Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Funny Quote


Be careful about reading health books. You may die of a misprint...................................... Mark Twain
 
 
 
 

Ajahn Brahm Explores Ways of Letting Go.


  • FOUR WAYS OF LETTING GO
    1) let go, nothing will go wrong, be free of your past, one thing at a time, throw your stick
    2) learn what freedom is. be content where you are,"want to be there", enjoy the present
    3) give and expecting nothing in return
    4) have a teflon mind, collect no mementos, never allow knowledge to hide truth

Uploaded by on Apr 12, 2010
Straight from teaching a meditation retreat, Ajahn Brahm explores ways of letting go.

License:  Standard YouTube License

Monday, July 30, 2012

Get Comfortable. How was your day?

Victor Frankl Quote


 Appreciating the Space

Between stimulus and response, there is a space.  In that space is our power to choose our response.   In our response lies our growth and our freedom.
-Victor Frankl

BE HERE NOW

Be Here Now.
Do not dwell in the past, do not dream of the future, concentrate the mind on the present moment



Beginner's Mind

Beginner's Mind
Curiousity and wonder are the best cure for boredom.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Stunning Northern Lights

How to Unplug and Be Present in Our Over-Connected World

How to Unplug and Be Present in Our Over-Connected World


How to Unplug and Be Present in Our Over-Connected World

4
how, to, unplug, and, be, present, in, our, over-connected, world, ,
How to Unplug and Be Present in Our Over-Connected World
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Mindfulness is becoming an increasingly popular devotion in the everyday lives of millennials. It is even the subject of college courses. Mindfulness may bring to mind Buddhist monks chanting on mountaintops, but it is really something much more simple. According to Professor Jon Kabat-Zinn, “Mindfulness means paying attention in a particular way; on purpose, in the present moment, and nonjudgmentally.” It is the act of just taking time in a day to stop and pay attention.
Simple time spent with ourselves can be a release from the day’s hustle and bustle, and it can help point us in the direction to where we want to ultimately be. And most importantly, time with ourselves can help us to be non-judgmental. In short, it helps us realize what will make us happy. And, it helps us see what makes others happy.
Stop, Drop, and Think
Being mindful brings us into the most important part of any day: the present.
Meditation and mindfulness are incorporated into just about every form of spirituality as a central practice of the faith. Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism all use meditation and mindfulness as a form of devotion. It is the most simple of practices that keep our minds in the present. So while one may not necessarily consider themselves religious or even spiritual, meditating and being mindful goes deeper than religion, and taking the time to really feel and think has lasting positive affects on our minds and bodies. It is a time to have a conversation with ourselves and really be in the present.
With increasing stress comes a need for release and moments of mindfulness are that release. There are many, many ways to be mindful. Meditation, exercise, eating, and even going to the bathroom are all opportunities to retreat from the pressures of everyday life and the stresses we put on ourselves; like worrying about the past or the future. Mindfulness lets us be present and really be in the moment.
We are nowhere else but where we are now.
Anytime we consciously do something and are aware of ourselves doing it, we are being mindful.
Coffee: A Path to the Mind’s Eye
One example of a good moment for meditation and mindfulness is making coffee. Gi Nam Lee is a teacher I work with, as well as a teacher of a course on roasting and brewing coffee. Using his method, dripping coffee is a morning ritual for pleasure, enjoyment, and mental preparation for the day of work ahead.
Mindfulness is all about thinking small. So here is one small example.
Try this and only breathe, think of nothing but the coffee:
  1. Go out and buy some good beans. Whole beans. Smell them and know where they are from, geographically speaking.
  2. Buy a small coffee drip; a “pour-over” (I hear they are popular now) style coffee drip.
  3. If you are making for one, drip over a mug; for two or more, drip over a pot.
  4. Grind the beans and smell. Think of nothing else but smelling the beans. The noises they make in the grinder.
  5. Put the coffee in the drip and shake it lightly, notice how the coffee falls into place. Make it level.
  6. Always smell.
  7. Boil water and put into a pitcher with a good spout.
  8. Pour very slowly and evenly. Think of nothing but the pour. Start in the center and spiral out.
  9. Wait while the water fills the beans and they swell upwards. Notice the beans absorbing the water; imagine the flavor saturating each drop.
  10. Breathe. Smell.
  11. Now start a slow continuous pour. For three minutes. No more.
  12. Fill the coffee mug or pot to the desired level.
  13. Smell the coffee.
  14. Notice the flavor on your tongue. What is different about it? What is the same?
  15. Enjoy the coffee, black preferably.
The everyday act of making a cup of coffee can be a moment for reflection and ritual. No longer is it just a cup of coffee to jump start your day, it is now a process. Every part of the making process is my choice and I know every part of the process. It is a time to think and mentally be in the present moment making coffee and drinking coffee.
It’s Your Mind, Body and Soul … Get Creative With It
In the hyper-connected lives of millennials, moments of disconnection are becoming more and more important to reduce stress and improve mental health. Anything can be a moment for being mindful -- dripping coffee is just one of them. Mindfulness and meditation are not synonymous with sitting in your room and saying “oommm” for 30 minutes (although you totally could and should try it!).
Mindfulness is just an observation of the present. It turns off the “auto-pilot” that we create in day-to-day activities and brings value to many things once seen as mundane. Being mindful of noises, feelings, tastes, and smells in the present opens up a whole world that we so often take for granted. It is a world of quality, present quality, that should not be taken for granted.
Take a part of your day and make it a ritual. Get used to it, enjoy it, and be present. Feel a moment, smell a moment, hear a moment, taste a moment, see a moment, and enjoy it. The more you practice, the more you will notice.
It will be awesome.
Picture Credit: Flickr

Thursday, July 26, 2012

QUOTE

Photo

Where is the best hidden location to relax in London?


Where is the best hidden location to relax in London?

If you're looking for a calming oasis in which to relax, there are plenty of London locations to choose from. Here are our top tips for time out in the capital.

Neal’s Yard Therapy Rooms
Head to Neal’s Yard Therapy Rooms for relaxing alternative treatments Photo: © Roberto S. Herrett / Alamy
In the Know question:
Where is the best 'hidden' location to relax in London?
Answer:
Everyone’s idea of relaxation is different. But if solitude helps you unwind, visit one of London’s many cemeteries. Try a leafy walk amid the crumbling headstones of Abney Park in Stoke Newington if you’re in north London, or Nunhead Cemetery if you’re in the south.
If you're in central London, but need a quiet moment in which to gather your thoughts, All Souls, just minutes from the thronging crowds of Oxford Street, is a true refuge. It hosts lunchtime services on Thursdays at 1.30pm. While, in the City, try St Dunstan-in-the-East church garden. The church itself was destroyed during the Blitz, but the garden remains a haven, where you can enjoy fragrant plants and the relaxing sounds of a fountain.
Want to unwind and quench your thirst at the same time? The Japanese tea ceremony was inspired by Zen Buddhism and Teanamu Chaya Teahouse in Notting Hill will give you a taste of its relaxing properties as well as a delicious afternoon break. Choose from exotic Chinese and Japanese teas and healthy, unusual snacks in a calm, welcoming atmosphere.
Failing this, turn to the professionals. Hidden behind a non-descript doorway in Neal’s Yard in Covent Garden are Neal’s Yard Therapy Rooms. Here therapists offer alternative treatments, many of which promote relaxation. Some you’ll have heard of – acupuncture and Indian head massage – while others might not be so familiar, like abdominal sacral therapy and hot towel hydrotherapy. Whatever you choose, the bustling streets of London will seem a world away.
Ask our In the Know experts a question about London here

Monday, July 23, 2012

Time Lapse, Artic Motion

Monk Meditation Study

 Brain Scans
 A brain scan of a monk actively extending compassion shows activity in the striatum, an area of the brain associated with reward processing. Photo: SPAN Lab, Stanford University / SF





 A brain scan of a monk actively extending compassion shows activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, an area of the brain associated with reward processing. Photo: SPAN Lab, Stanford University / SF

 A brain scan of a monk actively extending compassion shows activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, an area of the brain associated with reward processing. Photo: SPAN Lab, Stanford University / SF






Stanford studies monks' meditation, compassion

Updated 12:02 p.m., Sunday, July 8, 2012

Stanford neuroeconomist Brian Knutson is an expert in the pleasure center of the brain that works in tandem with our financial decisions - the biology behind why we bypass the kitchen coffeemaker to buy the $4 Starbucks coffee every day.

He can hook you up to a brain scanner, take you on a simulated shopping spree and tell by looking at your nucleus accumbens - an area deep inside your brain associated with fight, flight, eating and fornicating - how you process risk and reward, whether you're a spendthrift or a tightwad.

So when his colleagues saw him putting Tibetan Buddhist monks and nuns into the MRI machine in the basement of the Stanford psychology building, he drew a few double-takes.
Knutson is still interested in the nucleus accumbens, which receives a dopamine hit when a person anticipates something pleasant, like winning at blackjack.

Only now he wants to know if the same area of the brain can light up for altruistic reasons. Can extending compassion to another person look the same in the brain as anticipating something good for oneself? And who better to test than Tibetan monks, who have spent their lives pursuing a state of selfless nonattachment?

Meditation science

The "monk study" at Stanford is part of an emerging field of meditation science that has taken off in the last decade with advancements in brain image technology, and popular interest.

"There are many neuroscientists out there looking at mindfulness, but not a lot who are studying compassion," Knutson said. "The Buddhist view of the world can provide some potentially interesting information about the subcortical reward circuits involved in motivation."

By looking at expert meditators, neuroscientists hope to get a better picture of what compassion looks like in the brain. Does a monk's brain behave differently than another person's brain when the two are both extending compassion? Is selflessness innate, or can it be learned?

Looking to the future, neuroscientists wonder whether compassion can be neurologically isolated, if one day it could be harnessed to help people overcome depression, to settle children with hyperactivity, or even to rewire a psychopath.

"Right now we're trying to first develop the measurement of compassion, so then one day we can develop the science around it," Knutson said.

Stress reduction

Thirty years ago, medical Professor Jon Kabat-Zinn used meditation as the basis for his revolutionary "Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Program." He put people with chronic pain and depression through a six-week meditation practice in the basement of the University of Massachusetts Medical School and became one of the first practitioners to record meditation-related health improvements in patients with intractable pain. His stress-reduction techniques are now used in hospitals, clinics and by HMOs.

"In the last 25 years there's been a tidal shift in the field, and now there are 300 scientific papers on mindfulness," said Emiliana Simon-Thomas, science director for the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley.

People who meditate show more left-brain hemisphere dominance, according to meditation studies done at the Center for Investigating Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"Essentially when you spend a lot of time meditating, the brain shows a pattern of feeling safe in the world and more comfortable in approaching people and situations, and less vigilant and afraid, which is more associated with the right hemisphere," she said.


Effect on aging

The most comprehensive scientific study of meditation, the Shamatha Project led by scientists at UC Davis, indicates meditation leads to improved perception and may even have some effect on cellular aging.

Volunteers who spent an average of 500 hours in focused-attention meditation during a three-month retreat in 2007 were better than the control group at detecting slight differences in the length of lines flashed on a screen.
When researchers compared blood samples between the two groups, they found the retreat population had 30 percent more telomerase - the enzyme in cells that repairs the shortening of chromosomes that occurs throughout life. This could have implications for the tiny protective caps on the ends of DNA known as telomeres, which have been linked to longevity.

"This does not mean that if you meditate, you're going to live longer," said Clifford Saron, a research neuroscientist leading the study at the UC Davis Center for Mind and Brain.

"It's an empirical question at this point, but it's remarkable that a sense of purpose in life, a belief that your goals and values are coming more into alignment with your past and projected future is likely affecting something at the level of your molecular biology," Saron said.

Knutson's monk study at Stanford is in its early stages. He has some data collected from Stanford undergrads to use as part of the control group, but he still needs more novice meditators and monks to go into the MRI machine. It's an expensive proposition. Subjects are in the machine for eight to 12 hours a day, for three days, at $500 an hour.


Knutson's study is funded by Stanford's Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education, which was started with a sizable donation of seed money from the Dalai Lama after his 2005 campus visit to discuss fostering scientific study of human emotion.

Knutson and his team asked the monks and nuns to lie down in the MRI scanner and look at a series of human faces projected above their eyes. He asked them to withhold emotion and look at some of the faces neutrally, and for others, to look and show compassion by feeling their suffering.

Next he flashed a series of abstract paintings and asked his subjects to rate how much they liked the art. What the monks and nuns didn't know was that Knutson was also flashing subliminal photos of the same faces before the pictures of the art.

"Reliably they like the art more if the faces they showed compassion to came before it," Knutson said, "Which leads to a hypothesis that there is some sort of compassion carryover happening."

Extending compassion

Next Knutson asked the Buddhists to practice a style of meditation called "tonglen," in which the person extends compassion outward from their inner circle, first to their parent, then to a good friend, then to a stranger and last to all sentient beings. He wants to see whether brain activity changes depending on different types of compassion.

"There's a concern that scientists might be 'trying to prove meditation,' but we are scientists trying to understand the brain," said Matthew Sacchet, a neuroscience doctoral student at Stanford working with Knutson.

"The research has important possibilities for medicine, and also it could get rid of some of the fuzz and help make meditation more empirically grounded," he said. "If there is some kind of underlying structure to be understood scientifically, it could make things more clear for everyone.



Meredith May is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. E-mail: mmay@sfchronicle.com



Stanford studies monks' meditation, compassion - SFGate

 Link:  http://www.sfgate.com/health/article/Stanford-studies-monks-meditation-compassion-3689748.php

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Take a stress-reduction break wherever you are

Meditation: A simple, fast way to reduce stress

Meditation can wipe away the day's stress, bringing with it inner peace. See how you can easily learn to practice meditation whenever you need it most.

If stress has you anxious, tense and worried, consider trying meditation. Spending even a few minutes in meditation can restore your calm and inner peace.
Anyone can practice meditation. It's simple and inexpensive, and it doesn't require any special equipment. And you can practice meditation wherever you are — whether you're out for a walk, riding the bus, waiting at the doctor's office or even in the middle of a difficult business meeting.

Understanding meditation

Meditation has been practiced for thousands of years. Meditation originally was meant to help deepen understanding of the sacred and mystical forces of

By Mayo Clinic staff
life. These days, meditation is commonly used for relaxation and stress reduction.
Meditation is considered a type of mind-body complementary medicine. Meditation produces a deep state of relaxation and a tranquil mind. During meditation, you focus your attention and eliminate the stream of jumbled thoughts that may be crowding your mind and causing stress. This process results in enhanced physical and emotional well-being.

Benefits of meditation

Meditation can give you a sense of calm, peace and balance that benefits both your emotional well-being and your overall health. And these benefits don't end when your meditation session ends. Meditation can help carry you more calmly through your day and can even improve certain medical conditions.
Meditation and emotional well-being
When you meditate, you clear away the information overload that builds up every day and contributes to your stress.
The emotional benefits of meditation include:
  • Gaining a new perspective on stressful situations
  • Building skills to manage your stress
  • Increasing self-awareness
  • Focusing on the present
  • Reducing negative emotions
Meditation and illness
Meditation also might be useful if you have a medical condition, especially one that may be worsened by stress. While a growing body of scientific research supports the health benefits of meditation, some researchers believe it's not yet possible to draw conclusions about the possible benefits of meditation.
With that in mind, some research suggests that meditation may help such conditions as:
  • Allergies
  • Anxiety disorders
  • Asthma
  • Binge eating
  • Cancer
  • Depression
  • Fatigue
  • Heart disease
  • High blood pressure
  • Pain
  • Sleep problems
  • Substance abuse
Be sure to talk to your health care provider about the pros and cons of using meditation if you have any of these conditions or other health problems. In some cases, meditation can worsen symptoms associated with certain mental health conditions. Meditation isn't a replacement for traditional medical treatment. But it may be a useful addition to your other treatment.

Elements of meditation

Different types of meditation may include different features to help you meditate. These may vary depending on whose guidance you follow or who's teaching a class. Some of the most common features in meditation include:
  • Focused attention. Focusing your attention is generally one of the most important elements of meditation. Focusing your attention is what helps free your mind from the many distractions that cause stress and worry. You can focus your attention on such things as a specific object, an image, a mantra, or even your breathing.
  • Relaxed breathing. This technique involves deep, even-paced breathing using the diaphragm muscle to expand your lungs. The purpose is to slow your breathing, take in more oxygen, and reduce the use of shoulder, neck and upper chest muscles while breathing so that you breathe more efficiently.
  • A quiet setting. If you're a beginner, practicing meditation may be easier if you're in a quiet spot with few distractions — no television, radios or cellphones. As you get more skilled at meditation, you may be able to do it anywhere, especially in high-stress situations where you benefit the most from meditation, such as a traffic jam, a stressful work meeting or a long line at the grocery store.
  • A comfortable position. You can practice meditation whether you're sitting, lying down, walking or in other positions or activities. Just try to be comfortable so that you can get the most out of your meditation.

Everyday ways to practice meditation

Don't let the thought of meditating the "right" way add to your stress. Sure, you can attend special meditation centers or group classes led by trained instructors. But you also can practice meditation easily on your own.
And you can make meditation as formal or informal as you like — whatever suits your lifestyle and situation. Some people build meditation into their daily routine. For example, they may start and end each day with an hour of meditation. But all you really need is a few minutes of quality time for meditation.
Here are some ways you can practice meditation on your own, whenever you choose:
  • Breathe deeply. This technique is good for beginners because breathing is a natural function. Focus all attention on your breathing. Concentrate on feeling and listening as you inhale and exhale through your nostrils. Breathe deeply and slowly. When your attention wanders, gently return your focus to your breathing.
  • Scan your body. When using this technique, focus attention on different parts of your body. Become aware of your body's various sensations, whether that's pain, tension, warmth or relaxation. Combine body scanning with breathing exercises and imagine breathing heat or relaxation into and out of different parts of your body.
  • Repeat a mantra. You can create your own mantra, whether it's religious or secular. Examples of religious mantras include the Jesus Prayer in the Christian tradition, the holy name of God in Judaism, or the om mantra of Hinduism, Buddhism and other Eastern religions.
  • Walk and meditate. Combining a walk with meditation is an efficient and healthy way to relax. You can use this technique anywhere you're walking — in a tranquil forest, on a city sidewalk or at the mall. When you use this method, slow down the pace of walking so that you can focus on each movement of your legs or feet. Don't focus on a particular destination. Concentrate on your legs and feet, repeating action words in your mind such as lifting, moving and placing as you lift each foot, move your leg forward and place your foot on the ground.
  • Engage in prayer. Prayer is the best known and most widely practiced example of meditation. Spoken and written prayers are found in most faith traditions. You can pray using your own words or read prayers written by others. Check the self-help or 12-step-recovery section of your local bookstore for examples. Talk with your rabbi, priest, pastor or other spiritual leader about resources.
  • Read and reflect. Many people report that they benefit from reading poems or sacred texts, and taking a few moments to quietly reflect on their meaning. You also can listen to sacred music, spoken words or any music you find relaxing or inspiring. You may want to write your reflections in a journal or discuss them with a friend or spiritual leader.
  • Focus your love and gratitude. In this type of meditation, you focus your attention on a sacred object or being, weaving feelings of love and gratitude into your thoughts. You can also close your eyes and use your imagination or gaze at representations of the object.

Building your meditation skills

Don't judge your meditation skills, which may only increase your stress. Meditation takes practice. Keep in mind, for instance, that it's common for your mind to wander during meditation, no matter how long you've been practicing meditation. If you're meditating to calm your mind and your attention wanders, slowly return to the object, sensation or movement you're focusing on.
Experiment, and you'll likely find out what types of meditation work best for you and what you enjoy doing. Adapt meditation to your needs at the moment. Remember, there's no right way or wrong way to meditate. What matters is that meditation helps you with stress reduction and feeling better overall.











 Source:
Meditation: Take a stress-reduction break wherever you are - MayoClinic.com

By Mayo Clinic staff


 http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/meditation/HQ01070/NSECTIONGROUP

Types of Meditation

Types of meditation

Meditation is an umbrella term for the many ways to a relaxed state of being. There are many types of meditation and relaxation techniques that have meditation components. All share the same goal of achieving inner peace.
Ways to meditate can include:
  • Guided meditation. Sometimes called guided imagery or visualization, with this method of meditation you form mental images of places or situations you find relaxing. You try to use as many senses as possible, such as smells, sights, sounds and textures. You may be led through this process by a guide or teacher.
  • Mantra meditation. In this type of meditation, you silently repeat a calming word, thought or phrase to prevent distracting thoughts.
  • Mindfulness meditation. This type of meditation is based on being mindful, or having an increased awareness and acceptance of living in the present moment. You broaden your conscious awareness. You focus on what you experience during meditation, such as the flow of your breath. You can observe your thoughts and emotions but let them pass without judgment.
  • Qi gong. This practice generally combines meditation, relaxation, physical movement and breathing exercises to restore and maintain balance. Qi gong (CHEE-gung) is part of traditional Chinese medicine.
  • Tai chi. This is a form of gentle Chinese martial arts. In tai chi (TIE-chee), you perform a self-paced series of postures or movements in a slow, graceful manner while practicing deep breathing.
  • Transcendental meditation. You use a mantra, such as a word, sound or phrase repeatedly silently, to narrow your conscious awareness and eliminate all thoughts from your mind. You focus exclusively on your mantra to achieve a state of perfect stillness and consciousness.
  • Yoga. You perform a series of postures and controlled breathing exercises to promote a more flexible body and a calm mind. As you move through poses that require balance and concentration, you're encouraged to focus less on your busy day and more on the moment.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Jon Kabbatt-Zinn and Stress Reduction



Stress reduction

Thirty years ago, medical Professor Jon Kabat-Zinn used meditation as the basis for his revolutionary "Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Program." He put people with chronic pain and depression through a six-week meditation practice in the basement of the University of Massachusetts Medical School and became one of the first practitioners to record meditation-related health improvements in patients with intractable pain. His stress-reduction techniques are now used in hospitals, clinics and by HMOs.

"In the last 25 years there's been a tidal shift in the field, and now there are 300 scientific papers on mindfulness," said Emiliana Simon-Thomas, science director for the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley.

People who meditate show more left-brain hemisphere dominance, according to meditation studies done at the Center for Investigating Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"Essentially when you spend a lot of time meditating, the brain shows a pattern of feeling safe in the world and more comfortable in approaching people and situations, and less vigilant and afraid, which is more associated with the right hemisphere," she said.


 

Stanford studies monks' meditation, compassion - SFGate



Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Laughter Yoga Cultivates Merry Mindfulness

NEW YORK | Mon Jul 9, 2012 5:18am EDT

 
(Reuters) - Can't touch your toes? Laugh it off.


Laughter yoga, unlike Pilates yoga, water yoga, aerial yoga and other offshoots of the ancient eastern practice of uniting body and breath, doesn't aspire to sculpted arms and bendy backs.
Laughter yoga just wants you to be happy.

"You may not lose fat, but you will lose the idea that you're fat," said Sebastien Gendry, founder and executive director of the American School of Laughter Yoga.

"People come because it's the exercise they can do and it makes them feel good," said Gendry, who founded the school in 2004. "It's the easiest form of yoga. They can't twist, they can't bend, but they can do this."

A blend of yogic deep breathing, stretching, and laughter exercises that cultivate child-like playfulness, Laughter Yoga was developed 17 years ago in Mumbai, India by Dr. Madan Kataria. Laughter Yoga International now claims 600 clubs in 60 countries.

Gendry, who was born in France, was the first American to train as a certified Laughter Yoga teacher.

Central to Laughter Yoga is the tenet that the body cannot differentiate between pretend and genuine laughter.

"We fake it," Gendry said of the group classes he leads. "We simulate to stimulate. We go through the motions of joy to create the chemistry of joy."

In one exercise attendees are instructed to repeat "ho-ho, ha-ha-ha" while clapping hands; in another they are directed to "picture yourself jumping for joy."

The exercises are unapologetically silly and very short—20 to 40 seconds each in an hour-long class, Gendry said, to facilitate the shift from thinking to feeling.

"The goal is not to work on muscle mass," he said. "It is to overcome critical thinking."
Another goal is to connect with classmates.

"Laughter is a means to an end," he explained. "In hatha yoga (the yoga commonly taught in studios and health clubs), the focus is the breath. In laughter yoga, the focus is the "dristi," or gaze, of the other. It builds community."

It's also easy. Gendry said it usually takes two days to master the fundamentals of the method.

"For those who want to teach, it takes a week," he said. "Truly, this is not rocket science."
New York City-based fitness expert Lashaun Dale, who has been teaching movement, fitness and yoga for over 20 years, said she really enjoyed the Laughter Yoga class she attended.

"It's a hoot," said Dale. "It releases so much stress. You can't help but laugh. First, there's discomfort; then it's hard to stop."

Dale said the class favored gentle, healing movement over the intense stretching and exertion of the vinyasa flow of typical yoga classes.

"It is a way to do movement," she said. "If you're stressed out, you're not taking care of yourself. You can't get fit until you get balanced."

Humor can boost the immune system and lower blood pressure, according to the Centers for Disease Control, and laughing for 10 to 15 minutes a day can burn 10 to 40 calories.

Gregory Chertok, sport psychology counselor and fitness trainer at the Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Center in Englewood, New Jersey, said there is a staggering amount of documented findings on the importance of mood to behavior.

"It (laughing) is not like doing a cardio workout or a plank (exercise)," said Chertok, who encourages his athlete clients to notice their moods. "It's less of a physical, more of a social, benefit. Engaging with people is an enjoyable thing."

Chertok noted that writer and researcher Norman Cousins, whose book "Anatomy of an Illness" influenced Kataria, famously referred to laughter as "internal jogging."

He said the Self-Determination Theory, a psychological theory of motivation, says that anyone seeking a healthy lifestyle must feel three things: autonomy, competence, and relatedness.

"A person who is not physically able to do more strenuous yoga may feel more competent and related in a setting like this (laughter yoga)," he said.

Of course, as Pandora discovered to her dismay, even openness has consequences.

"You cannot open up your box of emotions separately," Gendry explained. "Laughter and tears go side by side. The more you laugh, the more you cry. You can't avoid that."



(Reporting by Dorene Internicola; editing by Patricia Reaney and Leslie Gevirtz




 Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/07/09/us-fitness-yoga-laughing-idUSBRE86809U20120709


Laughing yoga cultivates merry mindfulness | Reuters

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Rapture- Enjoy!

Do Your Best

Do Your Best

"I always remember an epitaph which is in the cemetery at Tombstone, Arizona. It says: 'Here lies Jack Williams. He done his damnedest.' I think that is the greatest epitaph a man can have - When he gives everything that is in him to do the job he has before him. That is all you can ask of him and that is what I have tried to do."
- Harry S. Truman

Friday, July 13, 2012

Leonardo da Vinci on Focus


Self-portrait in red chalk, circa 1512 to 1515[nb 1]
Royal Library of Turin

Discipline, Focus and Consistent Effort
 
“You will never have a greater or lesser dominion than that over yourself...the height of a man's success is gauged by his self-mastery; the depth of his failure by his self-abandonment. ...And this law is the expression of eternal justice. 
He who cannot establish dominion over himself will have no dominion over others.” 

― Leonardo da Vinci
 
“As every divided kingdom falls, so every mind divided between many studies confounds and saps itself.” 

― Leonardo da Vinci

A small daily task, if it be really daily, will beat the labors of a spasmodic Hercules.

-- Anthoony Trollope

Pablo Picasso

Inspiration


“Inspiration does exist, but it must find you working.”
– Pablo Picasso

Interesting photo

 
A man dressed as a giant holds a young girl during the so-called ‘giants and big heads parade’ during the San Fermin festival on July 10, 2012. Tens of thousands of festival-goers gather in the northern Spanish city for the week-long party, made famous for the running of the bulls. (Pedro Armestre/AFP/Getty)

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Awareness helps ease stress | The Poughkeepsie Journal | poughkeepsiejournal.com

Awareness helps ease stress | The Poughkeepsie Journal | poughkeepsiejournal.com

Written by  Lauren Yanks
The Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction workshop includes exercises to help pay attention to the breath, body and mind, and helps participants observe their constant judgments and evaluations.

The Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction workshop includes exercises to help pay attention to the breath, body and mind, and helps participants observe their constant judgments and evaluations.
Today’s busy world presents unique challenges, and most of us could use a little help meeting these challenges. In 1979, Jon Kabat-Zinn, a professor of medicine emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, created the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction program to help people deal with stress through greater momentary awareness. Working with modalities such as yoga and meditation, Kabat-Zinn incorporated ancient healing traditions with Western science and began to teach the eight-week course. Since then, hundreds of health facilities have adapted its teachings.
Psychiatrist Ernest Shaw has been teaching Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction workshops since the early nineties. He runs an evening workshop each fall and spring out of his office in Kingston.
“I had explored various meditation practices since the ’60s,” he said. “At one point, I did a mindfulness workshop with Jon Kabat-Zinn at (University of Massachusetts) Medical Center and felt it was a powerful tool, so I began to integrate the work more fully into my psychiatric practice.”
Shaw says being mindful in the moment helps people engage reality and deal better with the choices of living, because only in the moment can we get traction and regain control of our lives.
“Mindfulness is being in the present moment on purpose, and that is very empowering and helps our decision-making,” he said. “If we don’t have an intention to be in this moment, we get lost in our thoughts and anxieties and fantasies, and because we’re so identified with our thoughts, one negative thought or story can block out so much by the decisions we make. The course helps us to step aside from our thoughts and observe them, while no longer identifying with them.”
The workshop includes exercises to help pay attention to the breath, body and mind, and helps participants observe their constant judgments and evaluations. People are also given instructional CDs to practice at home.
“Every class, we explore a formal practice; for example, we might sit, watch and focus on the breath in order to stabilize ourselves,” Shaw said. “We also do a body scan to create awareness of what’s happening in the body because anxiety, emotions and much of our suffering is experienced in the body."


The mindfulness course can help one deal better with stress, as well as expand perspective.
“Stress is the belief that we cannot bring our situations to a successful conclusion, but through practice, we gain the confidence we can,” Shaw said. “When you bring awareness to the present moment, the ordinary becomes extraordinary. Life becomes rich and alive with all its ups and downs, joys and sorrows. We can’t get rid of the problematic nature of the world, but mindfulness can help us have a much larger container of awareness, which helps stabilize us.”
Shaw compares mindfulness to a keel on a sailboat — although we are unable to stop the water’s waves and currents, it helps us navigate more skillfully.
“It’s sad that many psychiatrists today are too narrowly trained to give out medication without considering all the other helpful approaches to the complexities of being human,” he said. “Sometimes it’s needed, but a builder should have a wide range of tools in their toolbox, not just a hammer. A psychiatrist should also work with many therapeutic approaches to suffering. The mindfulness practice is a tool that can really help. It teaches us to pay attention and, after all, love is attention.”
Director and founder of the Center for Grief, Loss & Life Transition in Poughkeepsie, Shelley Tatelbaum runs mindfulness workshops at Vassar Brothers Medical Center.
“It’s very clever that it’s called a stress reduction program, because that hooks people’s attention,” she said. “Everyone can relate to being stressed out. It’s universal.”
Tatelbaum emphasizes how present moment awareness can lead to better decisions.
“The practice helps us to detach from what’s happening in the mind, so we become more responsive and less reactive,” she said.
Like Shaw, Tatelbaum’s workshops include teachings on jobs, relationships, grief, loss and more. She also emphasizes diet and nutrition.
“It makes a big difference for people to be aware of what’s entering their bodies, including the air,” she said.
Tatelbaum believes the program can aid people at all stages of life and is pleased that Health Quest pays for their employees to take the course.



“It’s very helpful for dealing with stress at work or helping those with chronic illness,” she said. “It enables the staff to better assist patients. It’s a wonderful preventive program for all aspects of life.”
Salt Point resident Johanna Tomik first took the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction class 12 years ago.
“The program has helped give me the ability to enjoy every day as opposed to rushing through the days,” said the retired science teacher. “It might sound overdramatic, but I would say the class is life-changing. It helps you to enjoy the good situations and make the most of the difficult ones.”
Over the years, Tomik has taken the course three times.
“You need to continue to do it, like you need to continue to exercise to develop your muscles,” she said. “Each time I take the class, it encourages me to be mindful every day.”
West Shokan resident Jane Keller is now in the seventh week of Shaw’s spring program.
“I changed careers from being a chef to a teacher, and I was putting a lot of stress on myself,” she said. “Aside from the intensity of our lives, often we berate ourselves and push ourselves, which makes our 
 insides feel even more stressed. Ernie talks about remembering to be kind and gentle with yourself to balance the striving and the pressure.”Ultimately, Shaw believes that Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction is not about learning a simple method — it’s about enhancing your way of being in the world.
“It’s not a course in learning a technique, but looking to know when you’re out of balance,” he said. “Awakening into present moment, non-judgmental awareness enables people to see life directly as it really is, and that is incredibly helpful. We roll out the red carpet for reality.”

Resources

Dr. Ernest Shaw
845-331-1155
ernestshaw@hvc.rr.com
Shelley Tatelbaum
845-471-5269
www.shelleytatelbaum.com

 

Reducing pain and stress - Arts - Life - The Telegram

Reducing pain and stress - Arts - Life - The Telegram

http://www.thetelegram.com/Arts%20-%20Life/2012-06-27/article-3017881/Reducing-pain-and-stress/1

Published on June 27, 2012
Sarah Smellie  RSS Feed
Click here to find out more!
Topics :
Family Life Bureau , University of Massachusetts Medical School , Center for Mindfulness , Malibu, California , Military Road , United States

Reducing pain and stress

Meditation
 Andrew Safer doesn’t speak slower or more deliberately than anyone else. The desk in his home office isn’t impeccably clean. In fact, if you weren’t looking for anything out of the ordinary, not even the big moon painting on his wall seems strange.

He’s just a regular guy whose prefrontal cortex has a better-than-average chance at overriding his amygdala.
Andrew Safer has been practicing mindfulness meditation since he was 15 years old.
“I was living in Malibu, California, and my mother was always interested in different religions,” he says.

“She found a Zen monastery not far away and we went there for a weekend. We called it a family vacation. But I met the Zen master Suzuki Roshi there, and I started practising zazen meditation.”

He continued through university, where he met his teacher, a Tibetan Buddhist named Chogyam Trungpa. Safer practised with Trungpa for 14 years, until Trungpa’s death in 1987. He kept up with it, finding other teachers along the way. And now he’s a teacher himself.

A technical writer by trade, Safer leads a workshop series on mindfulness meditation at the Family Life Bureau, on Military Road. Since he began in 2010, he’s taught over 130 people.
“The mindfulness practice is rooted in the Buddhist tradition, when the Buddha sat down under a tree and stayed there until he understood,” he says.

“He evolved this way of working with his mind so that, when confronted with something that would normally freak us out, he was able to acknowledge them, deal with them and move on.”
But the mindfulness meditation that Safer teaches goes beyond Buddhism. His teachings are based on the work of Jon Kabat-Zinn, a professor at the University of Massachusetts Medical School and founder of the Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care and Society.

“About 30 years ago, Kabat-Zinn was on a Buddhist meditation retreat,” says Safer.
“At the time, he was working in a hospital with people who suffered from a lot of chronic pain and stress, and he had this ‘A-ha!’ moment where he saw that meditation could be really beneficial for those people. So he figured out a way to introduce mindfulness in a secular context, without the trappings of any religion or culture.”

As it turns out, Kabat-Zinn was right, and there’s a growing body of work from neuroscientists to back him up.

The prevailing theory to explain meditation’s role in pain and stress reduction centres on its interaction with the amygdala and the prefrontal cortex.

The amygdala are two almond-shaped clusters of neurons located in the temporal lobes of the brain. They are associated with the processing of emotional reactions — the amygdala reacts quickly to stimulation, and it is the initiator of the “fight or flight” response.

Emotional signals are first received and processed by the amygdala, which then sends them to the prefrontal cortex at the front of the brain.

The prefrontal cortex is the brain’s voice of reason. It’s commonly associated with decision-making, differentiation between good and bad or right and wrong, and weighing consequences of actions and behaviours. Compared to the amygdala, the prefrontal cortex is slow and methodical.

“They say that as soon as that amygdala gets triggered, certain brain chemicals — adrenaline and cortisol, mostly — start surging through the body,” says Safer.

“That sends a message that we have to do something immediately, and we go into this reactive mode. Mindfulness meditation teaches us to give these thoughts and emotions some time and space. When we do that, we give our prefrontal cortex a chance to engage. Then, if we decide we’re going to do something about those thoughts or emotions, and we’re probably going to do something that’s far more reasoned,” he said.

Safer is particularly interested in how mindfulness meditation can help people suffering from mental illness, and he is in the process of developing an eight-week mindfulness meditation program that can be adapted for different conditions.

“There are lots of people who are suffering,” he says. “And not necessarily just those who have had a diagnosis, it could just be someone who is very anxious or is having trouble getting to sleep at night. A lot of it has to do with the past and the future: it could be something that you did and now you’re beating yourself up, or that you’re anticipating something in the future. The mindfulness practice trains us to actually be here, in the present.”

Ultimately, says Safer, mindfulness meditation teaches people to be better friends with their thoughts and with themselves.

“Nervousness, hesitation, self doubt — normally, when any of these feelings of discomfort come up, we try and avoid them,” he says. “But that approach doesn’t really work. This is more like acknowledging them and welcoming them. Treat these thoughts like guests, and welcome them into your house, but then welcome the next guest. We tend to get monopolized by our concerns or problems, and that’s like spending all your time on one guest.”
“Mindfulness meditation practice is about being non-judgemental in relation to everything that comes up in our mind,” he adds.

“It’s about not taking sides, and saying, ‘This is a good thought, this is a bad thought, this is what I should think.’ Treating our thoughts without judgement, treating them all the same, is an important form of loving kindness towards our ourselves.”

Interest in mindfulness is even spreading beyond medicine, he says, holding up a copy of a book called “A Mindful Nation: How a Simple Practice Can Help Us Reduce Stress, Improve Performance, and Recapture the American Spirit.”

“The author of this book is Tim Ryan, who is a United States congressman,” says Safer.
“He thinks, basically, that mindfulness can help rejuvenate America, and he talks about its possible applications in the health care system, in education and in the military. I haven’t seen anything about mindfulness on this scale before. So, I think it shows just how significant this practice can be.”


More information about mindfulness and Andrew Safer’s mindfulness meditation workshops can be found at www.mindfulnesawareness.ca.

  The website address is written incorrectly. It's there as: www.mindfulnesawareness.ca.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Water Buffalo vs. Lions




Amazing video of water buffalo vs. lion.  Water buffalo's are a very strong family unit and will protect each other from all other threats.

The Mountain

Norwegian landscape photographer Terje Sørgjerd posted another amazing video of stars in the Milky Way galaxy along with Spain´s highest mountain, El Teide. It is awesome, magnificent and an absolute must see!

Restful Video

Mindfulness and Awareness: Shambhala and Buddhist Meditation Instruction in St. John’s, Newfoundland

Mindfulness and Awareness: Shambhala and Buddhist Meditation Instruction in St. John’s, Newfoundland



 We must practice mindfulness: watching the mind and bringing it back to the
present moment again and again. That is perhaps the most essential component of
any training. You can’t be somewhere else mentally while your training is going on
here.”
-Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche
Mindfulness practice trains us to be present and to relate non-judgmentally to things as they are. It brings us back to the basics. This time-honoured way of working with the mind, developed in the Buddhist tradition, has gone mainstream in recent years, as evidenced by web sites such as Mindfulkids, Mindful: Living with Awareness and Compassion, and the Centre for Mindfulness and Justice.
When we practice mindfulness meditation, we begin to see that we don’t have to get caught up in the storylines in our head—what I should have done, what I’m going to say the next time I talk to that person, how I’m going to solve this problem–the list is endless. Instead, we start paying attention to now–this reality here, our breath–and mind and body begin to synchronize. “You are not working with your mind alone,” Chogyam Trungpa writes about meditation practice in Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior. “You are working with your mind and your body, and when the two work together, you never leave reality.”

Thursday, July 5, 2012

The Elephant Whisperer

We know they respect and mourn their own - imagine having the respect of a herd of soulful, spiritual elephants at your own human passing. How beautiful that would be - and darn impressive.

The Elephant Whisperer


Lawrence Anthony, a legend in South Africa and author of 3 books including the bestseller
The Elephant Whisperer, bravely rescued wildlife and rehabilitated elephants all over the globe from human atrocities, including the courageous rescue of Baghdad Zoo animals during US invasion in 2003.

On March 7, 2012 Lawrence Anthony died.   He is remembered and missed by his wife, 2 sons, 2 grandsons and numerous elephants.   Two days after his passing, the wild elephants showed up at his home led by two large matriarchs. Separate wild herds arrived in droves to say goodbye to their beloved man-friend.  A total of 20 elephants had patiently walked over 12 miles to get to his South African house.


Witnessing this spectacle, humans were obviously in awe not only because of the supreme intelligence and precise timing that these elephants sensed about Lawrence 's passing, but also because of the profound memory and emotion the beloved animals evoked in such an organized way:   Walking slowly - for days - making their way in a solemn one-by-one
queue from their habitat to his house.


Lawrence's wife, Francoise, was especially touched, knowing that the elephants had not been to his house prior to that day for well over a year!   But yet they knew where they were going.  The elephants obviously wanted to pay their deep respects, honoring their friend who'd saved their lives - so much respect that they stayed for 2 days 2 nights.  Then one morning, they left, making their long journey back home.

May Peace and Peace and Peace Be EverywhereThe Upanishads (900-600-B.C.)

Note:  Just one more example of our connection to this world, humans, animals and nature.