Hi, and welcome to the fourth week of the Mindfulness Program!
We're halfway through the program already.
A word of encouragement: you may feel "behind" when you read these emails. "I haven't done last week's meditations" you may think to yourself, and then you start beating yourself up. Just know that this is common. But is it useful? If you feel that you're "behind", don't fret.
(Spoiler: You can't "fall behind" with your meditation practice.)
Instead, see if there is a meditation or habit releaser that you want to try for this coming week. Let your curiosity and interest guide you.
Please note that all exercises and meditations are from the book Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Finding Peace in a Frantic World by professor Mark Williams and journalist Danny Penman.
Let's dive in.
Week Four introduces a Sounds and Thoughts meditation that progressively reveals how you can be sucked unwittingly into overthinking.
You learn to see your thoughts as mental events that come and go just like sounds. By meditating on the sounds around you, you’ll come to learn that the mind is to thought what the ear is to sound. This helps you to distance yourself from your thoughts and feelings.
Instead of confronting the mind's rumour mill with logic and "positive thinking", it makes far more sense to step outside the endless cycle and just watch the thoughts unfold.
But this can be difficult.
If you look closely at the "rumours" that start washing around the mind when you feel stressed, you'll see how much a part of you they really appear to be. They carry quite a punch and may be central to what you believe about yourself and the situation you find yourself.
Have a look at the following list of common thoughts that pop up into people's heads when they feel frantic, stressed, unhappy or exhausted:
When we feel stressed and life is frantic, thoughts like these often feel like the absolute truth about us and the world. But they are, in fact, symptoms of stress, just as a high temperature is a symptom of flu.
Becoming aware that these thoughts are symptoms of stress and exhaustion, rather than facts that must be true, allows you to step back from them. And this grants you the space to decide whether to take them seriously or not.
In time, through mindfulness practice, you can learn to notice them, acknowledge their presence and let them go. Week Four of the Mindfulness program will show you how to do this.
We are immersed in a soundscape of enormous depth and variety. Just take a moment to listen. What can you hear?
Even when you're in a quiet room, you can still pick up muffled sounds. It might be your breath as it moves through your nostrils, or the cracking of the floor or a heating system. Even silence contains sounds.
The Sounds and Thoughts meditation gradually reveals the similarities between sounds and thoughts. Both are enormously potent and carry immense momentum. They trigger powerful emotions that can easily run away with us.
We might start to feel angry, sad, anxious, stressed or bitter -- just because a thought triggered an avalanche of associations. The Sounds and Thoughts meditation helps you to discover this for yourself.
Ask a friend or family member to go with you to the movies, but this time, with a difference. Go at a set time (say 7 PM) and choose whatever film takes your fancy only when you get there.
Often, what makes us happiest in life is the unexpected: the chance encounter or the unpredicted event. Movies are great for all these.
What's going in your world? Has any of these meditations helped you?
Just reply to this message and keep me updated.
Hope you're having a great week!
Cheers,
Olle
PS. New Shoes.
A Sweden-based author and coach.
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