Hello One and All!
Deep night solitude for me and I love it so. While the world is asleep.........
I watched a YouTube vid earlier this evening, a lecture by Jon Kabat-Zinn on mindfullness. It was 1 hour and 12 minutes of time well spent. I'm reading a second book of his now with a third requested from our library. The first was "Wherever You Go There You Are" which I found recommended in this forum last year. I am most grateful for that recommendation from whoever did post about it. I just ran through the self help book thread to name and thank the individual that cited the book, but it's buried in another thread apparently.
Here's the vid:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3nwwKbM_vJc
I'm going to make a real commitment to practice mindfullness which I understand to be meditation itself but not in the traditional sense of taking 30 minutes or more (or less) to sit and just be aware of the present moment under conditions of ultra minimized stimulation. Zinn is such a compassionate, well spoken man, a beautiful man and a most superb teacher.
In the video, after the period of still meditating, he drew his class back outwards and asked for some impressions. The very first woman to speak stated she has been meditating for 10 years and she has a problem falling asleep during her practice, even just then. Wow, that has been my own experience which can be most discouraging and here I heard the solutions and the assurance from Zinn! Man, I liked that!
He speaks so warmly and entirely practical about life. His ideas for succeeding in this mysterious endeavor were illuminating to me, the grasp of what this is all about never so clear. For example, to ground myself upon this very moment is the mindfulness practice of constant return, return to the breathing even as I think of words and type them out. He spoke of the inflow of stimulation while actually being busy DOING something, that the sound and smell and sight and touch and THOUGHT events can all be piped through our being and then out, without encumbrance or distress. He spoke of a child's effortless finger popping soap bubbles as an analogy. Just let it come and let it go, all in a way that one personally develops by his own practice.
Oh the breathing of life CONSCIOUSLY should be taught along with the alphabet in our young.......
So at one point in the video late, Zinn advised SOME regular effort at traditional meditation as an anchor for the daily practice of mindfulness, emphasizing the results are best served by doing so.....even if only 5 minutes in the traditional manner......and so I will commit.
He's tied it up nicely for me. I was piqued when long ago I read about "eating meditation" where you stay in the present moment with each cut, fork, bite swallow, napkin swipe and drink and everything else during a meal, but I don't recall the term "mindfulness" in that reference. And long time since then, here I see that EVERYTHING IN OUR DAILY LIVES can be done in the present moment as a practice, which in time (and with more practice) renders POWERLESS the emotionally sad events of the past and the grinding uncertain worries of the future! That is the promise of all this as I understand it, a safe place for us in the NOW moment, this moment here presently, now..............typing all these dots.............
One thing lead to another and for the second time I watched the film, "Sling Blade" yesterday. I love the film immensely and recommend it.
Saturday, tomorrow, I have the 40th anniversary of my high school graduation reunion to attend. I've got a healthy excitement going, a bit of apprehension too. I thought about passing but I would have regretted that. More people have died from my class since the prior reunion as one would expect and more than one close old friend. It's getting interesting this aging process, like a democratic lottery where sooner or later everyone's number gets picked!
My iTunes library music run has now come to play Bing Crosby's, "It's Beginning To Look A Lot Like Christmas." Imagine that?