Friday, April 24, 2015

Easy Ways To Eat Healthier

Bison by Tucker Smith



"Return of Summer" by Tucker Smith
"Return of Summer" by Tucker Smith


Return of Summer
by Tucker Smith

Winner of the Prix De West, the highest prize of the National Academy of Western Art.

The location of the painting is the area just east of the Rocky Mountains in Montana. It's call the Rocky Mountain front -- where the plains meet the mountains.

This is early summer when the cloud shadows drift across the prairies where the green grass has returned. Here the grasses are flowering but there's still snow on the peaks. The prairie is very colorful with all kinds of flowers. The renewed plant life, the crisp atmosphere and the lingering snow in the high country certainly lifts one's spirit.

 Masterwork by Dan Smith

Dan Smith's "Heavy Hitters"Award-winning wildlife artist Daniel Smith's stunning 48" x 30" MasterWork Edition of Heavy Hitters has entered Low Inventory status. Heavy Hitters received the 2011 Bob Kuhn Wildlife Award for Best Wldlife Painting at the Masters of the American West Exhibition and Sale.



Source:


Jon Kabat-Zinn - Body Scan Meditation - GUIDED MEDITATION

Published on Jun 3, 2014
The spiritual teacher Jon Kabat-Zinn teaches us about body scan meditation
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Wednesday, April 15, 2015

About Breathworks and Mindfulness



About Breathworks and Mindfulness

From humble beginnings to international recognition, Breathworks' mission is to bring mindfulness as a tool for reducing suffering to people worldwide; regardless of their situation.


About Breath­works

"The Breath­works ap­proach to Mind­ful­ness-Based Pain Man­age­ment (MBPM) is the most com­pre­hens­ive, in-depth, sci­en­tific­ally up-to-date and user-friendly ap­proach to learn­ing the how of liv­ing with chronic pain and re­claim­ing one’s life that I know of.....I ad­mire Vidyamala tre­mend­ously... her ap­proach could save your life and give it back to you."

Jon Kabat-Zinn, PhD au­thor of Full Cata­strophe Liv­ing and Com­ing to Our Senses Pro­fessor Emer­itus of the Uni­versity of Mas­sachu­setts Med­ical School.

Breath­works is based on the ex­per­i­ence of Vidyamala Burch who sus­tained a severe spinal in­jury in 1976 when she was six­teen lead­ing to mul­tiple sur­ger­ies and par­tial para­ple­gia. Over 27 years ago she began ex­plor­ing mind­ful­ness and med­it­a­tion to man­age her per­sist­ent pain and in 2001 wondered if she could share these life-chan­ging skills with oth­ers who were suf­fer­ing from pain, stress or ill­ness. She was soon joined by Gary Hen­nes­sey and Sona Fricker, both mind­ful­ness prac­ti­tion­ers for over three dec­ades and to­gether they de­veloped Breath­works as it is today.

Along the way, Vidyamala wrote two books Liv­ing Well with Pain and Ill­ness and Mind­ful­ness for Health (co-writ­ten with Danny Pen­man). These form the 'back­bone' of the Breath­works ap­proach to mind­ful­ness-based pain and ill­ness man­age­ment (MBPM) and the Mind­ful­ness for Health course.

To fur­ther de­velop the Breath­works Ap­proach, Gary Hen­nes­sey com­bined his ex­per­i­ence of MBPM, med­it­a­tion and mind­ful­ness to cre­ate the pop­u­lar Mind­ful­ness for Stress course, which has helped hun­dreds of people to find bal­ance in their lives.

As Breath­works grows, so does the core team, the in­ter­na­tional pool of train­ers and the com­munity of Breath­works teach­ers and course gradu­ates. Today, thou­sands of people world­wide have be­nefited from the Breath­works mind­ful­ness meth­ods for man­aging pain, stress and ill­ness.


You Are Not your PainUsing Mindfulness to Relieve Pain, Reduce Stress, and Restore Well-being---an Eight-week ProgramBy Burch, VidyamalaBook - 2015

What is Mind­ful­ness?

There are many ways to de­scribe mind­ful­ness in­clud­ing:
"Mind­ful­ness means de­lib­er­ately at­tend­ing to and be­com­ing more aware of our ex­per­i­ence: our thoughts, feel­ings and body sen­sa­tions. This al­lows us to clearly per­ceive thoughts, phys­ical sen­sa­tions, emo­tions and events at the mo­ment they occur without re­act­ing in an auto­matic or ha­bitual way. Ex­per­i­ences don’t over­whelm us and we be­come steady through life’s ups and downs."

Hun­dreds of books have been writ­ten on this very sub­ject and yet it is still a chal­lenge is to de­scribe it in a nut­shell.

Per­haps the most con­cise way to de­scribe Mind­ful­ness is that it is simply as a spe­cial kind of aware­ness. This means you can be fully 'awake' to life in each present mo­ment; fully alive and vi­brant.
Mind­ful­ness works! Try it and you’ll dis­cover its be­ne­fits and its magic. Once learnt, it is freely avail­able to every­one, any time, no mat­ter your age, gender, re­li­gion or cul­tural back­ground. (read more)
In order to share this won­der­ful tool called 'mind­ful­ness', the founders of Breath­works have de­veloped courses and re­sources that can be ac­cessed in a num­ber of ways. So wherever you are, whatever your health and mo­bil­ity, you can find a way to learn mind­ful­ness for re­liev­ing the suf­fer­ing that comes from liv­ing with pain, ill­ness or stress­ful cir­cum­stances.

We are also ded­ic­ated to train­ing as many people as we can to teach mind­ful­ness to oth­ers.

We do hope you enjoy ex­plor­ing our web­site and you find what you are look­ing for...

Find out more about:




Link: http://www.breathworks-mindfulness.org.uk/aboutbreathworks



Mindfulness and the Brain



Dec 2014

Mindfulness and the Brain




Neuroscience has shown that the brain changes with experience.

Taxi drivers who have ferried passengers around London for years have larger hippocampi, a region of the brain important for spatial awareness and memory, compared to newer cab drivers.

Similarly, experienced musicians show higher grey matter volume in motor, auditory and visual-spatial regions, suggesting their brains have been altered through daily practice.

When the brain is damaged – such as during a stroke – it is possible to recover lost capacity through therapy. Other areas of the brain take over from those damaged.

The brain’s ability to adapt in response to experience is known as neuroplasticity. Just as exercise affects the body, the same is true of the brain. This process can happen quite quickly: learning to juggle or play the piano over just a few days alters brain density.

This is empowering news because it suggests that we aren’t stuck with our old brains and our old habits. We can plough new furrows, cultivating freedom to shape the future, based on what we do in the present, or how we train the mind.

Link: http://www.breathworks-mindfulness.org.uk/


Source:
http://www.theschooloflife.com/london/

Researchers have explored the neuroplastic changes that occur with mindfulness training, and are finding that practitioners’ brains seem to reflect their expertise. 

Activity, structure and volume are different in parts of the pre-frontal cortex, the area of the brain which is associated strongly with reasoning and decision making. 

Experienced meditators also show high levels of gamma wave activity, which is thought to be related to increased awareness.

Changes start to be seen in the brains of new meditators after a few days or weeks of training. As they practise mindfulness, regions of the brain related to learning, memory, mind-body awareness, cognitive control, emotional reactivity, sense of self and other markers of well-being are all affected.

It doesn’t take much, it appears, for patterns of activity in the brain to shift. As new grooves are formed in our ways of seeing, relating and behaving, so these are reflected and perhaps reinforced by neural shifts.

This is an extract from Mindfulness: How To Live Well By Paying Attention, by Ed Halliwell, published by Hay House Basics on 5 Jan 2015.

Ed is a faculty member at The School of Life and teaches a number of classes on Mindfulness.




MINDFULNESS AT THE SCHOOL OF LIFE




NURTURE YOUR BRAIN WITH THE SCHOOL OF LIFE







Intensive
Mindfulness Course
An integrative, mind-body approach to life that helps people relate effectively to their experiences. An eight week course lead by Ed Halliwell.




Intensive
Mindfulness at Work
An approach to life that increases awareness and creates space for wise choices both in and out of the office. A class lead by Ed Halliwell.




Intensive
Yoga as Therapy
Bringing together mindfulness meditation, breathing, and yoga to give you a toolkit to manage your mental wellbeing. An eight week course lead by Veena Ugargol .

 UK-based mindfulness teacher and writer and the author of Mindfulness: How To Live Well By Paying Attention and 

co-author of The Mindful Manifesto: How Doing Less And Noticing More Can Help Us Thrive In A Stressed-Out World .

He leads public mindfulness courses, workshops and retreats in London, Surrey and Sussex, and have introduced and taught mindfulness in organisations such as Citibank, UNICEF UK, Imperial College Business School and Ardingly College.



Meditation can ease the stress of daily life


Coping with anxiety: Newsmen share strategies, including meditation

DAVID LEVINE

Good Morning America (tv program)UCLA

Dan Harris of 'Good Morning America' uses mindfulness meditation to cope with panic attacks

Scott Stossel, editor of the Atlantic magazine, speaks about his struggles with anxiety

When Dan Harris had a panic attack while reading the news on "Good Morning America," he decided he had to make some changes in his life. "My panic attack was not only seen by my colleagues but, according to the Nielsen ratings, over 5 million viewers," he said.

Unlike Harris, whose anxiety started when he was an adult, Scott Stossel, the editor of the Atlantic magazine, has coped with anxiety since childhood. "Since the age of about 2, I have been a twitchy bundle of phobias, fears and neuroses. And I have, since the age of 10, when I was first taken to a mental hospital for evaluation and then referred to a psychiatrist for treatment, tried in various ways to overcome my anxiety," he wrote in the magazine.

My shrink thought that my moods when I came home might be due to missing the rush of being in danger and my drug use was a way to try and bring back the highs.- Dan Harris

The men have a lot in common. They are high-profile media professionals in their 40s who come from high-achieving families. Harris' parents are doctors. Stossel's father is a doctor and his mother a lawyer.

Both were begged by their mothers not to publish their stories. And both have written bestselling books about their anxiety (Stossel wrote "My Age of Anxiety: Fear, Hope, Dread, and the Search for Peace of Mind"; Harris wrote "10% Happier: How I Tamed the Voice in My Head, Reduced Stress Without Losing My Edge, and Found Self-Help That Actually Works — A True Story"). They spoke about their struggles at a forum in New York.

Where they differ is how they cope.

Stossel has tried every prescription drug on the market. To deal with the stress of public speaking and flying, two of his phobias, Stossel arms himself with a cocktail of drugs that includes Xanax, Inderal (a heart medication that is used for performance anxiety) and vodka or scotch.

In general, though, Stossel takes the antidepressant Celexa daily and Xanax when he needs it. "I always carry Xanax with me. In fact, I carry two sets of pills in case I lose one." And writing helps, he said. "I no longer live with a secret. To my amazement, my colleagues never knew I was suffering."

At first I was very skeptical [about mindfulness meditation]. I felt my anxiety gave me an edge and kept me competitive. I was wrong. It was ruining my life.- Dan Harris

Harris' colleagues did not know either. In his book, he speaks about working as a young reporter who regularly used cocaine, Ecstasy, marijuana and alcohol. "Drugs made me feel better while I was on them, but when they wore off I was miserable."

Harris has covered wars in Afghanistan, Israel and Iraq and reported from Haiti, Cambodia and Congo. "My shrink thought that my moods when I came home might be due to missing the rush of being in danger and my drug use was a way to try and bring back the highs," he said.

Although Harris was prescribed antidepressants, he also tried mindfulness meditation. "At first I was very skeptical," Harris said. "I felt my anxiety gave me an edge and kept me competitive. I was wrong. It was ruining my life."

Meditation is widely used today in schools, workplaces and the military to encourage calmness, relieve stress and focus attention.

For his part, Stossel said he found meditation too difficult. "I am too anxious to sit down and try it. Hopefully one day I will," he said.

Harris meditates 30 to 35 minutes a day and has introduced meditation to colleagues at ABC News. "They were all very supportive of my struggles and the fact that I published a book that I feared could end my career. And they saw I was a happier and, hopefully, better journalist and colleague."

health@latimes.com



Meditation can ease the stress of daily life

Giving meditation a chance — to help with anxiety or just make life a little calmer and less stressful — takes just a few minutes a day.

There are many free or low-cost apps and downloads, as well as classes at meditation and community centers. Some employers and healthcare centers offer meditation instruction. Mindfulness meditation, a common style of practice, has its roots in Buddhism but is not a religious program. It has become secularized through the work of people such as Jon-Kabat Zinn, a doctor and professor at the University of Massachusetts. An estimated 20 million Americans meditate.

Meditation can be done sitting, walking, gardening or cooking, and in as few as five minutes a day, experts say. What's key is focused, nonjudgmental attention to the moment. Often, that is achieved by focusing on breathing.

UCLA offers a free meditation session on Thursdays at lunchtime at the Hammer Museum in Westwood. It's often conducted by Diana Winston, one of the nation's best-known teachers of mindfulness meditation and director of mindfulness education at UCLA's Mindful Awareness Research Center (www.marc.ucla.edu).

Another mindfulness training group, InsightLA, has been teaching meditation for more than a decade in Los Angeles (www.insightla.org). 

Free Mindfulness offers various free meditation downloads (www.freemindfulness.org).

—Mary MacVean

mary.macvean@latimes.com

Follow me on Twitter: @mmacvean

Los Angeles Times


Meditation Techniques


Mindfulness Meditation of the Body and Breath

Every meditation tradition begins with daily practices that help to focus a scattered mind. A great way of doing this is to focus on a single object that is always with you: the movement of the breath in the body. This eight-minute meditation is a brilliant introduction to Mindfulness. It will begin the process of putting you back in control of your life. All of the meditations on this page are taken from our book ‘Mindfulness: Finding Peace in a Frantic World’. The book contains the complete 8 week mindfulness course developed at Oxford University.





Sounds and Thoughts Meditation

Sounds are as compelling as thoughts and just as immaterial and open to interpretation. For this reason, the Sounds and Thoughts Meditation is my personal favourite as it elegantly reveals how the mind conjures up thoughts that can so easily lead us astray. Once you realise this – deep in your heart – then a great many of your troubles will simply evaporate before your eyes. All of the meditations on this page are taken from our book ‘Mindfulness: Finding Peace in a Frantic World’. The book contains the complete 8 week mindfulness course developed at Oxford University.


Three Minute Breathing Space

This is a mini-meditation that can put you back in control of your life when it starts to slip between your fingers. It acts as a bridge between the longer, formal meditations detailed in our book Mindfulness and the demands of everyday life. All of the meditations on this page are taken from our book ‘Mindfulness: Finding Peace in a Frantic World’. The book contains the complete 8 week mindfulness course developed at Oxford University.

Silent Meditation (with bells at 5, 10, 15, 20 and 30 mins)

There comes a point when it’s time to move on from the prescriptive audio meditations in our book Mindfulness (and from MBCT and MBSR in general). Ultimately, mindfulness meditation is about sitting silently and observing the thoughts as they arise in your mind before dissolving away again. This audio track can help you along this route. It is pure silence interspersed with gentle bells at 5, 10, 15, 20 and 30 minutes to mark the time. It will help boost your confidence and help you to pace yourself as you gradually learn to meditate without guidance. It’s the perfect end note (and accompaniment) to our book Mindfulness:Finding Peace in a Frantic World. We wish you luck as you continue on your journey.



Source: http://cdn.franticworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/30-Mins-Silence-from-book-Mindfulness-Finding-Peace-in-a-Frantic-World-Bells-At-5-10-15-20-30-Minutes-128kbs.mp3


Vincent Van Gogh

"Let’s not forget that the little emotions are the great captains of our lives and that we obey them without realizing it."

—Vincent Van Gogh


Tuesday, April 14, 2015

How can mindfulness change your life"Jon Kabat Zin.


Published on Aug 20, 2013

How can mindfulness change your life Jon Kabat Zin talks about how it works.


The history of clinical stress Jon Kabat Zinn (click subtitles for the French version)

The Centre for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care, and Society is a 

visionary force and global leader in mind-body medicine. 

For thirty years, we have pioneered the integration of mindfulness 

meditation and other approaches based on mindfulness in traditional 

medicine and health through patient care, academic medical research and 

vocational training, and in society in general through various outreach 

initiatives and public service. 

Directed by Saki F. Santorelli, EDD, MA, since 2000 and founded in 1995 

by Jon Kabat-Zinn, Ph.D., of the Centre is an outgrowth of the famous 

Stress Reduction Clinic - the oldest and the largest university medical 

centre based on the reduction of stress in the world. 


Association for the Development of Mindfulness



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Monday, April 6, 2015

Self-Acceptance Quotes

“Once we believe in ourselves, we can risk curiosity, wonder, spontaneous delight, or any experience that reveals the human spirit”
― E.E. Cummings

“The most terrifying thing is to accept oneself completely.” 
― C.G. Jung


“We can never obtain peace in the outer world until we make peace with ourselves.” 

― Dalai Lama XIV


“It's not worth our while to let our imperfections disturb us always.” 

― Henry David Thoreau

“Because true belonging only happens when we present our authentic, imperfect selves to the world, our sense of belonging can never be greater than our level of self-acceptance.” 
― BrenĂ© Brown   

“If you begin to understand what you are without trying to change it, then what you are undergoes a transformation.” 
― Jiddu Krishnamurti

“I now see how owning our story and loving ourselves through that process is the bravest thing that we will ever do.” 
― BrenĂ© Brown

“At 30 a man should know himself like the palm of his hand, know the exact number of his defects and qualities, know how far he can go, foretell his failures - be what he is. And, above all, accept these things.” 
― Albert Camus

"Self-acceptance means living the life you choose to live without worrying what others think about you. It doesn’t matter what someone else thinks about you. What matters is what you think about yourself. Life is about choices—your life choices, not someone else’s choice about how you should live.” 
― Sadiqua Hamdan, Happy Am I. Holy Am I. Healthy Am I.


“Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle with yourself.
You are a child of the universe, no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here.
And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.” 

― Max EhrmannDesiderata: A Poem for a Way of Life


“There comes a time in each life like a point of fulcrum. At that time you must accept yourself. It is not any more what you will become. It is what you are and always will be. You are too young to know this. You are still becoming. Not being.” 
― John FowlesThe Magus


“What is freedom? It consists in two things: to know each his own limitations and accept them – that is the same thing as to know oneself, and accept oneself as one is, without fear, or envy, or distaste; and to recognise and accept the conditions under which one lives, also without fear or envy, or distaste. When you do this, you shall be free.” 
― Ann BridgeIllyrian Spring
 

Meditation

the impact of meditation on the brain -- 11/3/14

Today's selection -- from "Mind of the Meditator" by Matthieu Ricard, Antoine Lutz and Richard J. Davidson. Brain imaging shows that when we master a task such as playing an instrument or the advanced performance in a sport, specific parts of the brain are transformed -- certain neural pathways grow and strengthen. Neuroscientists have now shown that the same is true for mastery of meditation with direct benefits for improving focus, overcoming depression, dealing with pain and cultivating emotional well-being:
"A comparison of the brain scans of meditators with tens of thousands of hours of practice with those of neophytes and nonmeditators has started to explain why this set of techniques for training the mind holds great potential for supplying cognitive and emotional benefits. ...
"The discovery of meditation's benefits coincides with recent neuroscientific findings showing that the adult brain can still be deeply transformed through experience. These studies show that when we learn how to juggle or play a musical instrument, the brain undergoes changes through a process called neuroplasticity. A brain region that controls the movement of a violinist's fingers becomes progressively larger with mastery of the instrument. A similar process appears to happen when we meditate. Nothing changes in the surrounding environment, but the meditator regulates mental states to achieve a form of inner enrichment, an experience that affects brain functioning and its physical structure. The evidence amassed from this research has begun to show that meditation can rewire brain circuits to produce salutary effects not just on the mind and the brain but on the entire body. ...
A) 12 expert meditators had greater overlap of increased activation of attention-related 
brain regions. B) 12 non-meditators had less overlap and activation. Orange hues equal
higher correlation between individuals & activation. Blue hues equal little to 
no correlation between regions of activation.
"Neuroscientists have now begun to probe what happens inside the brain during the various types of meditation. Wendy Hasenkamp, then at Emory University, and her colleagues used brain imaging to identify the neural networks activated by focused- attention meditation. ... Advanced meditators appear to acquire a level of skill that enables them to achieve a focused state of mind with less effort. These effects resemble the skill of expert musicians and athletes capable of immersing themselves in the 'flow' of their performances with a minimal sense of effortful control. ...
"In our Wisconsin lab, we have studied experienced practitioners while they performed an advanced form of mindfulness meditation called open presence. In open presence, sometimes called pure awareness, the mind is calm and relaxed, not focused on anything in particular yet vividly clear, free from excitation or dullness. The meditator observes and is open to experience without making any attempt to interpret, change, reject or ignore painful sensation. We found that the intensity of the pain was not reduced in meditators, but it bothered them less than it did members of a control group. Compared with novices, expert meditators' brain activity diminished in anxiety-related regions -- the insular cortex and the amygdala -- in the period preceding the painful stimulus. The meditators' brain response in pain-related regions became accustomed to the stimulus more quickly than that of novices after repeated exposures to it. Other tests in our lab have shown that meditation training increases one's ability to better control and buffer basic physiological responses -- inflammation or levels of a stress hormone -- to a socially stressful task such as giving a public speech or doing mental arithmetic in front of a harsh jury.
"Several studies have documented the benefits of mindfulness on symptoms of anxiety and depression and its ability to improve sleep patterns. By deliberately monitoring and observing their thoughts and emotions when they feel sad or worried, depressed patients can use meditation to manage negative thoughts and feelings as they arise spontaneously and so lessen rumination. Clinical psychologists John Teasdale, then at the University of Cambridge, and Zindel Segal of the University of Toronto showed in 2000 that for patients who had previously suffered at least three episodes of depression, six months of mindfulness practice, along with cognitive therapy, reduced the risk of relapse by nearly 40 percent in the year following the onset of a severe depression. More recently, Segal demonstrated that the intervention is superior to a placebo and has a protective effect against relapse comparable to standard maintenance antidepressant therapy. ...
"About 15 years of research have done more than show that meditation produces significant changes in both the function and structure of the brains of experienced practitioners. These studies are now starting to demonstrate that contemplative practices may have a substantive impact on biological processes critical for physical health."


author: "Mind of the Meditator"
title: Matthieu Ricard, Antoine Lutz and Richard J. Davidson
publisher: Scientific American
date: November 2014
pages: 39-45