I agree with Jon. Just keep doing it. In general about mindfulness, I would say: The more difficult it is, the more reason there is to do it.
Gareth wrote:I don't like it either, and I almost never do it. And I'm as committed to mindfulness as you can be.
I think some of my reasons might be similar to Fee's. ie there are parts of my body that don't give me a great deal of sensation any more, and maybe that's tricky to handle emotionally.
If I'm being honest, I think that's all the more reason to do it.
I think the bodyscan is a very important exercise for three reasons:
* A very effective way to ground yourself.
* A very good way to keep track of what's going on in your body (tensions, pains, etc.); If you check your body very often, it will be much easier to notice it when something is not normal.
*And, most importantly, your body is a sort of 'mirror' (that is very easy to watch) of what's going on in your mind. All sorts of events in your mind will trigger physical responses that are very easy to pick up on. Just like you can stay with the difficulty in your mind to learn to accept things, it is often just as effective to stay with the physical response. For instance: If you zoom in on the adrenaline rush after stressful events and keep with it, you break the cycle; your mind learns that the adrenaline isn't caused by something that is actually dangerous, and in time your mind accepts this and it doesn't produce extra adrenaline, which would otherwise feed the feeling of danger, and would cause the anxiety to become ever bigger.
I've also noticed that if you keep doing bodyscans, that over time you become wired (in the head) to notice everything much easier, much more vividly, and in much more detail.. So, just hang in there, and keep doing bodyscans.