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Earlier this month I had a fabulous opportunity to hear John
Kabat-Zin, author of Wherever You Go, There You Are, speak
at a Susan G. Komen fundraiser. He shared some very powerful
concepts about the power the mind has over the body, specifically
about using meditation to support both healing and dying.
I’m sure it was very enlightening, or would have been
if I had been able to focus on it. As it was, I spent the
last half in stunned contemplation following a participative
demonstration.
The audience, of about 1200, was asked to watch a three-minute
video of six people passing a basketball back and forth. We
were asked to count the number of times the basketball was
passed from one of the three people wearing white shirts.
A sense of Olympic competition filled the auditorium as we
watched the video twice and came up with a wide variety of
answers. Then John asked us to stop counting and just watch
the video one more time. To our total amazement, a person
in a gorilla suit strolls into the center of the screen, turns
and faces the audience and does a little jig, and then walks
out. Of the 1200 people, only two saw the gorilla in the first
two viewings of the video clip. We are all so focused on counting
basketballs that we missed the six-foot gorilla right in front!
In the world of psychology, this is an example of what has
been called inattentional blindness. For the rest of us, it’s
about being so focused on our own goals that we miss what
is going on around us, even down to the blatantly obvious.
Since this event, I have begun to wonder what I am missing
out on while moving through life under the momentum of my
own agenda. I encourage you to give this some thought for
your own life. What wonderful opportunities are laid at our
feet that we don’t even see? Who may be hurting right
next to us that we don’t respond to? What source of
joy is going unexplored? What messages unheard? What fabulous
(or dangerous) gorilla is right under our nose!
So how do we become more mindful of what is going around us?
I believe that each of us has to seek our own unique intersection
between focused attention and open awareness. Some of the
more enlightened find it by living completely in the Now.
Some discover it in meditation or while lying on a Caribbean
beach. Still others postpone their mindfulness until tomorrow,
or the next day, or the next. What gifts would mindfulness
bring to you? If you stopped searching, what would you find? |
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"Life seems but a quick succession of busy nothings."
~ Jane Austen
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Be fully present in your action of the moment. Practice
focusing your attention on the very thing you are doing
at that moment. Try to engage all five senses, even on the
simplest actions. Brushing your teeth with total awareness
is a great way to experiment with this!
- Don’t multi-task in a single-moment. We think we’re getting
more done by doing two things at once, but we’re actually
accomplishing less on both. Avoid doing email during a conference
call. Don’t talk on a cell phone while taking your
child for a walk. Be open to all that is there in this single
point in time.
- Listen deeply when others speak. Focus your attention on what they’re
saying, not what you are getting ready to say. Many wars
(and a few divorces) could be avoided this way.
- Stop and breathe when you are too busy to stop and breathe. Besides
creating a space for mindfulness, your own answers have
a chance to come through when you do this. Awareness needs
oxygen.
- Break your own patterns. Take a different route to work, wear
your watch on the opposite arm, read email last instead
of first, listen instead of speak, wear something out of
character. By breaking away from the known, your mind has
a chance to forge new patterns and become open to things
not previously seen.
- Take off your perception blinders. When you find yourself making
a strong judgment of a person or situation, take a moment
to ask yourself, “What am I missing by seeing them/it
this way?” Your judgment may not change but your awareness
of the entire person or situation will expand, letting a
bigger picture come through.
- Fix the frenzy in your life. Frenzy and mindfulness cannot exist
in the same space. Don’t allow yourself to see frenzy
as a necessary solution to any situation.
- Set a “gorilla intention” for yourself for a week.
Each morning before rising, tell yourself, “Today
I will be open to see something I have been missing.”
Don’t laugh – it works.
- Try this simple meditation: sit quietly and breath normally.
Clear your mind of its busyness and observe yourself breathing.
Count each out-breath. When a thought other than breathing
comes in, wave it away with compassion and start again with
1. When you get to 10 without a thinking interruption (this
took me weeks of practice), congratulate yourself and go
on with your day from this better place.
- Allow yourself to be led by a power greater than self. To surrender
is to succeed.
Information boundaries take time to develop and implement.
Mindfulness is an ongoing practice, not something to pass or fail. Watch
as the gorillas gradually come out of your midst, showing
you what you’ve been missing out on! |
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"Life is a never ending stream of opportunity for growth.
Just because a person chooses to stop taking advantage of
opportunities doesn’t mean the opportunities stop coming."
~ Rabbi Pinchas Winston
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This is
the “gorilla”
video created by Daniel Simons & Christopher Chabris.
It can be viewed by those of you with Java installed on
your computer.
For more information on inattentional blindness, read this
article.
Practicing
the Power of Now: Essential Teachings, Meditations, and Exercises
from The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle.
For specific steps on creating a simple meditation practice, check
out this site.
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Are you ready for more?
Get a coach! |
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