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Informative Articles

Finding Peace: A Taste of Mindfulness
When we are ill and don't know it, we are in a state of ignorance or delusion. We don't view ourselves as sick, so we don't believe it's necessary to go to a doctor or take any medication. We fail to recognize our own need for care and support....

How Healers Can Prevent Healing
Do you have a tendency to shift the blame for things that seem to turn out wrong? Most of us do! The occurrance of nonhealing in the Christian ministry is no exception. Usually we shift the blame onto the poor individual with whom we are praying....

Leading a Growing Church
Recently I spent the day reflecting on my fumbling attempts to lead our church in growth. To say that I've felt unprepared for my current assignment is an understatement...the Three Stooges meet Forrest Gump strikes me as a more accurate...

STOP! AND NAME YOUR INTENTION
I usually write two newsletters a month for my website, but recently I missed an issue. I had gone away on a "rustic retreat" weekend, and although I had intended to write it before I left, it just didn't happen. When I got back I felt pressured...

Stop Scoring Own Goals
Own goals are actions, things we do, that stop us from reaching where we want to go or what we want to obtain. When we are out of focus, when we are out of tune with what's going on, when we do something which takes us in the opposite direction...

 
Mindfulness and Neuroscience: Let's Make A Deal

It seems that everyone is talking about mindfulness lately. Have you heard?

*The Center for Contemplative Mind in Society is working with a number of groups--college faculty, attorneys and judges, social justice workers, business leaders, youth and those who work with young people--to encourage the incorporation of contemplative practices in a variety of settings.

*Film director David Lynch is traveling across the U.S. offering presentations and podcasts about the power of Transcendental Meditation.

*Colleges such as Portland State University in Oregon are offering meditation classes at no charge to any interested students. The focus is on stress-reduction, not spirituality.

*Goldie Hawn's organization, the Bright Light Foundation, is studying the effects of mindfulness education in students in the Vancouver, B.C. area. The program teaches a series of simple techniques designed to enhance self awareness, focused attention, self regulation and stress reduction.

Mindfulness is popping up in surprising places as the buzz moves from meditation to everyday ways to increase awareness. In the last week alone, I have been interviewed for forthcoming articles in Self, Vibrant Life, Woman's Day, Family Circle, Health, and even Sly, Sylvester Stallone's magazine for mid-life men.

But the greatest buzz of all comes thanks to the Dalai Lama and his invitation to speak at the annual convention of the Society for Neuroscience last week. Hundreds of scientists signed a petition against his selection as the speaker, citing a conflict between science and religion.

As a serious student of science, the Dalai Lama has been actively encouraging mind/body research for many years. He feels that learning more about what happens during meditation will help shed light on the ways in which the brain processes information and responds to focused attention, and the findings may prove useful in alleviating human suffering.

Those who are worried about blurring the line between science and religion would do well to embrace a little temporary fuzziness for the greater good. In an editorial published in both The New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, the Dalai Lama says: "If science proves some belief of Buddhism wrong, then Buddhism will have to change."

Wow. Now there's a guy who is not attached to the outcome. He's simply seeking to learn as much as he can and wants to see that new information shared with everyone who might benefit from it.

Neuroscience has much to gain by opening to new discoveries, but in order to do so, researchers must be willing to question their own theories if findings do not support them.

Let's make a deal: Neuroscientists will do research. People will meditate. We will all learn about meditation and mindfulness and attention as best we can and share what we find.

We'll keep at it until we come to a greater understanding of what it means to be mindful and how that might affect the brain.

And we'll look forward to reading all about it in Playboy and Popular Science, in People and Parents and Pro Football Weekly.

We won't stop questioning and studying and sharing until mindfulness is discussed by all kinds of people while they sip milk or mint tea, Mountain Dew or mocha cappucino, merlot or Miller beer.

Deal?

About the author:

Maya Talisman Frost has taught thousands of people how to pay attention. Her playful, eyes-wide-open approach to everyday mindfulness has been featured in over 150 publications worldwide, and her free weekly ezine, the Friday Mind Massage, offers clarity, comfort and comic relief to subscribers in over 100 countries. To read her free tips for practical awareness, visit http://www.Real-WorldMindfulness.com.

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