Introduction to Mindfulness_349810_bookemon_ebook.pdf Coaching and Practising Mindfulness | Página 152
the abdominal wall as you breathe in, and as you breathe out. Take a
few minutes to feel the sensations as you breathe in and as you
breathe out.
5. Having connected with the sensations in the abdomen, bring the
focus or "spotlight" of your awareness down the left leg, into the left
foot, and out to the toes of the left foot. Focus on each of the toes of
the left foot in turn, bringing a gentle curiosity to investigate the
quality of the sensations you find, perhaps noticing the sense of
contact between the toes, a sense of tingling, warmth, or no particular
sensation.
6. When you are ready, on an in-breath, feel or imagine the breath
entering the lungs, and then passing down into the abdomen, into the
left leg, the left foot, and out to the toes of the left foot. Then, on the
out-breath, feel or imagine the breath coming all the way back up, out
of the foot, into the leg, up through the abdomen, chest, and out
through the nose. As best you can, continue this for a few breaths,
breathing down into the toes, and back out from the toes. It may be
difficult to get the hang of this just practice this "breathing into" as
best you can, approaching it playfully.
7. Now, when you are ready, on an out-breath, let go of awareness of
the toes, and bring your awareness to the sensations on the bottom of
your left foot—bringing a gentle, investigative awareness to the sole
of the foot, the instep, the heel (e.g., noticing the sensations where
the heel makes contact with the mat or bed). Experiment with
"breathing with" the sensations—being aware of the breath in the
background, as, in the foreground, you explore the sensations of the
lower foot.
8. Now allow the awareness to expand into the rest of the foot—to
the ankle, the top of the foot, and right into the bones and joints.
Then, taking a slightly deeper breath, directing it down into the whole
of the left foot, and, as the breath lets go on the out-breath, let go of
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