Mon Jun 23, 2014 1:30 am
G'day Terry,
You have some wonderful insights above already. I do agree with Gareth, that there is no contradiction with certain practices. Mindfulness is a way of being rather than being a particular type of practice. You need not worry that certain practices of meditation will clash or reduce the effects of one another. In reality all meditations are really practices of mindfulness. You could say that meditation is simply the formal practice of mindfulness.
As was mentioned, you can sit mindfully (as in formal meditation), mow the lawn mindfully or brush your teeth in the same manner.
Whats more important really is truly understanding what it is to embody this mindful way of being.
Your experiencing anxiety and this is a wonderful opportunity to use mindfulness.
As Suryacitta mentioned, in times of unwanted emotion we often want to escape the pain, drown it out or push it away somehow. We want it to stop. All these ways of avoiding pain only perpetuate it in the long run. Avoidance creates suffering and keeps us from living fully, this miraculous and precious life that we have.
Instead of ‘turning away’ from pain in avoidance we can learn to gently ‘turn towards’ what we’re experiencing. We can bring a caring open attention toward the wounded part of ourselves and then from there make wise choices about how to respond to ourselves and to life. For you, that may be in that moment - a choice to take a deep slow breath.
Your not avoiding the emotion here. Your mindfully attending to it and then it may well be that your response is to slow the breath and even sooth the mind with the thought - "I am actually ok here and now. I am safe".
That would be a mindful response rather than an unconscious reaction of just wanting the pain to stop.
I recently posted a blog on this website is with i detailed a 6 step process for dealing with difficult emotions. I think you'll find it very helpful so i'll paste the steps here....
Here is a six step process for mindfully dealing with difficult emotions…
1. Stop, Turn Towards
Once you have become aware of the feeling, stop for a moment. Take a deep breath and then ‘sit with’ the anger, shame, guilt, anger, anxiety, frustration and fear. Don’t inhibit it, suppress it, ignore it or try to conquer it. Just be with it with an attitude of open curiosity and acceptance.
2. Identify The Emotion
Acknowledge the emotion is there. If you are embarrassed, you can specifically recognize that feeling. You can mentally say to yourself, for example, “I know there is embarrassment in me.”
3. Acceptance Of What Is
When you are embarrassed, or feeling another difficult emotion, you don’t need to deny it. You can accept what is present. In his book Peace is Every Step, Thich Nhat Hahn suggest we actually mentally acknowledge to ourselves…
“I can accept that I am experiencing intense embarrassment right now.”
Through your mindful acceptance you can embrace or hold the feeling in your awareness– this alone can calm and soothe you. This is an act of self-compassion and responsiveness to your own distress, and it is so much more effective than punishing yourself for having this feeling.
See if you can open to feeling what you feel. Opening to it means to see what is there fully without suppressing, rejecting, ignoring or trying to be ‘stronger’ than the emotion.
By opening and embracing the emotion you create a mental space around it and witness it instead of being enmeshed in it. Be creating this space you’ll discover that you are not your anger, your fear or your pain. You are much larger
than that.
Think of embracing your difficult emotion in your arms like a mother holding her upset child.
4. Realize The Impermanence Of All Emotions
Acknowledge that all emotions are impermanent. They arise, stay for a while and then disappear. They come and go in you like waves in the sea, cresting and receding.
Your task is simply to allow this current wave to be and to witness, with patience, as it continuously changes form and eventually disappears.
We often take emotions (especially negative ones) very personally but mindfulness invites us to view them as simply mental events passing through- temporary waves in our ocean of awareness.
Psychologist and mindfulness teacher Elisha Goldstein suggests, it can be helpful to say to ourselves, “While this is a temporary feeling, it is here right now, how can I care for it, what do I need?”
5. Investigation & Response
When you are calm enough, you can look deeply into your emotion to understand what has brought it about, and what is causing your discomfort.
It may be that particular kinds of thoughts were the cause. You may have been worrying unnecessarily about something or someone and that generated feelings of anxiety. Perhaps you were ruminating on a random comment a colleague said last week and it created anger or embarrassment.
You may also find that you have particular values, beliefs, expectations and judgments about how you should behave or be seen by others that contributed to the emotion.
Perhaps an event has happened and your response is perfectly natural or perhaps an old habitual reaction. Allow the light of your mindful awareness to help you gain insights into the emotion.
You may then reflect on how you want to respond to what is happening. This may be take the form of simply realizing that your thoughts are not reality and therefore not taking them seriously.
It could be that the simple embracing of the emotion is all you need to do for now, or it could be that a response is needed to a situation that has arisen in your daily life.
Trust yourself to choose the appropriate response.
6. Be Open To Outcome
Love, Melli
Melli is a mindfulness teacher, but first & foremost, a mindfulness practitioner. She runs regular retreats & courses around Australia & has a blog where she shares simple tips on mindful living for everyday people. Check out her website at
http://mrsmindfulness.com/