Introduction to Mindfulness_349810_bookemon_ebook.pdf Coaching and Practising Mindfulness | страница 212

energies that arise from our unconscious and if we do not learn to deal with them they can overpower us. We should prepare in advance for emotional storms by learning how to embrace our feelings and emotions. We have to begin to learn how to deal with emotions right now, because when the storm hits, it may be too late. Like the way we prepare for winter; we cut wood in the summer and let it dry so that it can be of use to us when winter comes. It is too late to cut wood in the winter-time. We should not wait until then. Some of the points made by Thich Nhat Hahn on the DVD about emotional storms: - Our emotions are only a part of us. We are more than our emotion. We should write on a piece of paper and carry it around “dear emotion, you are only a part of me”. - The challenge is to mobilise other elements in us to take care of the emotion. If you have been practicing mindful breathing, you are prepared to mobilise mindful energy to take care of your painful emotion. - Our emotion is not our enemy, it is our “baby”; we need to know we can take care of it. By recognising the emotion, embracing the emotion, I can experience relief. - Our well being in a crisis is like a tree being blown around in a storm. If we look at the upper part of the tree, we see it being blown around, and we may feel it is so fragile and vulnerable. But if we bring our attention to the trunk of the tree, and think about how firmly rooted it is in the soil, we can have a very different feeling. We see that is stable. During the experience of strong emotion, we also should not stay on the level of the head or the heart, we need to bring our attention to our naval, and become aware of our breathing. Lying down, placing our hand on our belly, and breathing deep and slow. We need to hold firm to “cling to” - our in-breath and out-breath, until the storm passes. What we do meanwhile is to maintain an awareness of our 211