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| Week
115: |
Reinforcing
Mindful Awareness |
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Walking to the park one morning, I found myself uncharacteristically
busy in my mind, thinking about this and that, and not being particularly
present to the walk itself. My mind chewed on this issue and that problem
all the way across many blocks toward the park. The moment I entered
the park, it was like coming awake all of a sudden and I realized I
had been in my head instead of in my experience of walking.
What I noticed is that the colors, smells, and quiet of the park have
become an irresistible signal for me to be fully present to my experience
right here, right now. As I walked across the park, I noticed how vividly
different I felt, compared to my walk to the park. My mind was clear
and free of chatter, my eyes took in the beauty around me, and I was
able to fully enjoy myself without being off in the future somewhere
trying to solve a problem that had nothing to do with my immediate experience.
This got me to thinking about the kinds of symbols, places, and experiences
that spontaneously bring us back to ourselves because we have somehow
associated them with being present. I have a particular place where I
sit to meditate in the morning, and just putting my body there has the
effect of focusing and clearing my mind. I have so many non-conscious
associations to being in a present-moment state of being when I sit there
that the state comes unbidden just by entering the space. The fragrance
of the incense I burn as I meditate also has the power to bring me into
a more mindful state whenever I smell it. If I enter a store where a
similar incense is burning, I immediately drop into a more centered,
deeper sense of myself. It’s an automatic response, and quite powerful
for me. And, when I don’t even realize I’ve been lost in
thought, it’s a particular treat to be brought back into myself
in these ways.
In some meditative traditions, there is an instruction to meditate in
the same place at the same time each day. There’s a similar idea
in hypnosis – about the benefits of associating positive experiences
with certain images, symbols, or places. Through these associations,
we more readily enter a particular state of mind or being just by being
there, or by calling to mind the symbols related to that state.
And so, for this week’s experiment, I invite you to notice those
places, images, smells, sights, sounds, and symbols that create the spontaneous
experience of being more mindful or centered. Then, notice what happens
if you cultivate the association between your mindful, more centered
state of being and these aspects of your world. As with all the experiments,
there’s no right way to do this one. There is the possibility of
giving yourself the gift of added support for being more present to your
experience, more grounded in the here and now.
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