What Is Mindfulness?

Everything related to our Everyday Mindfulness community.
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Gareth
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Fri Oct 31, 2014 10:40 am  

If you look at the front page of the site, there is a slider that cycles through the following topics: Why Everyday?, Why Every Day?, What Is Mindfulness?, The Benefits, How Do I Start?, Our Aim

On the What Is Mindfulness? page, the following is written:
The average human being has five senses, and mindfulness simply means paying attention to those senses. All you have to do to be mindful is listen to the music, taste the food or notice the sensations of your breathing.</


I wrote this a long time ago, and I don't think it is good enough any more. I want to come up with something else, short and sweet. Does anybody want to pitch in with a suggestion on wording to answer that question that would fit the plain language, Everyday Mindfulness style?

JonW
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Fri Oct 31, 2014 11:26 am  

I came up with this in response to the guy who was looking for definitions of mindfulness in a few sentences:
Mindfulness is remembering to be present in the moment, learning to relate to our thoughts and our feelings in a way that goes against the grain of our conditioning. It is a way of unbecoming what we are not. This way freedom lies.
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paulpsych
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Fri Oct 31, 2014 1:33 pm  

Attending to the reality of the present moment, rather than being lost in regrets about the past or fears about the future

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Gareth
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Fri Oct 31, 2014 2:03 pm  

I like both.

I'll give it some more time for other answers and change the site accordingly.

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Gareth
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Wed Nov 05, 2014 8:54 am  

See this article by Ed Halliwell in Mindful Magazine:
http://www.mindful.org/mindful-voices/t ... indfulness
He ponders whether the classic definition by JKZ is open to misinterpretation.

chrislwagner
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Mon Nov 24, 2014 5:44 pm  

Mindfulness is full awareness of your inner and outer world in the present moment without judgment. Hope this help you.

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Matt Y
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Mon Nov 24, 2014 9:07 pm  

I don't have a good definition, yet, but here are some thoughts.

1. Mindfulness can, and needs to be, applied to all aspects of our experience. As Jon says, we can usefully apply it to our thoughts and emotions, as well as to our sensory experience. If we limit mindfulness to a certain range of experiences, then we set up the idea that when we're mindful of one thing that's good, and when we're not mindful of it, that's bad. See point 2 below.

2. There are problems with restricting mindfulness to the 'present moment', because — strictly speaking — we can never actually be aware of the present moment. And in practice, we usually only become aware of our thinking some time after it has been going on for a while. And even our sensory perceptions take time to reach the brain for processing and interpretation. The present moment definition also gives rise to the notion that we can fly off into the future or past — via our thoughts — when in fact, a thought about the future occurs right now, and we can be just as mindful of that.

3. Nor can we say 'without judgment', because this certainly can lead to a lot of misinterpretation and confusion. a) because we will always be making judgments, and b) because — good — judgment is actually just what we need.

I can't remember where I found the following definition, and it's not perfect, but I think it works quite well:

Mindfulness helps to change the way you think and feel about your experiences, especially stressful experiences. It involves paying attention to your thoughts and feelings in order to become more aware of them, less enmeshed in them, and better able to manage them.
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paulpsych
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Mon Nov 24, 2014 9:46 pm  

I like that 8-)

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Gareth
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Tue Nov 25, 2014 10:44 am  

Matt Y wrote:2. There are problems with restricting mindfulness to the 'present moment', because — strictly speaking — we can never actually be aware of the present moment. And in practice, we usually only become aware of our thinking some time after it has been going on for a while. And even our sensory perceptions take time to reach the brain for processing and interpretation. The present moment definition also gives rise to the notion that we can fly off into the future or past — via our thoughts — when in fact, a thought about the future occurs right now, and we can be just as mindful of that.


Never thought of it that way, but you're right of course.

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Gareth
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Wed Nov 26, 2014 11:41 am  

Ok, I'm going to change the page on the site. I thought about putting this up:

The definition of mindfulness is notoriously difficult to pin down, despite the simplicity of the practice. Although the fundamentals of mindfulness remain the same, the practice means different things to different people. Here are some definitions that we have found and liked:

Mindfulness is remembering to be present in the moment, learning to relate to our thoughts and our feelings in a way that goes against the grain of our conditioning. It is a way of unbecoming what we are not.

Mindfulness is the awareness and approach to life that arises from paying attention on purpose, fully present, with curiosity and compassion.

Mindfulness helps to change the way you think and feel about your experiences, especially stressful experiences. It involves paying attention to your thoughts and feelings in order to become more aware of them, less enmeshed in them, and better able to manage them.


Thoughts?

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