Full Catastrophe Living by Jon Kabat Zinn
Chapter 1: You Have Only Moments to Live 2
Chapter 2 The Foundations of Mindfulness Practice: Attitudes and Commitment 3
Chapter 3 The power of breathing 3
Chapter 4: Sitting Mediation 4
Chapter 5 Being in Your Body: The Body-Scan Meditation 4
Chapter 6 Cultivating Strength 5
Chapter 7 Walking Meditation 5
Chapter 8 A day of mindfulness 5
Chapter 9 Really doing what you’re doing 5
Chapter 10 Getting started in practice 6
Chapter 11 Introduction to the paradigm 7
Chapter 12 Glimpses of wholeness 7
Chapter 13 On healing 8
Chapter 14 Doctors, Patients and people 9
Chapter 15 Mind and Body: Evidence That Beliefs, Attitudes, Thoughts, and Emotions Can Harm or Heal 10
Chapter 16 Connectedness and interconnectedness 11
Chapter 17 Stress 13
Chapter 18 Change, the one thing you can be sure of 14
Chapter 19 Stuck in stress reactivity 14
Chapter 20 Responding to stress as opposed to reacting 15
Chapter 21 Working with symptoms: listening to your body 16
Chapter 22 Working with Physical Pain: Your Pain Is Not You 17
Chapter 23 More on working with pain 19
Chapter 24 Working with emotional pain 20
Chapter 25 Working with Fear, Panic, and Anxiety 22
Chapter 26 Time and Time Stress 23
Chapter 27 Sleep and Sleep stress 25
Chapter 28 People stress 25
Chapter 29 Role Stress 26
Chapter 30 Work stress 27
Chapter 31 Food stress 28
Chapter 32 World Stress 29
Chapter 33 New Beginnings 30
Chapter 34 Keeping up formal practice 30
Chapter 35 Keeping up informal practice 30
Chapter 36 The way of awareness 30
Chapter 1: You Have Only Moments to Live
In mindfulness we are paying attention, observing what we
are doing. Mindfulness is non doing, that allows us to be aware of what we are
doing, what are senses are engaging with
and how our bodies are. So to fully pay
attention to tasting, seeing. This can make our senses more vivid. We can pay
attention to what we are doing, which can give us more information about what
we are doing and then make better choices. Thus mindfulness can be a prelude to action.
With out thoughts we can pay attention to them, label them,
and let them go. In doing this we can
see our repeated patterns, and we can
choose to engage with them or not, if they are helpful to us.
Thing is whilst this has a point, that we can be attentive
to our perception, which can lead to sensation and information. There is, I
would argue no raw moment, rather there is a multiplicity of sensation, that
involves past (to make sense of), future in terms of plans, and not now, i.e.
how the world should be which derives into future. This is coming from the ecstatic sense of
time from Heidegger. I would also add from Gendlin that we have a sense that is
our experience, and we can engage with that via certain labels. It doesn’t seem
that we could ever run out of those labels, the sense seems infinite. Likewise add in the sense that our sense has a
direction that is implicit, and could be carried forward in several ways, there
is no definitive now that mindfulness could engage in.
Chapter 2 The Foundations of Mindfulness Practice:
Attitudes and Commitment
We judge the world, and we like to try to get it to turn out
how we want it. The core philosophy of
mindfulness is non - judging , patience , a beginner’s mind , trust , non -
striving , acceptance , and letting go .
We categorize and judge so quickly it becomes automatic, and
conceive that that’s how the world is
Non judging and beginners mind, allows us to know more, patience can be
useful to allow things to unfold, and to see all of it, Trust again can trust the description you
have rather than an authority, non-striving allows you to stay
phenomenologically with the experience. Acceptance
is accepting things as they are now, you may not like it but that’s how they
are, it allows you again to move closer to it.
Acceptance can form a good basis for action, I am overweight, so it
would help if I ate less. Letting go of striving, of understanding lets us
engage with our experience.
For me this again is a helpful initial practice, as when you
are more aware, then you can take the action that best suits you. At points in
your living, you will not want to be mindful of your whole experience, you
would base your action on previous awareness.
Chapter 3 The power of breathing
The rhythm of the planet, the ebb and flow of the tides, the
seasons, the rhythm of creatures, the birth and death, the inhale and exhale,
the nourish, and the purify, the rhythm of life. It feels luxurious to link the
breath to the tides.
We have feelings of panic when we hyper ventilate. When we meditate we pay attention, one
classic meditation is to pay attention to the breathing. Paying attention to your breathing can, quite
naturally, move you into diaphragmatic breathing as this is the original way we
learnt to breathe.
As we meditate with the breath, then we disengage with thoughts,
we observe them, so they are less
agitating. This in turn slows our breathing, this in turn gives signals to the
automatic nervous system and the para
sympathetic, which triggers the rest and digest mode.
If your abdomen is tight it restricts the diaphragm and
therefore the breath,
Chapter 4: Sitting Mediation
The meditation of the breath is a non-doing. It is paying
attention to the breath and just being aware of this. Being with the sensation of the breath,
observing any distractions and returning to the breath.
If you are distracted by the pain of sitting, then observing
the pain and returning to the breath. This can help in time to your powers of
concentration, calmness and awareness
and to help you respond with awareness to events rather than automatically
react. To help with pain, you can
breathe into the pain and out of it.
If you are distracted by a thought, then you might observe
and return to the breath. In doing this you are teaching yourself that your
thoughts aren’t facts, they aren’t you or reality. Many thoughts will come and
go over your lifetime. What you think is reality now will change, what you
desire will change, at best all a thought is, is representative of what you think the world is at the moment, or what
you think you are at the moment, but both will change.
Choiceless awareness, is just being aware with whatever
comes, to notice and return to being aware.
Of course there is a contradiction in this, meditation is a
doing, it is the doing of meditation. It is dropping out of the base engagement
with the world, which is to use it.
Chapter 5 Being in Your Body: The Body-Scan
Meditation
We are so preoccupied with how our body looks and so out of
touch with it from the inside.
We get preoccupied with our bodies as we are growing up,
perpetuated in society and within media
and advertising, and those with the desired bodies get infatuated with
themselves and attention and other people highly desire that they had similar
bodies. Then this stays and we have a deep insecurity with our body and are
never at home in it.
We can change this by moving from appearance and judgement
of our bodies to experiencing them.
If during the body scan you feel an insistent pain, then if
it keeps taking your attention to it, then move your attention back to the
place where you want it, and breath in and out of that region. Then you come to the problem area, and just
notice, breathe in and out of it, and move on to the next area.
Thus, you are practicing moving through the region of
maximum intensity and also making it wait its turn for attention, whilst you
give attention to other parts of the body.
If the pain is too intense, then another approach is to go
to the area of maximum intensity and breathe in and out of it. As you do this notice how your sensations
change in quality. If it subsides enough go to other areas.
Chapter 6 Cultivating Strength
When we feel ill or in pain, we tend to stop and rest and
then the rest of our body atrophies. Disuse
atrophy is when something isn’t used it weakens.
Part of yoga is to reconnect ourselves with our wholeness of
all the parts of us that do work. In yoga we stretch and strengthen.
When we’re ill we can become preoccupied with being ill and
the rest of the world and our body gets lost. In doing yoga then it can gently
return.
From a therapeutic perspective, yoga would stretch and
strengthen the mind, so increase perspective, mental flexibility and self-efficacy
through strength.
Chapter 7 Walking Meditation
If you do a walking meditation, keep your focus on one
aspect of walking rather than moving it around. In anchoring you then get to
notice distraction.
Chapter 8 A day of mindfulness
Not much to say here, retreats can be powerful
Chapter 9 Really doing what you’re doing
Some people get busy to avoid something, this can lead to
half doing the thing that they are doing. The doing becomes an avoidance, a
time filler.
Fully engaging with what
you are doing, the sensations of it, can invigorate the thing being
done, give more information about the thing being done, so can lead you to do
it in different ways and also give you a powerful sense of having done it. For instance,
people can overeat as they never have fully engaged with their eating, so need
to eat more.
Likewise, things can seem more stimulating and less like a
chore, when you fully engage with them. So mindful engagement can lessen the
load. Likewise, in engaging with the full experience of activities, you can see
your thoughts and emotions that appear whilst doing the activity, which again,
can illuminate the meaning of the activity and can change how you do it.
You can also in mundane activities engage with impermanence,
as you clean the dishes, you can notice how many times you will do this.
Chapter 10 Getting started in practice
All this refers to Jon Kabat Zinn’s audio
Weeks 1 & 2
Daily
Body scan + mindfulness of breath + informal practice
Weeks 3 &4
Daily
Alternate Body Scan and Mindful Yoga + mindfulness of breath
+ informal practice
Weeks 5&6
Daily
Sitting practice alternated with Mindful Yoga+ choiceless
awareness + informal practice
Week 7
Self-directed practice for 45 minutes from above choices
without the audio
Week 8
Self-directed practice for 45 minutes from above choices
with the audio
Chapter 11 Introduction to the paradigm
Integrative medicine is seeing body and mind as involved in
healing.
Participatory medicine is people being involved in their
healing by doing things, rehabilitating physically and mentally, for instance meditation
and yoga.
Body and mind being connected, then you need to notice the
relationship between the two, to understand any ease or dis-ease.
If you think of the complexity of the interaction between
the bodily systems, and the mental system, then you have a huge allostatic
system, which contains many homeostatic systems. This in turn implies the environmental
systems that this body is part of and then connects the whole of experience
from the “inner” to the “outer”, one large system.
In some ways this points towards wholeness, one system from
environmental connected to the body\mind system.
Chapter 12 Glimpses of wholeness
Have you engaged with a being, fully engaged with them?
Being with an animal say a pet, and feeling the sense of them existing now,
experiencing them in their fullness, all of them. The wonder of them all. Sometimes our
thoughts, judgements, categorisations can get in the way of the wonder of all,
of the natural world.
If you think about your body and its abilities it is quite
extraordinary. Speech, digestion, walking, talking, thinking, seeing, it all is
quite amazing, and takes a level of sophistication far beyond human ingenuity. Our body is a universe of 10 trillion cells
born of a single cell. Our bodies are self-organising
and self-healing.
Our language and concepts are learnt from others, and then
embed within our bodies to drive and organise their behaviour, which in turn
creates the allostatic conditions that our bodies tune in to.
Our world is constructed out of the physical and psychic
systems that both form us and are structures in which we live. From the systems
in our bodies, the systems of thought\belief and their interconnections, the
relationships between people, the natural systems of meteorology, of geology,
systems, within systems.
Our minds seem at times like magnets to simplicity and to
avoid novelty. So habitual ways of thinking dominate.
The argument from JKZ is that if you do not identify a
system in its entirety, you will never establish a satisfactory solution.
However, given the argument above, about systems, within, systems, this is
quite a large claim!
Habitual thinking can get supported by behaviours, e.g. “I can’t
drive”, so I avoid driving and prove my belief. So, in this instance one
system, our mental one, restricts our behavioural one.
JKZ argues that meditation, being, connects us with our
wholeness. Hmm that’s quite a statement, and I’m not sure that I agree with as
you seem to need to go outside the moment to get there.
In our living we get hurt, so we carry around both
psychological, behavioural, and physical armour.
Health is a dynamic process that depends on the operation of
a system and its interaction with others.
Wholeness and interconnectedness are the most fundamental
aspect for us as humans.
Chapter 13 On healing
Health comes from the word “whole” and “holy”. Healing comes to mean engaging with the sense
of wholeness that you are, and interconnectedness.
There is a coming to peace with what is, you don’t need to
like it. In this way you reduce the suffering from the pain if that’s what you
feel. The sense of wholeness means to be
complete, to have nothing missing. You can experience this by being aware. As
you observe your experience, even if you like or dislike, then this moment is
complete there’s nothing missing, you are fully engaged in the experience and
therefore you are whole, you are at home in the moment.
The sense of wholeness is also a sense of perfection as you
are, even If you have imperfections. There is wonder in your being as you are. Likewise,
as you inhabit this present moment in awareness then you are whole. Nothing is
missing in this present moment, it is everything.
It is as a whole human being, that our internal systems make
sense
Wholeness goes with interconnectedness as is an antidote to
fragmentation and isolation which case suffering.
Meditation is less likely to be healing if you are using it
to get somewhere.
Meditation is
residing in the stillness of being, just engaging in awareness in the
present moment.
Chapter 14 Doctors, Patients and people
The brain isn’t a fixed organ, the body isn’t a fixed organ.
We have neuroplasticity in the brain, where what fires together wires together
and conversely connections aren’t used will be pruned.
The body isn’t a fixed organ and epigenetics turn on and off
genes dependent on the influence of the environment.
Epigenetics can reduce inflammation, which in turn can have
a powerful effect on some diseases.
The mind across both brain and body, is a very powerful
aspect. The placebo effect is the most reliable medical effect which is
entirely controlled by the mind.
Telomeres are at the end of chromosomes and play a key role
in cell replication. Stress reduces the size of telomeres and therefore their
effectiveness. Stress therefore ages us . People can put large amounts of faith
in modern medicine because of its success, but then also don’t see the areas
where medicine doesn’t know, cant explain, until it happens to their body or
the body of someone they love.
Taking the approach of medicine will fix me, can reduce the
sense of people looking after their own health.
Personal beliefs have a large influence on suffering and
dying. They can both reduce suffering and stave off dying.
Dr Engels proposed the biopsychosocial model, that argues
that a person disease or rehabilitation from a disease is an outcome of
biology, psychology and sociology.
Many aspects of the body, that were though involuntary,
heart rate, skin temperature, brain wave were thought to be automatic, but can
be influenced by biofeedback. So, a machine can give feedback to patient which
can affect these areas, same as acupuncture. The idea here as well is that
meditation can do the same.
Chapter 15 Mind and Body: Evidence That Beliefs,
Attitudes, Thoughts, and Emotions Can Harm or Heal
Cognitive healing aspects
Self-efficacy: comes from both the belief in your abilities,
and memories of having achieved things that are important to you. The higher
level of self-efficacy, then the higher the confidence, and the higher the
ability to achieve things. Self-efficacy
also increases if you are inspired by other people, seeing what they can do\achieve.
Stress hardy individuals have high levels of control,
commitment and challenge.
Challenge that you can grow\get rewards through overcoming
Being healthy means you can restore balance, after a
stressful situation. This is enabled via coherence, having a solid view of
yourself and the world. This coherence in turn is enabled by comprehensibility,
meaningfulness and manageability. So, with
comprehensibility, you can make sense of the stressful event, within terms of
the world view, likewise it is meaningful within terms of the world view and
then it is also manageable, i.e. that you have the resources to manage the
stressful event.
MBSR, according to JKZ studies, increases stress hardiness
and sense of coherence . These factors
have been personality aspects, so the small, 5% increase from MBSR is rather
surprising.
Why would that be though?
I guess if you can observe better, then your ability to
manage your emotions increases, and your pain.
This would increase stress hardiness.
I guess mindfulness can enrich your engagement with the world, so part
of your worldview would be I can engage and get value from the simplest things
which I guess would make your world view more flexible.
Emotional healing aspects
Feeling a lack of closeness with your parents, ambivalence
to relationships and life, correlates with getting cancer, this is shown from a
40-year study. Suppression of emotions,
difficulty expressing emotions also correlates with cancer.
Strong positive emotions, or total denial helps with cancer
survival.
Studies in animals show a link between helpless and the
immune system, with animals who exhibit helpless having less natural killer
cells, which ward off illness.
Some people believe that cancer cells are produced all the
time, but the immune system standardly kills them, so a weakened immune system
leads to cancer.
Stressed power motivation,
a trait that indicates a higher susceptibility to disease.
Stressed power motivation sees people have a desire to have
power over people, and they are aggressive, argumentative and competitive. They
want status and prestige not affiliation. They tend to get ill when stress and
stressed when their personal sense of power is diminished.
On the other side
people who want to affiliate for no other purpose than to connect with people
tend to have a lower tendency to disease.
Again, MBSR testing by JKZ showed that levels of affiliation
increased over the course.
Social isolation correlates with premature death and tend to
be both psychologically and physically less healthy.
In summary thoughts and feeling that foster hopeless and
helpless feelings, a cynicism towards others, loss of control and cynicism. Emotional suppression and social
isolation all appear to be correlative to poor health
Chapter 16 Connectedness and interconnectedness
When you care about a living being, that being needs you.
You are valuable to it. When its yourself, you have more control and are more
subject than object. When you are in
relationship then you belong to a group bigger than you, there is you and the
other. All of this can give meaning to
life, and make you more resistant to ill health as studies have shown.
Connection between people is when each are present with the
other, and the other can see that, or feel that, though, sight, touch and
hearing. Connection is also about
responsiveness to need, to be met emotionally, as I am scared with another so
connection is about validation of that emotion and response to it
Dan Siegel argues that the tenets and teachings of MBSR
exactly mirror the tenets of secure attachment, I guess through the attachment
to your experience.
The body has several systems that look to self-regulate,
food for instance.
You have a budget of what is expected, then then you need to
translate that to food requirements. This requires information coming from
various internal and external systems. E.g. it’s a cold day, you’re going to go
for a walk, it used x amount of energy last time. Dr Schwarz saw that humans
that get sick have dysregulated systems, as there is a disruption to feedback
loops, so for instance the ability to be aware of how full you feel. If you
aren’t aware of those signals as you ignore them then that feedback loop
wouldn’t work, and you could eat too
much. For him disordered behaviour is a
disease.
So for me eating too much fat possibly clogged my arteries,
which caused heart disease. I’m not sure
how the feedback loops didn’t work, in terms of eating too much fat, again
that’s speculative as oppose epigenetics narrowing arteries. I guess if you
consider that babies know what they need to each there would be a muddying of
these feedback loops to get disordered eating, when you would eat for comfort
and rewards.
Schwarzes argument is that it is dis-attention, that leads
to disconnection, which leads to dysregulation which leads to disease. This is
a big statement as there is so much that we could attend to within and without
our bodies, such that we could almost make paying attention to our bodies a full-time
event.
It also works on the other side; attention leads to
connection. I guess it also can lead to amplification, pay attention to your
hurt foot. So I guess attention needs to be moderated to enable connection. If
I stare at someone that can be quite an aggressive connection.
The argument is that when we are healthy the brain\nervous
system regulates the body. However some functions reach consciousness e.g.
hunger. Sometimes managing the symptoms is an inattention to the feedback
system, for instance if we eat too much food because we are stressed, and we
get heart burn then the feedback loop to listen to is to reduce eating rather
than taking antacid. Likewise work too much get headache take aspirin.
In mindfulness, we pay attention to the body, we observe it,
we listen to it, and therefore we befriend it, as having a more granular
appreciation of what the body is saying can lead to a more accurate response. So,
we are caring more for it.
Again, the argument is wholeness is part of healing and
disconnection relating to disease. This is a major statement as the body has a
variety of systems in it, the body is part of several social systems, each body
is part of meteorological systems, of systems of nature. Of systems of physics
and chemistry. Depending on your perspective you can see many different systems
we are part of.
When we are aware of our thoughts, in mindfulness. This is
tricky as a thought might refer to something, get its meaning within a context
of other thoughts, and be doing something, setting up a certain relationship to
self with the world. Thought is complex, is part of a complexity of meaningful
systems.
Chapter 17 Stress
The word stress refers to both cause and effect. I have a
lot of stress in my life that leads me to feel stressed. Ugly sentence but it
shows the different usage.
Dr Seyle who coined the word stress, thought stress weakens
the immune system.
Whilst demands and therefore stress is part of life, if
stress is chronic\acute then the body will adapt to survive.
The significance of a stressor is modulated by the meaning
we give it, seen as a challenge that will lead to growth as opposed to an
oppressor will change the unpleasantness
of the stressor.
Some stressors given that they happen all the time, we adapt
to and generally don’t notice e.g. gravity. We make adaptions to this, and it
doesn’t cause stress.
Having a sense of control is a modulator to the level of
stress. Learned helplessness is a sense of nothing we do matters.
Mindfulness gives options in terms of our internal reaction
to an event. We can observe it, we can become curious about it, and engage with
it from this side, from that side…
Stress is the appraisal that a relationship you have with
your environment exceeds your resources and threatens your well-being.
I guess mindfulness opens possibilities, we can see more of
our engagement with a situation. So, a car cuts me up, I can initially think he’s
inconsiderate and get angry. But with mindfulness I can open to noticing a
feeling of sadness of someone not caring about me, or fear of threatening my well-being, I can remember
times when I have been inconsiderate, and notice he is very much like me.
If stress relates to our resources, then increasing our bank
account via sleep, intimacy, meditation and exercise can give more ability to
cope. But how does meditation fill our bank account? I guess because with
mindfulness we are more aware of what is, we might notice our thoughts about a
situation and our emotions and in seeing those I guess we can question them.
Are they relevant and proportionate to what is happening now? They might come
from previous times in our lives when they were relevant.
Mindfulness helps us to experience more clearly, so we might
see things that are adversity affecting us, bring consciousness to the
unconscious and be more aware of things we are conscious of.
Chapter 18 Change, the one thing you can be sure of
To realise and accept that there is continual change,
reduces stress and increases well-being as change isn’t seen as unusual\unfair
just part of everyday life.
There is much birth and death, growth and decay within the
body of cells and brain cells. Birth, change death, is the process of life,
sometimes the slowness of change hides this but it is still there. The same is
true for our environment as much as our bodies, all is change.
Claude Bernard argues that the internal systems in the body
help manage the change from the external environment, food, temperature,
predators and the like.
Allostasis is the process of predicting the environment,
physiological\psychological that the body needs to adapt to, as opposed to
responding to the environment, making errors and then correcting them.
Homeostasis refers to systems that relate to immediate
survival, e.g. blood oxygen levels, whereas allostasis refers to longer term
systems which have a greater ranger, e.g. cortisol levels, blood pressure and
fat storage.
Telomeres is at the end of our chromosomes and can extend
our life span.
There are so many systems in the body that operate
automatically, for instance repair systems, the liver. WE can also affect these
systems by our actions, smoking, drinking and the like, makes you wonder why we
can make choices that hurt us?
Homeostasis means remaining stable by staying the same
Allostasis means remaining stable by being able to change
Chapter 19 Stuck in stress reactivity
Most change is handled automatically by the body,
temperature, oxygen disease etc. with automatic systems. So, you could argue
that most stressors are handled automatically.
It can be that are response to stress, in turn creates more
problems. So, busyness, avoidance, use of substance and the like.
We can get external stressors, the tax bill, and internal
stressors, thoughts of not feeling good enough.
You can distinguish between acute and chronic stressors.
Acute can turn into chronic, via worry and rumination.
The ANS triggers the sympathetic system, which includes
adrenaline, and hyperarousal to take in as much information as possible, so
dilated pupils, scanning for danger, hair on the back of our neck standing up
so we take in more of the vibrations in the air. Heart rate increases, and more blood gets
pumped up to 5 times! Our less important systems shut down, e.g. digestion and
its for that reason we feel butterflies in our stomachs and blood gets
re-routed.
The ANS regulates internal states of your body, including
heart, digestion, breathing. The sympathetic branch speeds things up. The ANS
is regulated by the hypothalamus.
Neuropeptides are chemical modulators that increase\decrease
the chemicals released by neurones.
We can get chronically stressed, where we see many events as
“life” threatening, or hugely significant when they aren’t, and there are many
ways to address the problem.
Animals have social stress, which is about dominance and
submission, and they fight to maintain their place in the pecking order, humans
feel and respond the same way, but have many more options than dominance and
submission.
The speed of the reaction of the SNS can cause the problem
as it means we want to act quickly as things are life threatening rather than
thoughtfully.
So, the idea here is that we can get into chronic stress,
where the SNS is stuck on, and we react quickly but not cleverly and meditation
can help slow us down.
Many people handle the feelings of stress, rather than their
cause, and can get busy, which both reduces the feelings and gets them feeling
they are doing something about their problems. They also use of substance, or
reassurance, or denial and avoidance as stress symptom management.
An internalised stress response, i.e. you don’t fight or
flight, wreaks havoc on your body and doesn’t discharge the increased
activation via heart\lungs and muscles.
Chapter 20 Responding to stress as opposed to
reacting
To be mindful with distress opens different ways to be with
that pain and allows you to understand it differently. One of the aspects of understanding
differently, is to not take things so personally. When someone acts in a way
that makes you angry, it might be more about them than it is about you.
Mindfulness encourages openness and curiosity to experience.
Again, you can change your reaction to a situation, by being more aware and
seeing for instance that some of your response might be a hangover because of something
that happened earlier in the day.
Whilst Buddhism has a strong connection between meditation and
compassion. It is also the case that mindfulness and MBSR can make this
connection where through being more mindful you can be more engaged with your
experience. In doing this then you will naturally be more compassionate as you
will, be more responsive to what is happening.
To be mindful. To have a bit more of a pause before reaction
takes practice! Remembering to do it is part of the practice, so realising you
didn’t, can help.
Paying attention to the breath, can really help ground you,
can help you pay attention in turn to your thoughts, emotions and bodily
responds. It can give you a small pause to respond not to react.
Chapter 21 Working with symptoms: listening to your
body
Getting rid of symptoms is a multi-billion dollar business,
that sees symptoms as irrelevant inconveniences that we want to get rid of, as
opposed to significant feedback from our body\and physical\psychological
systems.
MBSR aims to focus more on what is right with the body as
opposed to what is wrong.
MBSR aims to give wise attention to symptoms
We put out a welcome mat to whatever is there, we listen to
the bodily symptoms, and the thoughts and emotions which come with them.
The aim is to accept ourselves as we are now, pain or no
pain. Accepting that we are whole as we are.
Pain is a message from your body which can be listened to,
to just want to get rid of it without paying attention to the message is like
when a king used to kill the messenger if they didn’t like the message.
If you have a headache, what is the sensation of it, what is
your emotion, what happened before having the headache (sounds like therapy to
me)
We personalise our experience, I am fat, I am cold, I am
sick, where my body is fat/cold/sick
If we view symptoms as processes, then this encourages the temporary
sense of them.
Chapter 22 Working with Physical Pain: Your Pain Is
Not You
There is your pain, and there is you, and your awareness,
they are not the same. You can notice your pain and that starts to separate
them. Your awareness of pain, which
isn’t in pain, can be a place of refuge.
Pain helps keep us safe. Acute pain is easier to treat.
There is pain and there is suffering on top of it. Pain being the primary,
suffering being all the secondary aspects. So, if you have a unpleasant feeling
in your gut that is the primary pain, thinking that its cancer would be the
suffering as it would increase the feeling. Suffering is your meaningful reaction
to the pain, which also has feeling with it. If you pay attention to your body,
your body will have a feeling because of that. So, if you stub your toe, and
you pay strong attention to it, thinking how bad it is, and how it will
interfere with your day and how the brick you stubbed it on shouldn’t have been left there, then the
feeling of the pain will increase. If you get a phone call and someone says you
have won the lottery, your pain will decrease.
Acute pain tells us there is danger if you continue to do or
not do something, e.g. hand on hot stoves, or haven’t eaten for a week. Pain is
a very effective teacher, and most people would say pain is bad. To live with
pain is to befriend it. We as a society
tend to avoid the feeling of pain, so we
reach for a tablet when there’s a headache, as opposed to asking what the
danger signal is pointing to.
Pain memory is poor we remember the last feeling and the
most intense feeling but not the bits in between. So, we don’t remember the overall intensity
and duration at all well.
If someone has a belief, that pain shows my body is broken
as it is in pain and it needs to be fixed by someone, a doctor for instance,
then that isn’t a great candidate for mindfulness training as you have to have
some responsibility for your pain.
Pain study with meditation
Meditators felt as much intensity of pain but had less
suffering. Less anticipatory suffering
MBSR aims to get you to turn towards your pain, on a moment-to-moment
basis with great compassion as opposed to wanting to get rid of it.
Mindfulness helps to understand your pain more, which drugs
or distraction can’t. This can really help you to learn how to live with your
pain.
MBSR looks to uncouple sensation, emotions, and thoughts
about the pain and to hold them as independent parts of experience.
Thinking yourself as a chronic pain patient sees you as
passive and you endure this thing this
pain, it can be helpful to reframe to think yourself as a whole person who is
facing their life with a chronic pain condition.
The body scan is the most effective mediation for chronic
pain.
As you do a body scan and you have pain, notice the thoughts
and emotions around it. “I can’t cope with this” , sadness: “why me”. These
thoughts and feelings aren’t the pain, and they aren’t you either.
You label your pain as bad and want it to go away. But it
doesn’t and you suffer because of this.
Is my awareness of pain in pain
Is my awareness of my sadness sad?
When you identify with your thoughts, emotions and pain
there is more suffering than when you inhabit the domain of awareness of them.
You can let all of yourself go, your concepts about
yourself, your identity, and you can rest in pure being, pure awareness.
You are not your thoughts or emotions they change, the only
thing that is constant is the awareness you have of everything.
I am not my body as my body changes, if I am not my body, I
am not my pain. I feel it sure, but it is not me.
So, the mindfulness approach to pain is 3-fold.
Firstly, within awareness then it looks to separate pain
from suffering, looking to be aware of the pure sensation of pain and to just
be with that, befriend it, and to let go all the other thoughts and judgements
about the pain, the suffering.
Secondly it looks to notice that awareness isn’t in pain, or
anything else. So, we look to dwell in
awareness.
Thirdly it looks to be compassionate to the pain, although
this is tricky as some compassion would really want to get rid of it, and even
acknowledgements of this really hurts again moves past what there is here, with
this stiff ache, or however your pain shows.
I guess maybe there is some sense of I’m finding it hard to be with
this.
Fourthly (!!) There is being more active with your pain,
noticing the I’m a passive victim and isn’t life hard, to rather befriending
your pain, noticing its sensation and then asking yourself what the message of
this pain is, and what would be a helpful response.
Fifthly(!!) Mindfulness pays attention to the whole
sensation of the pain; this is standardly different to how our minds work. We
remember the most intense and the level of the last sensation, not the overall
sensation of the pain. So, if a pain was intense brief, then low level, and
finished with intense but brief, we would remember it as an awful pain.
Sixthly (!!!) expecting there to be no pain, will cause it
to hurt more when it’s not gone (suffering)
Seventhly (!!!) Asking yourself “how bad is this pain is
right now, can I be with it right now in this moment”, again can reduce the
pain, as it is the threat of the pain from the future, which can be especially
painful.
If you think of your body as
a machine, then you want an expert to fix it, If you are still in pain
then they have failed. However pain is your bodies signal to yourself of
danger, it doesn’t mean that the signal is correct.
Mindfulness I guess is about nonbeing. There is awareness.
My thoughts are not me; my bodily sensations are not me, my emotions are not
me. Working with pain is to enhance this, I am not my pain.
Chapter 23 More on working with pain
Chronic pain: you can expect pain to come, so even when
there is no pain you feel precarious and insecure. Chronic pain affects what
you can do and affects the network of people around you. You might do things to protect yourself,
walk\sit etc in certain ways.
If you have a good day, you can be exuberant and then overdo
it and then pay for it later, thus you have a boom-and-bust cycle.
Don’t stop looking after your whole body because of your
pain.
Breathe into the area of pain and imagine\visualise the pain
softening as the air comes out.
Set long term goals, what could I look like in a year, if I
adopt a regular programme to look after my whole body, including the injured
part.
Notice when the thought “I can’t” is around as it
becomes as self-fulfilling prophecy via
“I won’t”
Headaches: it can be helpful to use the “hole in the head”
approach from the body scan to allow breathe to come in and out of a headache.
Chapter 24 Working with emotional pain
Awareness is like the sky is to the weather, its where the
weather happens.
With pain, be it emotional or physical the key is to rest in
awareness. To befriend, and welcome and get to know your pain. The more you do of this, describing it,
observing, the more you are resting in awareness. This is a place that doesn’t
hurt, so it will diminish the pain by being in there.
Being mindful about your emotional pain might be also to be
aware of its components: what makes this pain so strong, and when there are
answers to that be mindful: the event that my friend was rude to me, again just
notice that event, your thoughts, and feelings around that, just observe.
Noticing how you respond to your pain and separating that
out from the pain itself, again can lessen it through lessening the suffering.
Notice how your pain may relate to that things aren’t how
you would like them, and you might blame yourself or someone else for this. You
might feel badly treated by life or by yourself or others.
We reject things when they are my pain, my sadness etc. This
then sees pain due to our separateness. When you allow the event to be
connected to a larger whole, it can change your feelings of pain, as it is made
sense of within the whole, not just its mine.
The idea here is to accept what has happened and to observe
it. It doesn’t mean you like it, it doesn’t mean you don’t want to stop it
happening again if you can. Acceptance is the experience of engaging with the
fact that this event has happened. You can’t deny it, it’s there. But it is in
the past.
Being mindful with emotions, means noticing the feeling,
noticing the thoughts, notice how they change, their nature, frequency,
intensity. How they come and go.
This puts mindfulness not in the moment, but rather allows
views on events to happen, to be like an audience as they watch the show that
is you,
Whatever is happening will pass.
We suffer as things don’t go our way. But often we don’t
know what that way is. Also, if we get what we want, we then want something
else!
So, one question you can ask, is “What is my way, how do I
want things to go”, the answer to this question can be I want things to go as
they are, this is my way, and with it comes pain.
When you fully accept that this is your life, as it is, with
this pain, this then can help you see a way through the pain to what you need
for healing.
Sitting with the pain mindfully doesn’t mean to explain it, it’s
just to see with the experience of the pain
Problem focused and pain focused are two ways in which you
can engage with the problem. There is the problem and this was a part of the
creation of your emotion (but not all). So there are two things the problem and
your emotion.
Splitting the problem like this, then you might ask to the
problem what might be helpful. And then be mindful with the emotion, which can
have the effect of reducing the suffering
Taking this parallel track, you need to ensure that you
don’t have one dominant track, some people are problem solvers, other people
focus on emotions
If there is something to do to improve the problem do it, if
there is nothing to do to improve the problem do nothing!
For the emotion, notice how it feels, how it changes. Notice
any dominant thoughts that help explain, it . Imagine that you are comforting
your feelings like a crying child
Some of the power of observing is the confirmation to
yourself that you can stand and weather this storm, you can observe because
your legs are strong.
Chapter 25 Working with Fear, Panic, and Anxiety
Anxiety is common, a feeling that I’m not safe.
People manage this by avoiding, denying, being aggressive,
but avoiding your feelings is avoiding your inner life.
Mindfulness as an approach to anxiety observes it, the
affect, the physical feeling, the thoughts. It gets to know it.
When we have the feeling of fear that something bad can
happen, the worst thing to do is panic, as it is in this fearful time that we
most need to have our wits about us.
Mindfulness can help panic attacks as it notices the
symptom\thought rather than identifying with a panicking interpretation such as
I’m going to faint, have a heart attack.
Affective realism, emotional reasoning. Anxiety is the
feeling I’m not safe and believing the feeling \though to be true. Mindfulness can be with the sensation, see it
changing, can get to know it better. Maybe part of what is helpful about
mindfulness is that it does pay attention to the feeling that I have, and it
could slightly divorce your feeling from the world.
Mindfulness can help with anxiety, as it can through simple
observation show that we don’t have to act on the feeling, we can sit with it
and therefore tolerate it.
It can also help with anxiety as it can reduce the
identification with any meta thoughts about the anxiety, I can’t cope, I will
faint.
Mindfulness through observation also shows you that you are
not your anxiety. Giving yourself some distance allows you to be in
relationship with it, and to show you that your anxiety isn’t as dominating as
you might have thought as part of you is also observing it. In observing it you also see its impermanence
as you notice how it changes. In doing
this, you can reduce how much you take your emotions personally, I am my
anxiety, I caused my anxiety, I’ve done something wrong, something bad will
happen.
Mindfulness can go under our sensations, by observing them.
This is different from the standard way of acting on them or trying to get rid
of them.
Mindfulness drops into your core of awareness, the observing
state that is still and dependable. Doing this allows you to ride the choppy
waters of difficult emotions.
One key aspect of mindfulness is disidentification, you are
not your thoughts\feelings, they come to you, they happen, and you can observe
them, you do no need to be tyrannized by them.
If you do not feed your thoughts \emotions, they will arise
then they will go.
Treating a thought as a thought, means that you experience
it less
Mindfulness then weakens anxiety, as one anxious thought is
experienced and leads to another anxious thought. Mindfulness breaks that
chain, noticing the thought as a thought.
The argument is that mindfulness doesn’t prevent action on
strong emotions. It observes, it is aware, and when it becomes the right time,
it acts.
The fundamental pattern of life is to get what we want and
hold onto it, to keep what we don’t want away from us and keep it there, and to
find better things than we already have.
Chapter 26 Time and Time Stress
With the digital global age, we are 247 available\engaged.
We work with different time zones, have friends there too, the digital machine
works 247, there is no stop. Things are
happening faster and all the time. The
speed of interactions on text, social media and the like lead to a less aware,
less mindful interaction, where you react rather than respond.
The antidote to time stress is non doing. The idea being
whilst time happens in past, present and future. The moment that we experience,
is always here, and can be seen as outside time.
Of course, Heidegger amongst others would disagree, seeing
that temporality needs a merging in the present of past, present and future, so
that it is temporal and moves. The desk in front of me has both history and
future.
Non-doing can help with both time stress and time boredom,
so too much or too little to do. This
can be done by stepping out of time, which has desire\aversion and into being
mindful in the moment, where you are complete.
In boredom, you may well be ruminating, feeling sorry for
yourself, angry at yourself\others. Boredom doesn’t seem a pure state, it is a
not enjoying what you are doing, and then doing a whole bunch of things
internally.
Time seems linked to activity. We think about the past,
measure the present and anticipate when the future might come. JKZ thinks time is measured between thoughts,
so if we observe thoughts, we suspend time, this is something which needs a bit
more thinking, I think.
Non doing is a letting go of our attachment, our desires and
aversion. Theres a wholeness in non-doing
where you neither desire, nor feel aversion, where you are complete as you are.
An antidote to boredom can be non-doing, where you can feel
complete, and get to know yourself in a different way.
With mindful awareness you can let doing come out of being.
We play whack a mole, trying to do more and more, off the never ending to do
list. But in doing that we lost sight of
ourselves who is doing, the doing.
Rapidity loses connection with what is. So, it can lead to
poor decisions, low relationship connection and low satisfaction. Is life a
competition? Is life a race? Will you be pleased on your death bed that you
succeed against others?
Time pressure is the question of business. How can we get
more for less, how can we squeeze more out of less time, from people, be they
employees, customers or suppliers.
Hurry up, there is never enough time, you need to do more,
get more, be more. The shuddering instance of our culture.
In earlier times the rhythm of life was the rhythm of nature.
Time is a product of thought, and therefore a social
convention. We all have 24 hours a day,
and who we engage with that determines, if we have enough, too much or enough time.
You can also free yourself from time by living in the
present more, and reducing worrying about the future, or ruminating about the
past. Likewise, fully absorb with what you are doing, and time will disappear.
As you do things mindfully you will engage\enjoy with these things and they won’t
seem like taking time from you.
It can also help to simplify your time, notice all the
things you are doing, and reduce to the most important. I guess you might also
ask yourself why each of them is important and if this was a friend what you
would say to them.
Chapter 27 Sleep and Sleep stress
Our sleep cycle is connected to the natural world, the earth
turns in a 24-hour cycle and has light and dark during that time, awake and
asleep. Our biological clock, our circadian clock uses hormones to regulate
wake and sleep, cortisol and adenosine.
Sleep is a sign you are in harmony with your life (?), you can’t
make sleep come, you can’t go to sleep, rather it seems you can let sleep come
over you, you let go into sleep.
Regular exercise really helps you sleep!
Some people can get by on less sleep. There is pain that is
experienced thinking I should be sleeping but I’m not, maybe get up and do
something you enjoy doing instead of sleeping.
Meditating can help return to sleep.
Forcing yourself to try and sleep doesn’t help, so if you
don’t feel like sleeping then do something else. Catastrophising about how bad
the day will be doesn’t help and you don’t know if its true.
Buddhism is an aim to be fully awake. In mindfulness you
look to enhance your awareness, which leads to being fully awake. So, when you can’t sleep be aware of that, be
aware of your agitation, just observe it. Sleep will come in its way, just
maybe not as you think it should.
A breathing meditation where you breathe out to the ends of
the universe and then from there into
your body, can sometimes help to get to sleep.
The body and mind can self-regulate themselves.
If you wake in the middle of the night, be aware of that
experience, the stillness, the drowsiness, be fully aware of that experience.
Doing this reduces the suffering.
Chapter 28 People stress
Psychological stress results from our interaction with the
world. So when a person causes us stress
we need to take responsibility for our side of the stress.
We have habits to manage conflict: some avoid, pacify,
placate, please, do anything to have conflict.
Some cause conflict to get a sense of power and control.
When we feel our interests or social status are threatened,
we try to defend them\it, or we can be submissive.
Communication is a union of minds; it doesn’t mean an
agreement. What can be helpful is to be aware of the whole, which includes the
view of the other. If we are absorbed by
our own thoughts, it is impossible to be aware of the others and therefore
impossible to have communication. We
will also be easily threatened by people who don’t see things our way, maybe in
this absorption because this is all there is. Our views don’t relate to
anything else, so they are easily threatened.
Theres my thought, and your thought and the system in which
they both exist. Whole system thinking helps communication.
If you’re stuck between ideas, look at the system, the
context in which the ideas exist.
In argument, as with aikido, you can use the others
energy\anger. Anger can be a desire for connection, which If you avoid can be
frustrating. If you oppose the anger, it can intensify.
Entering and blending: Aware of the stressor without
losing the grounding of our whole body. So, we also see the whole situation and
are grounded in our breathing of our body.
On a physical level this is stepping in and to the side of the attacker and taking their
hand and moving closer to them. You
avoid a head on collision and take the same perspective as the attacker. At
this moment you become partners not adversaries. Possibilities from here, is you can use their
energy to turn them so they can see things as you see things.
Enter and blend, is to step in, take hold, and firstly see
things from the others perspective and then what happens next is uncertain, but
you haven’t lost your ground.
Being assertive means being aware of your feelings and
acting on them neither ignoring them and being passive or overreacting and
being aggressive. Feelings are just feelings they are neither good nor bad.
Chapter 29 Role Stress
We can get stuck in roles, how we should act, which gets in
the way of how we actually feel and can mould attitudes and behaviours. We act how we think the role should be.
We have roles, we have rules that make us good or bad, and
we get pleasure or pain from that. Roles
can convey identity and power.
You can also believe that other people in your role, or
other roles, don’t have your problems. Speaking to others who suffer can be
healing.
Roles can also be confining if you identify too heavily in
them, as the expense of other parts of your life. Likewise you can get locked
into a certain aspect of your role, which you really like and then try to
continue that even when its not merited, so create high pressured situations as
you like them.
Chapter 30 Work stress
Work with low autonomy and high-performance standards,
correlate with a higher prevalence of heart attacks.
Even if you have autonomy the law of impermanence can always
affect you and you can lose control in your job.
Strategic renewal=naps, breaks, rejuvenating activities, longer
sleep, boosts productivity.
We can act on auto pilot, and habit, as it is easier, but
then it becomes boring and repetitive.
Being mindful opens the possibilities of what we do, and how
we do it.
Awareness for work
1.
Wake up take a few moments to realise you are
deciding to go to work today and what you are intending to do
2.
Be aware of the process of preparing for work,
showering etc
3.
When you say goodbye to your partner, do it
mindfully, slow down
4.
Travelling to work, be aware of the journey, of
how you journey
5.
At work, be aware of your body, if there is
tension in it let it go
6.
If you walk at work, do it slowly aware of your
walking
7.
When working try doing one thing at a time
mindfully without distraction
8.
Take frequent breaks: do breathing, relax your
body
9.
Spend time with people you like\trust
10. Exercise,
it’s a greater antidote to stress
11. Stop
for a minute an hour and just pay attention to your breathing
12. As
you leave, travel end work, again do this mindfully
Chapter 31 Food stress
We have a global diet and can eat from anywhere in the
world. We can eat most foods in various ways, readymade, in a restaurant,
delivered to our house, or the ingredients to cook. We are no longer tied by season and country
to what we eat, or indeed when. Foods
are also heavily manipulated, whereas previously we would have eaten what came
out of the ground, or out of the animal.
There is a massive network from farm\factory via
transportation, to shops to larder\refrigerator to microwave.
Our food problems now have moved from starving and not
having enough, to having too much and more importantly the wrong kind of food,
we are not eating healthily. We suffer
from obesity, type 2 diabetes, and all the problems that come from that.
Our health is threatened by the amount of chemical we
ingest, either the fertilisers of the agribusiness or the preservatives in our
food.
Michael Pollen=” Eat food, mostly plants, not too much”
The joy of being part of a work community and the joy of
being part of a community at home when you sit down to eat.
We mostly eat to manage emotions, fill up time, and out of habit its almost
rarely to satisfy hunger.
We can go on elaborate diets, then binge on the things we
have been depriving ourselves of. What we need is an awareness of our eating,
when, why, how does it feel during and after. Awareness too of what we are
putting in our body.
Tips for mindful eating
1.
Bring awareness to eating
2.
Slow down when you eat
3.
When you buy look at the labels
4.
When you prepare be mindful, and notice where
these ingredients come from
5.
If you have a craving for food, ask yourself what’s
the craving for and will this food give it to you
6.
Notice the before and after experience of food
7.
Listen to your body before and after eating
Chapter 32 World Stress
When the human mind knows itself, we get beauty, art,
technology.
When it doesn’t, we get oppression, violence, destruction.
This is quite a simple statement, that is really saying mindfulness
is great, but its not really a meaningful argument.
Irony: we ban pesticides in our domestic food production,
but then export them to countries where we import our food from, so we get the
pesticides back in our bodies.
The planet is a dynamic allostatic system, much like the
human body. It can be stressed, break down like our bodies.
We can raise the temperature of the planet, deplete the
ozone layer and pollute the air and water that we ingest.
There can be an increase in skin cancers due to depletion of
the ozone layer.
One atom of plutonium can kill you and we have made many
tons of it, and several hundred pounds of it have disappeared from stockpiles.
Should we be aware of the information we ingest as much as
the food?
We hear bad\horrible news with no ability to influence it.
Maybe this makes us less sensitive to others as we exist
within this sea of violence and disaster.
In our minds are the residue of all the adverts, all the bad
news, and it swims around in there.
For many children real life pales into comparison to digital
excitement, and indeed content creators ramp up the extremity to hold their
interest.
The constant agitation of our mind\or our being is increased
by a digital diet. We are shovelling in more things to think about, worry
about. Its not that we don’t have enough already!
It is out of our engagement with our present that the future
gets created.
Monitor your engagement with the news and digital media.
Your experience before, during and after. Is there something you can do, in an
area that you care about to make a difference? Doing something can really help
reduce your anxiety about the world.
Chapter 33 New Beginnings
Meditate as if your life depends on it, meditate with the
loneliness of the long-distance meditator
Chapter 34 Keeping
up formal practice
Mindfulness sitting in awareness, like sitting with cloudy
apple juice that gradually clears.
Breathing meditation, a being with, an experiencing your
breath.
Alternatively, you can watch your thoughts, experience them
The important thing is awareness, not the object of
awareness be it, thought or breath.
Thinking you need to get somewhere with meditation can
seriously damage your practice.
As soon as the mind comments on an experience it makes it
into something else.
When the desire to tell other people how wonderful
meditation is, the best idea, is to put that energy into practice.
Chapter 35 Keeping up informal practice
Mindfulness=paying attention, on purpose in the present
moment non judgementally.
Awareness means seeing the whole, the whole context of the
present moment.
Mindfulness means going up the stairs and knowing you are
going up the stairs, being with that.
Mindfulness is non conceptual knowing, being aware with all
the senses.
Chapter 36 The way of awareness
The way is the Tao word for the unfolding of being according
to its own lawfulness. Can you live with
how things are . There are many ways as there are customs and beliefs
You can’t fail with meditation it is beyond success and
failure, and observes our sensation of them should they arise.
Mindfulness is a lifetime journey that leads you nowhere,
only to who you are.