Peace through Meditation

Homepage  | Add to Favorites

 

Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Featured Articles

AWARENESS
"Let us not look back in anger or forward in fear, but around in awareness." -- James Thurber "Like a fish suddenly made aware that it is swimming in water, I found every aspect of my perception changed." Author Unknown How many of us live in a...



5 Tips To Cure Your Acne
Reports show that over 90 percent of all adolescents and almost 25 percent of all adults are acne sufferers. And although acne affects about 50 percent of all adult women, acne does affect males and females worldwide, regardless of nationality. ...

Searchers Follow Ancient Traditions
In the past year 36 percent of all Americans age 18 and over used approximately form of complementary color and option practice of medicine to deal with illness. These therapies range from acupuncture to herbs, from stress relieving meditation...


Yoga Therapy for Eating Disorders
Over 10 million women and a million men are affected by different forms of eating disorders in the United States alone. Most of them are teens and the common illnesses are represented by anorexia and bulimia. The physical factors related to these...

 
Dial M for Mindfulness: Using the Golden Arches


Looking for mindfulness? Who ya gonna call?

Try dialing M.

It's easy to be mindful. It's just hard to remember to be mindful. That's why it's so important to pick our triggers.

Here's a great trigger for mindfulness--the letter M. I'm a great fan of the letter M. For me, it stands for mindfulness, meditation, mediation and mind massage. It's soothing to say: "Mmmmmmm." Add an H and you're thinking: "Hmmmmm." Add an O and you're chanting: "Ommmmmmm." It's hard to go wrong with M.

Okay, but in the course of your day, with all the M-words you hear, say and see, how can you possibly remember to be mindful each time? You can't. That's why you need to choose ONE M for your mindfulness trigger, and I've got the perfect one: the McDonald's golden arches.

No, really. Think about it. You've already got your own ideas about McDonald's. Maybe you love McDonald's food. Maybe you appreciate the convenience of a drive-thru breakfast when you're on the road. Maybe you hate its corporate identity. Maybe you've seen "Super-Size Me" and all you can think about is poor Morgan Spurlock getting hypertension in his month-of-McDonald's-food experiment. Maybe you feel guilty that you like McDonald's food. Maybe you feel upset that you feel guilty.

Whether you love to hate McDonald's or hate to love it, those golden arches are a complex trigger. It's time for a little piggybacking--intentionally superimposing a new concept on an already loaded one.

Here's how it works: The first time each day that you see the McDonald's golden arches--the sign itself, the logo on a paper bag, an image on a television commercial--simply say, "I am mindful." That's it.

No need to


spin your stories. You don't have to get involved in any mental arguments. There's no reason to get caught up in any emotion. Just use it as a trigger to be mindful.

By saying this phrase--"I am mindful"--you are actually starting a complex process in your brain. You are creating a powerful link to a visual image, and taking control of what it does for you. You are building a self-fulfilling prophecy--if you notice the golden arches, then you are indeed mindful.

Since being mindful is not something you normally associate with McDonald's, it serves as a sort of balancing mechanism. Because the only emotion associated with mindfulness is a calm sense of paying attention, you can strip McDonald's of its "good" and "bad" properties and just note it without judgment.

This is what mindfulness is all about. By picking a trigger that is ubiquitous, you are automatically giving yourself plenty of opportunities to include this brief mindful moment in your day.

You will find that you will begin to be mindful every time you see the golden arches. That might expand to other images of your choice--the Coca-Cola logo, the Disney logo, Starbucks, whatever. Choose something you can't avoid, and take advantage of it.

Take comfort in taking control of your mind.

Mmmmmm. I'm lovin' it.

Maya Talisman Frost is a mind masseuse offering specialized mindfulness training in Portland, Oregon. Her work has inspired thinkers in over 90 countries. To subscribe to her free weekly ezine, the Friday Mind Massage, please visit http://mindmasseuse.com


maya@mindmasseuse.com


 


Visit these sites in the Information Organizers Network
Government Grants for Small Businesses | Fundraising Resources | Financial Prosperity | Community Building News | Civic Engagement Foundations | Credit Repair Kits | School Funding | Home Based Online Business Ideas | Environmental Funding Organizations | Smartest Home Based Business | Home Business Success Stories | Online Business Ideas | Web Hosting Reseller Business | Affiliate Marketing | Grants for Building | Articles on Small Business Management | Ideas for Starting Your Own Business | Nonprofit News | Prosperous Spirit
Edited by:Michael Saunders

©2008 Information Organizers, LLC