Introduction to Mindfulness_349810_bookemon_ebook.pdf Coaching and Practising Mindfulness | Page 259
2nd Week – Mindfulness of the Body
by Gil Fronsdal
Mindfulness of breathing is a wonderful beginning to cultivating
awareness. It strengthens our ability to concentrate and steadies the
attention on our present moment experience. It also weakens our
tendency to get lost in reactive emotions and mental preoccupations.
With time, attention to the breath helps us to develop a clear, nonreactive awareness that can then be turned to the full range of our
human experience. As mindfulness develops, we begin to bring this
awareness to other areas of our lives.
Mindfulness is an embodied practice. By practicing mindfulness, we
learn to live in and through our bodies. Learning to be mindful of
bodily experiences is one of the most useful aspects of mindfulness.
It is much easier have a balanced, healthy awareness of the rest of our
lives when we are in touch with our immediate physical experience.
During this week we expand the practice to include the body.
Many people ignore their bodies. The busier a person's life, the easier
it is to discount the importance of staying in touch with how the body
feels. Many people may be attentive to their body, but it is from the
outside in; that is, they are concerned about body image and
appearance. Mindfulness of the body is attention from the inside out.
We notice what the body is feeling, in and of itself. We give a
generous amount to time to be with the felt sense of the body. Not
only does this help the body relax, remaining mindful of the body is a
safeguard from getting wound up with mental preoccupations.
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