I've been working with clients for over thirteen years - helping them understand how they can grasp control of their mental energy, their inner power. But intellectual understanding is one thing. Actually experiencing your inner power is quite something else altogether - and something that will make a complete difference to your life - if you know how to put it into everyday practice. To that end, I've been teaching my clients "mental exercises" for all those years. More correctly, they've been learning how to meditate!
However, the most common feedback that I get from my clients is that they find meditation difficult. In fact a couple of really high achievers told me recently that meditation was the most difficult thing they'd ever tried in their lives. And they couldn't come to terms with what they saw as their failure.
Now, "failure" is a word that I cannot relate to meditation. It makes no sense at all to judge how your meditation is going, because the whole point of meditation is to observe and experience - not to analyse, dissect or judge. The whole point of meditation is to start cognising and to stop recognising.
You see, when we receive information through our five senses, we cognise - it's raw data that we have yet to make sense of. Unfortunately, we make sense of that raw data using our subconsciously stored knowledge. And because our subconscious primarily focuses on "snapshots" we took during our formative years, instead of making sense of the raw data, we make nonsense of it. That is called recognition.
One of the key purposes of meditation - or mental exercising - is to stop recognising and t start simply seeing and experiencing the here and now for what it is - not what we think it is based on long out of date information. So it makes no sense whatsoever to analyse or judge our meditation. If you're finding your mental exercising difficult, so what! If you think you're not improving or that your mind is all over the place while you meditate, so what!
As a management team with whom I spent three days working recently agreed, you just have to do it!! Just meditate - or mental exercise - for the sake of doing it. Just doing it is the end in itself. Why, because it is a choice you make. And almost everybody else - "normal" people - never make any choice whatsoever about their lives at all. As my online workshop explains, so-called normal people lead "normal" reactive, automatic, mindless, "not-so-bad" lives. Choosing to meditate and them simply doing it for the sake of doing it makes you abnormal - you've decided to spend a little time not reacting, not stumbling around like a headless chicken. You've chosen to spend a little time mindfully.
OK, maybe your mind wanders during meditations. So what - so does mine, so does everyone's! Don't react to it - and thereby start the whole chain reaction of normal mindless behaviour all over again - just stay calm. Don't get frustrated if you're not achieving some altered state of mind during your meditation - just re-focus on your chosen "mental exercise" or meditative technique. Don't start analysing it, just notice your breathing. It's the choice of sticking with it that will discipline your mind into not reacting, not getting frustrated, not recognising and making nonsense out of what's going on - in your ordinary everyday life.
As a result of simply sticking with your meditation - of persevering with it every time your mind wanders or you get distracted - the choices you make will make you abnormal - abnormally happy and abnormally successful. As a result, you will be more fully tuned in to the wonderful reality of the present moment, more alert to today's opportunities which your muddled mind would otherwise completely miss. As a result, your clear state of mind - open to the inspiration that is in universal energy all around us - will effortlessly lead you ever forward to the life you really, really want and make today an effortless present where you're more effective than everyone else, because you're more tuned in than everyone else.
So, don't think meditation is difficult - it can be and often is - but that is just another useless thought which you should simply not entertain. Instead, when it comes to improving your mental fitness, why not just do it!
Copyright (c) 2009 Willie Horton
Did you skip breakfast? That's a no, no. That's why you're not feeling your normal self. Below are seven simple on the job tips that will make a positive, quality difference in your life on the job.
Try them out. Incorporate these tips into your at work lifestyle, and they will make a positive, quality difference in your life. Print one side of one sheet of paper for easy reference.
Tip #1. Say good morning, smile, be positive, always give a kind word, and above all be approachable.
Tip #2. - Climb the stairs. If you work on the fortieth floor, walk up the first five, or seven, or ten. Catch the elevator the rest of the way.
Tip #3. - Freely drink quality water throughout your work day. It must be at room temperature, and yes, you may add lemon.
Tip #4. - Sitting, bending or kneeling while you work? At intervals, stand erect, interlock your fingers behind your head and swing your elbows to the left, and then to the right ten times.
Tip #5. - Standing while you work? Purchase a decent, comfortable pair of shoes. During your breaks, take your shoes off, sit and put your feet up. Wiggle your toes and make circular foot movements. Get regular foot baths, soaks and massages. Save your feet.
Tip #6. - Eat a nutritious lunch. Get in the habit of eating food that will make a difference. Say no to donuts, croissants, pastries, danish? say no to processed foods. No coffee, tea, hot drinks, soft drinks, alcohol or sweet juices. Just say no to junk food.
Tip #7. - No eating between meals. If after a valiant fight, you still feel that you must eat something, eat an apple. It will help keep the doctor away.
Both Willie Horton & Clef are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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