Taking Mindfulness into Your Day One of the goals of our meditation practice is to bring the mindfulness state off the meditation mat and into our everyday lives.
Just as we lift weights in the gym to be strong in daily life,
We meditate formally so we can be mindful in daily life.
But there need not be a distinction between the end of a formal session and the rest of our day.
Indeed,
With practice we will increasingly be able to come mindful at any time.
First with small glimpses and then over longer periods of time.
The first part of this process is to end our formal sessions with a quick intention to bring mindfulness into the day.
Rather than instantly and mindlessly going for our phones or onto the next task that needs completing,
Instead we should take a moment to remind ourselves of our desire to bring mindfulness into our day.
For example,
I will bring mindfulness into my day.
I will pay purposeful non-judgmental attention to the present moment,
Taking my time to consider before I act.
Over time you will naturally find yourself remembering mindfulness more and more throughout your day.
When this occurs use it as a prompt to take one mindful breath.
Glimpse.
One mindful breath.
Stop what you are doing and take one slow and deep breath in through your nose and out through your mouth.
Use that time to quickly scan your mental state.
How are you feeling?
What is your mood?
Are you tired?
Are you ruminating,
Anxious or depressed?
Are you present?
Give it a try now.
The more mindful breaths you take throughout the day,
The better.
Eventually you will find that the times between the breaths become shorter and that you are consistently more mindful.
This will have obvious benefits to your mental state,
Relationships and performance as you will be less lost in the distractions of your mind.
You can boost the number of mindful breaths you take each day by tying the behaviour to a particular external environmental trigger.
For example,
You could choose to take a mindful breath every time you look at your phone,
Go to the toilet or speak to a colleague.
My personal favourite is to use door handles.
I've set myself a rule that whenever I touch a door handle I'm to take a mindful breath.
This one rule has quadrupled the amount of awareness and mindful breaths that I take through the day and is not in any way inconvenient.
The moment I touch a door I internally scan my mental state as a mini meditation.
Even if I forget half of the time I'm still finding tremendous benefits.
If you're not convinced with this approach,
Reconsider the door handle trigger but replace the meditation instruction with do 10 push-ups or 10 squats.
Imagine how many repetitions you would be performing each and every day and how strong you would be in a month.
Glimpse,
Door handles trigger.
Set yourself the intention to take one mindful breath every time you touch a door handle.
Do this for a month and it will soon become natural.
Most meditation apps will have a feature to remind you to meditate and your phone's alarm can be tweaked in a way that it will serve as a similar function to the door handle trigger.
I found particular benefit from surrounding myself with other meditation practitioners in person and online and then making the practice of checking up on one another to see if we are meditating daily.
Reminding them about the practice with random messages as well as words of encouragement or useful resources.
This talk was taken from the book Mindfulness,
A guidebook to the present moment.