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Hi. Welcome to my little corner of the internet and to my first blog post about mindfulness. For those of you who are wondering who I am you can check out my About page on this site but the short version is... My name is Ashley, I am a former Civil Engineer turned Stay At Home Mum (yes... spelt with a “u”), Artist and Yoga Teacher from Australia. I currently live in Southern California with my husband Santiago, our son Dante and dog Chester. We recently bought our first home, a two bedroom townhouse and will be starting to renovate soon (stay tuned for updates on that).
Anyway, enough about who I am and time to talk about why I am writing today. I want to start my blog talking about Mindfulness... yes that buzz word you hear around all the time that perhaps no one has really taken the time to explain to you. So I hope to do that for you today and explain a little about my experiences with mindfulness too.
You may laugh (I do now looking back) but I thought going from the stressful corporate world to a SAHM was going to reduce the stress in my life. Boy was I wrong, becoming a mum and being a military spouse on a single military income brought more stress than I could have ever imagined. Don’t get me wrong, I knew this life was never going to be a walk in the park but never before have I found myself so aware of my actions, expectations and responsibilities. I read somewhere that raising children is the new activism and I couldn’t agree more. The job of raising the next generation to be kind, compassionate, emotionally intelligent, healthy and prepared to be a good citizen of the world is mentally and physically exhausting. Now more than ever I find myself searching for those tiny moments of calm that belong to me as I am all too aware of my need for emotional intelligence too. So here we are... Mindfulness, something that I have been trying... struggling at times... to incorporate into my daily life, and if you aren’t already, something I think you should try too.
Mindfulness itself originated in Buddhism and in the Buddhist teachings is known as Sati. As it relates to yoga it can be linked to Meditation or Dhyana which is the seventh of Patanjali’s Eight Limbed Path (or the eight components of yoga). While this little bit of history may not help you to incorporate mindfulness into your every day I do feel it is important to acknowledge the culture and people from which we have been given this gift. I am sure I will go into more detail about yoga, its origins and its many facets in later blog posts but if you would like more information now please reach out to me and I can direct you to some of my favorite texts.
Now while I don’t necessarily consider Mindfulness and Meditation to be the same thing, there are parallels to be drawn between both practices. Certainly meditation can be a form of mindfulness but I feel mindfulness deserves a separate definition. A definition that I find very clear is that by Jon Kabat-Zinn, professor emeritus of medicine and the creator of the Stress Reduction Clinic and the Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care, and Society at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.
“Mindfulness is awareness that arises through paying attention, on purpose, in the present moment, non-judgementally, in the service of self-understanding and wisdom.” Jon Kabat-Zinn
So you may have heard people say similar things to this like “be in the moment” or “get present” and thought “yeah right, because being in a different moment is an option....”. I am right there with you, but what you may not have noticed is where your mind goes when you are going though your day to day life. I know for myself that my mind is rarely focused on the exact task at hand, often I am thinking of all the other things I need to or should be doing. I will sit on my yoga mat and begin a practice whilst thinking about updating my Etsy store or what I should cook for dinner. Okay lets be honest, its almost always about the food, which seems fitting since I call this “monkey mind” (think loud crazy monkey jumping up and down to get your attention and then it doesn’t shut up even after you throw it a banana). I’ll get half way though my practice and start to think I really should stop and get onto those “more important” things instead of indulging on my mat. By the time I push though and give myself a few minutes of Savasana (relaxation) I find that I have gone and wasted what could have been a perfectly blissful yoga practice by feeding that damn monkey a banana. I get up from my mat feeling frustrated, not relaxed at all and more stressed about the rest of the day. Not the point is it?
On the opposite end of the spectrum when I focus my mind on my breathing and the sensations in my body during a yoga practice the time spent on my mat feels very different. I enjoy each pose so much more, I also find myself listening to my body more and following its innate intuition as to what it needs on that day and in that moment. Sometimes that means cutting a practice short and spending extra time in savasana rather than forcing an hour long practice just because that was what I had planned. The point here is that all the “should’s” go out the window along with the bananas and the monkey and I come off my mat feeling relaxed, revived and ready to take on the remainder of the day.
Now practicing mindfulness while doing something like yoga seems to go hand in hand, how is it that we can apply the same principle to our everyday life? Well, the actual act of mindfulness is a simple one, however, it requires everyday practice which is where it gets difficult. Being bombarded with so many tasks, responsibilities and distractions in our modern world I know I tend to run on autopilot most days doing each task with minimal attention and allowing the distractions of what is next on the to-do list or social media to take my mind away or distract me from the task at hand. I find all these distractions make me less efficient in my day and leave me feeling unaccomplished at the end of the day with a myriad of tasks left half done. I have tried to fix this with more to-do lists, more efficient methods, and funnily enough more distractions like watching tv or listening to podcasts while doing the mundane tasks. Writing these down makes me laugh because none of these perceived “fixes” are ever going to change things. This is what we do as modern humans, we try and fix everything with technology. But what if nothing needs to be “fixed” in our lives, what if just using mindfulness in our everyday life and not just in yoga or meditation could help us enjoy our lives more, reduce our stress and even make us more efficient?
I think it can. I am not saying that you’ll end up floating through life on a cloud each day with a serene smile on your face that makes people think “what are they on?”. But I guarantee that you will begin to find more pleasure in the mundane and will be left feeling more relaxed at the end of the day.
So as mindfulness is defined as the practice of fully appreciating the moment you are in and what you are experiencing. Next time you are folding the laundry, washing the car, doing the dishes or making your bed take the time to check in with yourself and how you feel completing and appreciating this task. Maybe remind yourself how lucky you are to have dishes to wash because that means you have food to eat, or notice how nice your bedsheets feel (I know I appreciate a good linen sheet). Check in with your mind and body more fully during your next workout and try to honor exactly what you are feeling (just because you went to the gym for a weights session doesn’t mean you have to do one if you aren’t feeling strong). And most importantly don’t beat yourself up when you find yourself doing something mindlessly, it will happen, you are only human. Like I said earlier this is called a practice because you need to practice it.
My 3 tricks will have you feeling more comfortable immediately!
No new poses!
Feel comfortable in your body how it is now!
These tips are for everyone, from the beginner to the experienced practitioner.
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