Introduction to Mindfulness_349810_bookemon_ebook.pdf Coaching and Practising Mindfulness | Page 107
4. Coping with negative experiences
Using mindfulness to cope with negative experiences (thoughts,
feelings, events)
As we become more practised at using mindfulness for breathing,
body sensations and routine daily activities, so we can then learn to be
mindful of our thoughts and feelings, to become observers, and then
more accepting of them. This results in less distressing feelings, and
increases our ability to enjoy our lives.
With mindfulness, even the most disturbing sensations, feelings,
thoughts, and experiences, can be viewed from a wider perspective as
passing events in the mind, rather than as "us", or as being necessarily
true. (Brantley 2003)
When we are more practised in using mindfulness, we can use it even
in times of intense distress, by becoming mindful of the actual
experience as an observer, using mindful breathing and focussing our
attention on the breathing, listening to the distressing thoughts
mindfully, recognising them as merely thoughts, breathing with them,
allowing them to happen without believing them or arguing with
them. If thoughts are too strong or loud, then we can move our
attention to our breath, the body, or to sounds around us.
Jon Kabat-Zinn uses the example of waves to help explain
mindfulness.
Think of your mind as the surface of a lake or an ocean. There are
always waves on the water, sometimes big, sometimes small,
sometimes almost imperceptible. The water's waves are churned up
by winds, which come and go and vary in direction and intensity, just
as do the winds of stress and change in our lives, which stir up waves
in our mind. It's possible to find shelter from much of the wind that
agitates the mind. Whatever we might do to prevent them, the winds
of life and of the mind will blow.
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