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David Dunn

Relaxation techniques: Try these steps to reduce stress - MayoClinic.com - 0 views

  • Relaxation isn't just about peace of mind or enjoying a hobby. Relaxation is a process that decreases the effects of stress on your mind and body.
  • Learning basic relaxation techniques is easy. Relaxation techniques also are often free or low cost, pose little risk and can be done just about anywhere. Explore these simple relaxation techniques and get started on de-stressing your life and improving your health.
David Dunn

Mindfulness Requires Practice and Purpose - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • And scans show mindfulness may change the way our brains function and help us improve attention, reduce stress hormones and even bounce back faster from negative information.
  • “Intentionally paying attention to the present nonjudgmentally”
David Dunn

9 simple steps to happiness - CNN.com - 0 views

  • Forget self-improvement
  • Make tough stuff work
  • Love your commute
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  • When you're bummed out, the mere act of smiling can cheer you up. The reasons for this effect have yet to be pinpointed, but one study at the University of Kansas in Lawrence reveals that flashing a grin slows down your heart rate during stress and chills you out.
Brittany Washburn

Daily Kos: A Lesson in Mindfulness: Don't Feed the Wolf - 0 views

  • A Native American wisdom story tells of an old Cherokee who is teaching his grandson about life. 'A fight is going on inside me,' he said to the boy. 'It is a terrible fight and it is between two wolves. One is evil--he is anger, envy, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, self-pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority, and ego. The other is good--he is joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion, and faith. The fight is going on inside of you--and inside every other person, too.
  • 'Which wolf will win?' The old Cherokee replied, 'The one that you feed.'
David Dunn

Nature Meditations -- How to meditate in nature | Meditation Oasis - 0 views

  • Our being resonates with the sight of a flower, sound of birds, feeling of the breeze.
  • In the nature meditations, we focus our awareness on the experience of nature — sight, sound, touch, smell (and perhaps even taste).
David Dunn

Mindfulness in Everyday Life: A Walk in the Woods and Return to Essential Nature | Donn... - 0 views

  • Connecting to one's humanity is found not in fame and glory, but in an inner stillness that is best cultivated in the natural world. In nature, the calm external environment encourages inner peace.
  • I credit the woods behind my childhood home for being a lifeline to the magical brilliance in its leafy reality.
  • Everything in the woods made sense
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  • Unlike television, nature does not steal time; it amplifies it
  • Given a chance, a child will bring the confusion of the world to the woods, wash it in the creek, turn it over to see what lives on the unseen side of that confusion
  • Experiencing ourselves in relationship to the natural world cultivates something unexpected yet so clear in the woods: the capacity to generate genuine love, for self, for others, and for the world.
  • The woods remind us of the wide expanse of universe in which we actually live, and appreciation and gratitude naturally ripen; being in nature provides a much-needed perspective, a greater vista. Rather than the multitasking, constricted space of everyday life, we see the larger corral in which we can tame the wild horse that life sometimes becomes.
Brittany Washburn

SheerMind Mindfulness Training - Mindfulness in the military - a soldier's approach - 0 views

    • Brittany Washburn
       
      Very different perspective of mindfulness. than the article the dark side of mindfulness.
    • Brittany Washburn
       
      The author is a soldier. He knows what stress really is and how important it is to be completely in the moment. He writes with passion and extreme experience
    • Brittany Washburn
       
      Having a plan drilled into your head seems to be repeated throughout the piece. You need a plan and you need to practice that plan
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    • Brittany Washburn
       
      He also really drills the point that we need to slow things down and that we always have more time then it seems when we are stressed
    • Brittany Washburn
       
      Wow that is so true everybody who lives owes a death
  • Thing is, and as morbid as this will sound: what’s the worst that could happen? May die. Yeah, its not like I was getting out of this life alive anyway
    • Brittany Washburn
       
      He is writing this article to the general public. explaining that there is really nothing to be stressed about. We are iin the environment of our choosing.
Samuel Sirota

JSTOR: Psychological Science, Vol. 18, No. 2 (Feb., 2007), pp. 165-171 - 0 views

    • Samuel Sirota
       
      psychological benefits associated with exercise
Darren Ferony

Creating Passionate Users: Your brain on multitasking - 1 views

  • Our brains can't do even two independent things that require conscious thought, especially if those two things involve different goals.
    • Darren Ferony
       
      This article emphasizes the practice of mindfulness and full attention on one thing at a time as apposed to multitasking because your brain cannot process two things at once, especially if they are two different goals. 
  • the problem... the brain isn't a computer, and in many cases the brain works much more slowly than a modern processor.
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  • Practicing mindfulness is like adding more hours to your day. If you're mindful, time slows down. You get more done, enjoy things more, and feel less stress. These are big claims, but anyone who's practiced mindful meditation or, like me, mindfulness-hold-the-meditation-thanks, will swear it's true.
  • But imagine what it would be like if every time you
  • gave that person all your attention.
  • 100% mindful, totally there, perfect eye contact, YOU.
  • If you want to get more done, be mindful. If you want to have more time, be mindful. Mindful means one thing at a time.
David Dunn

calendar | zen writ - 0 views

  • Use links page as possible starting point for 30 links; 10 can be borrowed from this list; 20 have to be culled using your own research and fueled (hopefully) by your curiosity; use Diigo to bookmark, comment and tag at least 10 sites for Project 2 by today
joshua gallo

How to Practice Mindfulness Meditation | Psychology Today - 0 views

  • Cultivating mindfulness is the key to overcoming suffering and recognizing natural wisdom: both our own and others'.
  • Mindfulness meditation is unique in that it is not directed toward getting us to be different from how we already are. Instead, it helps us become aware of what is already true moment by moment.
  • Instead of struggling to get away from experiences we find difficult, we practice being able to be with them.
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  • Perhaps surprisingly, many times we have a hard time staying simply present with happiness. We turn it into something more familiar, like worrying that it won't last or trying to keep it from fading away.
  • When we are mindful, we show up for our lives; we don't miss them in being distracted or in wishing for things to be different.
  • So, how do we actually practice mindfulness meditation? Once again, there are many different basic techniques. If you are interested in pursuing mindfulness within a particular tradition, one of the Buddhist ones or another, you might at some point wish to connect with a meditation instructor or take a class at a meditation center. Still, I can provide one form of basic instructions here so that you can begin.
joshua gallo

Shambhala Sun - How to do Mindfulness Meditation - 0 views

  • In mindfulness, or shamatha, meditation, we are trying to achieve a mind that is stable and calm. What we begin to discover is that this calmness or harmony is a natural aspect of the mind.
  • There are certain conditions that are helpful for the practice of mindfulness. When we create the right environment it’s easier to practice.
  • Often we just plop ourselves down to meditate and just let the mind take us wherever it may. We have to create a personal sense of discipline. When we sit down, we can remind ourselves: “I’m here to work on my mind. I’m here to train my mind.” It’s okay to say that to yourself when you sit down, literally. We need that kind of inspiration as we begin to practice.
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  • The Buddhist approach is that the mind and body are connected.
  • we become more and more familiar with our mind, and in particular we learn to recognize the movement of the mind, which we experience as thoughts. We do this by using an object of meditation to provide a contrast or counterpoint to what’s happening in our mind. As soon as we go off and start thinking about something, awareness of the object of meditation will bring us back.
Rebecca Lurie

Mindfulness - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • is a spiritual or psychological faculty (indriya) that, according to the teaching of the Buddha, is considered to be of great importance in the path to enlightenment.
  • Enlightenment (bodhi) is a state of being in which greed, hatred and delusion (Pali: moha) have been overcome, abandoned and are absent from the mind. Mindfulness, which, among other things, is an attentive awareness of the reality of things (especially of the present moment) is an antidote to delusion and is considered as such a 'power'
David Dunn

What is mindfulness - Living Well - Mental wellbeing for men - 0 views

  • Mindfulness exercises have been shown to help people stay on course and to better manage difficult thoughts, feelings and experiences.
  • When you are mindful, you are better able to take in information from your environment and choose an appropriate response, rather than reacting based from a history of bad experiences and old habits.
David Dunn

Between Here and Home: Fishing for mindfulness in the stream of time - 0 views

  • “TIME is but the stream I go fishing in”.
  • With acceptance comes a sense of wonder; each warm day passing to the timeless thrum of cicadas rather than the ticking of the clock.
Richard Ofosuhene

The peacefulness of fishing. | FlyFish Fanatic - 0 views

  • I have found that getting away for a few days fishing recharges my batteries and helps me get through that boredom of work and some parts of life.
  • When I am fishing/camping I find all of my issues  seem to just fade away leaving me with a overwhelming feeling of peace
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    I didn't know fishing could help a person overcome stress and problems until I read this. I thought that was interesting to me.
David Dunn

Wild Mindfulness: taking meditation practice outdoors - 0 views

  • Wild Mindfulness offers a chance to attend mindfully to the wild interconnections that define us.
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