Category Archives: Meditation

Mindfulness Meditation A-Z Links Directory

By alicepopkorn

A

Addictions, Afflictions, and Mindfulness: A Psychotherapist’s Journey

Attitudinal Healing: Mindfulness in Another Key

B

Balanced Life: Avoid a Repellent Plotline

Build Your “Self” First Before You Argue With It

C

Changing Habits With Habit Changer

Brief Meditative Exercise Helps Cognition

D

The Decade That Changed Our Brain Wiring

A Mindful Path Through Depression

E

Energize Your Workday with a Spiritual Meditation

Expanding Capacities Part 1- Stepping Quietly Into What is Possible

F

Finding Balance in Mindfulness: The Technique of “Touch and Go”

Four-Word Friday: How to Lose Weight and Change the World

From Fear to Love: A Spiritual Journey

G

Go Into Yourself and See How Deep the Place Is From Which Your Life Flows.”

Grow Empathy and Cut the Roots of Bullying

H

Why How Matters So Much More Than What

How to Gain Clarity in Your Life

How Not to Hurry

How We Change: Driving You Crazy or Driving You Well

I

50 Uplifting Ideas

J

Be Mindful to Maintain Job Satisfaction

K

L

I Have to Love AND Accept You?

What You Really Need When Life is Loud

M

My Mind as a Truck

The Mindful Entrepreneur

Mindfulness

Military Mindfulness Training May Also Help Athletes Handle Stress

Mindfulness Based Interventions

Mindfulness Makes You More Productive

Mindfulness Meditation and Carl Jung’s Red Book

Mindfulness Meditation Effective in Marriage and Family Therapy Curriculum

The Fourteen Mindfulness Trainings

Mindfulness Under an April Snow

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction

More Mindful, Less Clutter

The Secret of What Really Motivates You

N

5 Tips on Avoiding a Nervous Breakdown

O

Online Mindfulness Therapy Really Makes the Difference

P

Q

R

Right Here, Right Now: Eating Mindfully and Applying Atha to Your Practice – by Melina Meza

S

The Sacred Art of Living and Dying

The Sacredness of Earth Day: Stewardship as Spiritual Practice

Savor: Mindful Eating, Mindful Life

Seven Great Places to Visit, No Matter Where You Go

Sharing Mindfulness: A Gift from Juliet Adams

Spring Rain Meditation and Haiku

Stemming the Mindfulness Epidemic

4 Steps for Managing Social Media Attention

T

Testing the Benefits of Meditation…in the Emergency Room

Thich Nhat Hanh and the Art of Mindful Living

Trading Coping Mechanisms

U

V

W

7 Ways to Hone Attention, Insight and Creativity

What is Mindfulness Meditation in Buddhism?

What’s Your Idea of the Perfect Kindness Community?

X

Y

Fun Yoga Downloads: Mindfulness, Peace, and Yoga Therapy

Z

Learn to Make Meditation a Daily Habit

Oirase by chi king

Oirase by chi king

Anne Dilenschneider writes about Meditation-Walking in the World. In this post she gives three examples of meditation done while being alive to life and being fully conscious. In Walking Meditation #1, she suggests:

“Name an issue that is of concern to you,
something you’d like more clarity about.
Be open to seeing your concern in a new way.
Be open to letting go of your concern for this time,
and trusting it to a wider Wisdom.

Then go out for a walk.”

She also gives an excerpt from one if my heroes, Anne Dillard, from Anne’s Pilgrim at Tinker Creek:

“The universe was not made in jest but in solemn incomprehensible earnest. By a power that is unfathomably secret, and holy, and fleet. There is nothing to be done about it, but ignore it, or see. And like Billy Bray I go my way, and my left foot says ‘Glory,’ and my right foot says ‘Amen’: in and out of Shadow Creek, upstream and down, exultant, in a daze, dancing, to the twin silver trumpets of praise” (pp. 270-71).

And, finally, she suggests:  “As you go walking, try this:

When you take a step with your left foot, breathe the word “Glory.”
When you take a step with your right foot, breathe the word “Amen.”

(1)  When is the Right Time to Teach Children Meditation?

Answer from Deepak Chopra:

“There’s no hard and fast rule on this. What’s most important is to make them aware of the value of meditation through your example and then look for their receptiveness. Some children may be ready for meditation as early as eight or ten years of age. Other kids even growing up in homes where both parents meditate, may not feel drawn to meditating themselves until they are in their late teens.”

“It’s important that they don’t feel pressured to meditate because the parents want them to. When they are motivated to start from their own curiosity and desire that is the best indication they are ready, and that is the best indicator for them to continue on in their practice as well.”

(2)  20 Meditation Tips for Beginners:

“Although a good number of people try meditation at some point in their lives, only a small percentage actually persist with it. This is unfortunate, as the benefits are enormous. One possible reason is that many beginners do not start with an appropriate mindset to make the practice sustainable.”

“The purpose of this article is to provide 20 practical recommendations to help beginners get past the initial hurdles and integrate meditation as an ongoing practice in their lives.”

(3)  Meditation and Its Benefits:

“(a) Meditation is good for the brain
According to scientists there is evidence that suggests that meditation can boost parts of the brain and the immune system.”

“(b) Meditation for stress management
People started practicing meditation worldwide as a means to reduce stress or to help them with pain caused by various illnesses.”

(“c) Meditation can help maintain calm in any situation.”

“(d) Meditation develops intuition; a capacity to understand and foresee.”

“(e) Most of the diseases stem from the discord between mind, intellect and body. Meditation will bring your body, mind and intellect, into harmony and hence peace.”

“(f) It encourages deeper understanding of oneself and hence others. Thus one can follow his chosen path with more precision.”

“(g) Meditation will lead you towards the path of non violence. As a result you will gradually stop injuring yourself and other at work, in relationships, etc.”

“(h) Regular practice of meditation will certainly make the will power of the practitioner stronger. When the mind is stronger you can achieve what you want from life and stay peaceful and happy.”