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Mindfulness Meditation
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29 Apr 2016 09:16 PM
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02 May 2016 12:00 PM
02 May 2016 12:00 PM
Re: Mindfulness Meditation
Dear Everyone. ('specially @Silenus)
i am not cut out to meditate. I do practice presence and being int he now as much as I can - I was finding it hard to explain what happens to me when I try to do a sitting meditation and this little animated gif explains it perfectly.
https://45.media.tumblr.com/387f25d5ad37ccb6ac6ce09d036bc3aa/tumblr_o6ddhi7Xgd1tpv8gqo1_540.gif
Me. Meditating.
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02 May 2016 01:34 PM
02 May 2016 01:34 PM
Re: Mindfulness Meditation
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02 May 2016 06:34 PM - edited 02 May 2016 06:35 PM
02 May 2016 06:34 PM - edited 02 May 2016 06:35 PM
Re: Mindfulness Meditation
Have you tried sitting in a comfortable armchair, eyes shut, breathing deeply and quietly while listening to relaxing music through a good pair of headphones? That can be very close to meditation. As you listen to the music your mind drifts away into a kind of light sleep. Of course not for everyone but it could work for you if you give it a try.
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02 May 2016 07:24 PM
02 May 2016 07:24 PM
Re: Mindfulness Meditation
Yes @theaveragejoe I have tried that. I often just sit and put some soft relaxing music on and close my eyes. Sometimes I 'float' away with the sounds. It is really nice 🙂
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05 May 2016 02:10 PM
05 May 2016 02:10 PM
Re: Mindfulness Meditation
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05 May 2016 02:41 PM
05 May 2016 02:41 PM
Re: Mindfulness Meditation
My highs and lows don't have as much power to hurt me as they used to. I feel that Mindfulness has greatly improved my resilience...
Hugs and happy vibes beaming to you... 🙂
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07 May 2016 12:04 AM
07 May 2016 12:04 AM
Re: Mindfulness Meditation
Does mindfulness help us to cope with depressed people? How long it takes? |
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07 May 2016 01:10 AM
07 May 2016 01:10 AM
Re: Mindfulness Meditation
i think it builds patience and tolerance. maybe makes you more relaxed and chilled out, you pretty much train yourself in meditation to observe thoughts and not react, it works well when not meditating too.
you can start with a few minutes, there's no set time. i used to find the first 5 minutes could be patchy before i settled into a zone. about 20 mins worked well for me,
i've been slack with it and haven't done it regularly, only guided meditations. they can be a good place to start but i like to know what im getting first
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07 May 2016 07:08 AM
07 May 2016 07:08 AM
Re: Mindfulness Meditation
Interesting question! Even though I'm in the thick of it as a person with bipolar who has years and years of real lived experience with depression, I still feel lost and unsure and deeply troubled when a friend or a loved one is suffering from depression. I have even felt impatient about getting the "old them" back to the "normal" world from their depressed state. I miss who they are when they are "normal" (hah! Whatever that means... 🙂 ). I worry deeply for their safety and wellbeing...
It's a very difficult thing to be going through depression. What us "sufferers" often forget though, is that it is also a living hell for our loved ones who patiently nurture and worry and wait for the depression to hopefully lift, sooner rather than later...
At the moment, I have a very close friend whom I love deeply. She is one of the warmest and most caring and articulate people I know... when she isn't depressed. Unfortunately she suffers from lengthy depressions of a year or more sometimes, and retreats totally from contact and communication during these times.
I haven't heard a peep from her in just over a year. It tears me apart. I keep sending warm, caring, loving, understanding messages, and I keep being gentle and supportive... and I keep hearing nothing...
I'm good friends with her neighbours, and they keep an eye out for her - the bins still go out on bin night, and that sort of thing - the occasional short furtive chat over the fence - so I know she is still with us.
So, @nicoleclark - I understand the impatience and desire to get someone back from the clutches of depression. Even with meds and therapy and all the right stuff, it can take months, even years. But I want my friend back now! 😞
And that is where Mindfulness comes to help me. As @plasmo said, it builds tolerance and patience. It calms you down. It allows you to feel all of these intense feelings - impatience, grief, guilt, anger, fear, and all the others - without getting swept away by them.
You learn to observe the feelings inside you, without reacting intensely and strongly to them. It's like being hit by a ton of bricks, but you step aside at the last moment and observe the bricks crashing down on the spot where you were just standing...
Mindfulness is about the Now moment - not the fears and problems and intense feelings of the past or future. It is about accepting "what is", and about seeing a deep insight into what you have the power to change, and what you have no power to change. Having this insight, there is no uncertainty or anxiety or fear or pain - you apply action to change the things within your power to change, and you patiently accept the things you have no power to change...
It removes a lot of pain and conflict from our lives, by coming to the understanding that much of that underlying pain and conflict is generated by ourselves, within ourselves as a reaction to outside events - and that inner reaction is something we have the power to control...
Mindfulness brings about a great sense of peace, and vastly increases our resilience and ability to cope. It is not just for people with mental health issues. It can help every human being to greatly improve the quality of their lives.
To me, Mindfulness is not a structured form of meditation where you sit down cross-legged and try to empty your mind. Mindfulness is a different way of viewing the world and of reacting to it. It is a way of life that stops you being a slave to the psychological concept of time - with all of time's inherent worry and doubt and guilt and fear and frustration and anger and other emotional turmoil...
Quite simply, Mindfulness is life, with all of the silly harmful stuff we normally project onto it removed...
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