Introduction to Mindfulness_349810_bookemon_ebook.pdf Coaching and Practising Mindfulness | Page 204

just somewhere else most of the time… I was trying to be mindful of everyday things” - “Some days I have wobbly thoughts, but I try to ‘let it be’ and just come back to my breathing” - “For the first time in my life I’ve noticed how nasty I am to myself…” The major portion of the first half of this session was given over to 25 minutes Yoga, followed by 15 minute sitting meditation (with 1minute breaks where we checked that people were doing ok)). Emotions We discussed emotions as being the body’s language for how we were experiencing the world. Emotions were messengers that were trying to alert us to something that was happening between us and the world. We could disregard them or we could ‘invite them in’ and listen to what they might be alerting us to. Our emotional reactions can be very subjective and therefore do not always correspond accurately with what’s happening in the external world, but they do identify very accurately how we are feeling in ourselves and thus they provide us with important information. They are a more reliable source of information than our automatic thoughts. And they can also be a good radar system, telling us when something in our world isn’t quite right. The problem for most of us is that we’re on auto pilot most of the time and we don’t even notice what we’re feeling until our emotions are so strong that they overwhelm us. Mindfulness teaches us how to come off autopilot and take time to notice painful emotions as they begin to gath