Introduction to Mindfulness_349810_bookemon_ebook.pdf Coaching and Practising Mindfulness | Page 126

drawn into endless ruminations. There will be time to attend to these matters later, for now, simply note that they have emerged into your awareness and let them recede into the background as you return to enjoying the present moment. When the mind is relatively stable and focused, any object in the field of our attention - be it a pressing concern or a piece of music becomes more vivid and clear. And when the mind is clear, it is more likely that real understanding will be achieved, and that a wiser course of action will follow. Exercise 5: The 3-minute breathing space This exercise combines all of the above and when you have practiced it repeatedly, it becomes a resource that you can tap into at several points in your day. STEP 1: Bringing your awareness back home Begin by deliberately adopting an erect and dignified posture, whether you are sitting or standing. If you like, close your eyes. Then, bringing your awareness to your inner experience, ask: ‘What is my experience right now?’ - 'What thoughts are going through the mind?' As best you can, acknowledging whatever thoughts or images are passing through your mind without becoming drawn into them. Just letting them pass in and out of your mind, taking care to see what they are about. And then letting them go. What feelings are here? Turning toward any sense of emotional discomfort or unpleasant feelings, acknowledging their presence, and allowing them to be there, rather than pushing them away. What physical or bodily sensations are here right now? Perhaps quickly scanning the body to pick up any sensations or tightness or pain that may be in your body. See them for what they are and let them be. 125