Mindfulness and the Mind
A common
spiritual practice is to be mindful, which is another way of saying to be
present. A common misunderstanding is that mindfulness should be limited to the
body’s activities; to its breathing, feelings, and activities.
Sometimes
clients say things like, “I struggle to stay present, but I’m worried about my
son” or “I want to be present, but I can’t stop thinking about what my sister said
to me last week”, etc. They feel that they shouldn’t be thinking about anything
but what the body is doing. But the mind is going to continue to think until it
does not. So mindfulness must include being present to the mind’s present
thoughts, even when those thoughts are about the past or the future.
When you
are doing tasks that do not require much thought, like cooking, washing dishes,
pulling weeds, engaging in a quiet hobby, etc., you find your mind processing
the day just passed, a book read or movie seen, an issue in your life, an insight,
something in the past, possible outcomes in the future, etc. This is natural
and essential, as processing eventually winds down, leaving your mind quiet so
that you can tune into the Awareness of Truth (Holy Spirit) beyond all of those
superficial thoughts.
Mindfulness is a way of being with
yourself (mind) where you are, which is in this moment. And in this moment you
are experiencing a body, yes, but also thoughts. If you try to cut those out of
this moment, you are denying part of your experience!
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Do you want
support and guidance as you on your path? Email me at Liz@acimmentor.com
to set up an appointment for mentoring. Learn more at www.acimmentor.com.
Comments
We are SO as human beings busy keeping our heads full of most of the time nothing much at all! WHICH is why over the years more lately I've very much valued 4 Habits for Inner Peace....they really provide easily accessible steps to this process..Thanks Liz. X
Thanks,
Ken Purvis