What is Mindfulness

Improving Mindfulness Module Two: What Is Mindfulness?
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Transcript

Module Two, what is mindfulness? People often confuse the concept of mindfulness with the idea that one should stop and smell the roses. However, if you found yourself with your nose stuck deep into a flower in a field or an angry bowl was bearing down on you, this would be the exact opposite of being mindful. But simply mindfulness is the state of mind where you are fully conscious and engaged in the present moment, and with the demands of the present moment. Buddhist concept, the concept of mindfulness comes to us through the Buddhist religion. The word mindfulness is one of translation of the Pali word Sati, Sanskrit smarty.

Other translations of this word include awareness in memory. Mindfulness is one's capacity to avoid distraction from the present moment. But in Buddhism, it also means to avoid forgetting what one already knows and to remember to do what one has an intention to do. If mindfulness means avoiding distraction, what is it that distracts us from the present? People are constantly besieged with needs, our basic needs such as food and shelter, and our more complicated needs for love, respect, happiness, and so on. All compel us to consider our past and future in terms of what to avoid and what to seek after.

Consequently, the tempting answer is to blame all the things going on in our world. That's the source of distraction. A Buddhist would disagree. Instead of everything that goes on out there being the source of distraction. Buddhists blame what they call the monkey mind. The monkey mind refers to our own mental capacity to engage internally in constant chatter.

Sometimes internal mental chatter can be helpful for working out problems, for analysis and even for play. However, constant mental chatter can also distract us from the things that are most important. And often, it can actually mislead us into misunderstanding a given situation. Buddhism teaches techniques in meditation to cultivate mindfulness and quiet the monkey mind. They're at One aspect of mindfulness is the cultivation of bear attention. Bear attention is attention that is devoid of judgment or elaboration.

Whenever we are faced with a new situation we are tempted to try and consider what this new situation means to us. Will it be pleasant, scary, long lasting or of minor importance? More often than not, we do not have enough information yet to make that assessment when we start attempting to evaluate the situation before it is played out, this takes us into monkey mind style thinking, which often leads to distortion. One component of being mindful is to approach any present moment with our full and neutral attention. Another way of thinking of bear attention is the Zen Buddhist concept of beginner's mind. To a Zen Buddhist being a beginner is an ideal state because someone with no experience of something will also have developed no prejudice against it or other ways of placing limits on an experience.

Since every moment of your life is unique, approaching every moment with innocence as if you are a beginner, and this is your first time experience. This moment allows you to keep yourself open to a host of possibilities that a more experienced person would either ignore or never consider a psychological concept of mindfulness. Although mindfulness originated as a Buddhist concept, psychologists from the 1970s to the present have studied the effects of Buddhist mindfulness meditation techniques, and found that these are effective in reducing anxiety and reducing relapse rates in both depression and drug addiction. Recent studies have found that incorporating mindfulness into your life can increase positive emotions, improve the immune system and reduce stress. Despite the nearly universal agreement on the benefits of mindfulness, psychologists disagree on an exact definition of mindfulness or an exact method for developing mindfulness. Jon Kabat Zinn, one of the first psychologists to study mindfulness as a secular concept defines mindfulness as paying attention in a particular way on purpose.

The present moment and non judgmentally. According to a later study, mindfulness studies in psychology tend to require two components for mindfulness, a quality of high attentiveness and concentration, an attitude of curiosity and openness. Memory. To this point, we have focused on just one aspect of mindfulness that of bear attention in the immediate moment. However, as mentioned earlier, another translation of the word Sati is memory. And there is a very good reason for this.

Paying close attention to your immediate moment and environment sounds like a beneficial practice, and for the most part it is, however, there are times where paying too much attention can be detrimental and force you into mistakes. If you have ever been told or told someone else not to overthink a situation. This is a good example where bear attention can be detrimental. In fact, a recent study has found that a mindful state can be detrimental for certain kinds of learning. When you learn to ride a bicycle For example, you pay less attention about the process and feel of yourself pedaling. Instead, much of the learning occurs subconsciously in what is known as muscle memory.

Muscle memory is one example of a special kind of memory called implicit memory. This type of memory occurs through practice. For musicians who read music, for example, at a certain point in practice, they no longer consciously think about what the squiggles on the page actually mean. In fact, reading in general relies primarily on implicit memory, if you tried to be really mindful of what you were reading. By focusing on the shape of each letter or the makeup of each sentence, you would likely miss the overall meaning of a written passage, and it will take a long time to do it. Mindfulness is helping in tasks that make use of another kind of memory called explicit memory.

This type of memory is helpful in learning new things and in memorization. However, when you wish to develop a habit, the combination of mindfulness when you are consciously willing yourself to do or notice something, and scaling back your awareness as you allow the new challenge To be taken up in your unconscious mind through implicit memory is the ideal way to go

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