03, 2009
mindfulness and compassion

Excerpt from The Mindful Path Through Worry and Rumination


Traditionally, mindfulness was taught as the essential foundation for meditation practice. However, it was also understood that mindfulness was half of this foundation. The other essential half was compassion. For thousands of years, mindfulness and compassion have been understood to be the two wings of spiritual enlightenment and psychological freedom.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Thursday, December 03, 2009
Wednesday, December 02, 2009
big deal mind

by guest blogger Thomas Roberts, author of A Mindfulness Book

Greetings!


Recently, mindfulness has become somewhat of a commodity, a buzzword, something we can learn or get and be guaranteed wonderful outcomes. Be aware that mindfulness isn’t a thing to possess, an end state, something you have or do.


Consider, instead, that mindfulness is a way of being in the world. A way of being with great compassion, of remaining present amidst the flow of experiences that is our life. Turning down the volume on all our resistance, our need to control, manipulate and react. Instead, hang in there with what is going on. Remain patient with this flow, remain curious, and respond with great compassion.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Wednesday, December 02, 2009
Monday, November 30, 2009
mindful breathing

by guest blogger Sameet Kumar, Ph.D. author of Grieving Mindfully and The Mindful Path Through Worry and Rumination


The old saying “as above, so below” is particularly well suited to learning both the practice of mindfulness and the revolutionizing changes that mindfulness can bring. Mindfulness can change how you experience yourself and thereby affect how you manage your relationships with others. The more mindful you become of your thoughts and feelings, the less likely are you to be controlled by ruminations and irrational worries, or get swept up into the maelstrom of destructive emotions.

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Posted By / 8:00 AM / Monday, November 30, 2009
Friday, November 20, 2009
bedtime rituals; empty your mind

Excerpt from five good minutes in the evening


If kids can have bedtime rituals, why can’t you? Tonight, be mindful of your bedtime routine and be fully present in each moment-to-moment ritual. Take extra care in brushing your teeth, washing your face, drying your hands, changing into your comfy pajamas, pulling back the blankets, fluffing your favorite pillow, and hugging yourself good night.

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Posted By / 9:00 AM / Friday, November 20, 2009
Monday, October 26, 2009
four exercises to help deal with food cravings

Excerpt from Eating the Moment

  • Counting Craving Thoughts
  • It’s Just a Craving, for Crying Out Loud!
  • Craving-Control Chair
  • Craving-Control Success Record
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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Monday, October 26, 2009
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Opening Your Heart

Excerpt from Five Good Minutes with the One You Love

Even the busiest people can begin to reconnect with the sources of life and love in a relationship if they learn to inhabit the present moment with sensitive and caring attention. Through simple, mindfulness-based practices for stopping, relaxing, connecting, and staying here, the momentum of hurry and worry becomes less compelling. Something else more precious and sustaining returns. The opportunity for a different experience arises. Exploration of deeper, more positive feelings suddenly seems possible, even easier.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Friday, September 25, 2009
Ways of Seeing: Mindfulness Meditation

Excerpt from Peaceful Mind

 

Meditation starts with simply observing the mind and body without necessarily trying to change what is seen or the seer. Most people come to meditation with the hope of changing their sense of self, but the inherent framework of a meditation practice is actually not geared towards self-improvement. Rather, meditation is more radically geared towards accepting life as it is.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Friday, September 25, 2009
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Three Steps to Creating a Mandala for Your Life

excerpt from Wise Mind, Open Mind

 

When dramatic shifts occur in our lives, we can become nearly paralyzed with fear, anger, grief, and resentment. We enter a state of shock and forget that with loss comes rebirth. On some level, we understand that we must design a new life, a new mandala, but we struggle between trying to figure out what we want to do next and being overwhelmed by the intense emotions associated with loss. Clinging to the past, we resist the opportunity to embrace the creative process that requires us to let go of the mind’s limited way of thinking about ourselves and the situation at hand. But if we can find the courage to enter this process, to experience the state of consciousness Buddhists call “open mind,” accessing our deepest, or core, creativity, we can begin to tune in to what we most want for ourselves. You can ensure that your new life is in sync with your deepest values. You can let go of your attachments to what was and what you thought would be. You can choose to let go of fear and trust that a palette of many colors, some of which you may never have seen before, will be available for creating a new mandala: a new life of beauty that’s in harmony with the song of the soul.

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Posted By / 12:00 AM / Thursday, September 17, 2009
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