Introduction to Mindfulness_349810_bookemon_ebook.pdf Coaching and Practising Mindfulness | Seite 173

3. Layer 3 – linking them to the aims of the program (placing the learning in layers 1 and 2 in a wider context of understanding) Within MBSR this linkage process is in relation to the broad application of mindfulness skills to the areas of living life, managing stress, communicating, making choices about self care, and so on. The encouragement is for participants themselves to come naturally to a process of making the links by applying the learning from the program to their lives; this is done through integrating the mindfulness-based learning material offered in the program into their daily lives. This is true also in MBCT, but there is a greater emphasis within the linkage process on connecting direct experience and learning with an understanding of the particular vulnerability which the program is adapted for – e.g. relapse prevention in depression, chronic fatigue etc. This process is held mainly by the teacher who supports participants in integrating their direct experience with contextual understanding about the particular challenge they are working with. So linkage is helping participants to illuminate their seeing of: - The ways in which their mind becomes ‘caught’ or stuck through their particular way of relating to experience - The ways in which their learning about mindfulness has relevance within the various spheres of their life - The ways in which their learning about mindfulness has relevance to the particular vulnerability that they are working with (e.g. susceptibility to depression, chronic fatigue etc.) (see Chapter 12, Inquiry, in Segal, Williams & Teasdale, 2012 on how to do this while staying close F