Showing posts with label mindfulness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mindfulness. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Rotten Tomatoes

Recently I had one of those little experiences, something anecdotal, but it serves to help me re-examine my mode of operation through life.


I came home to the apartment I share with my partner after a recent trip out of town. I noticed he had put a big bag of tomatoes from our CSA share into the refrigerator. My immediate reaction: "Oh, the horror! The vulgarity! Are there really people so uncultured that they still refrigerate tomatoes?" My immediate reaction of default foodie-farmer snobbery only lasted an instant. I really try to keep this sort of judgement in check.

Then I thought, oh well, whatever, at least he picked up the CSA share while I was gone.

For the week that followed, I was able to use the tomatoes though, making myself lunches of sauteed onions and garlic, with lentils, and stewed tomatoes and curry. Sometimes I added chicken or kale. I find that when you cook tomatoes, it really doesn't matter if they were once refrigerated. They still taste great. Furthermore, I realized my own foolishness when the fresh tomatoes from the next share that I left on the table started to quickly go bad and had to be thrown away, all the while I was still able to enjoy my lunches of stewed tomatoes from the ones my partner had refrigerated. My attitude about the refrigerated tomatoes had shifted from judgement and disgust, to passive acceptance, to gratitude (for a partner that had saved my tomatoes) to wonder. I wondered how many other little habits or beliefs I had picked up, that had become religious beliefs, in the building of some identity I held to, that had actually stifled my creativity or problem-solving abilities.

Do you have a limiting belief or dogma that keeps you from moving forward?

Do you have any values or principles that have made your life too rigid?

I'm not really talking about your overall value system here. I'm talking about little limiting quirks that have become habits that hold you back from your big picture goal.  The little thoughts, minutia, that can hold you back from achieving your big things, from having your broader influence or from just making your life easier.

Example - "I don't refrigerate tomatoes because temperatures lower than 55 Fahrenheit burst the cell walls causing the tomato to lose flavor and become mealy" had come to interfere with my greater value of not wasting food to be both resource conscious and thrifty, when really, I enjoy stewed tomatoes anyway... not to mention the possibility of interfering with domestic bliss!

Maybe we begin to adopt these little habits, as a way to strengthen our ego or identity when we are still forming who we are in the world. We form these beliefs out of not feeling we have much influence or control, or for wanting to appear to belong to specific group of people.  But do they really matter in the long run? Or do they just start to make life hard for us?

Can you think of any examples of limiting beliefs that might hold you back from achieving your career goals, health, satisfying relationships, or financial success?






Friday, October 25, 2013

Welcoming Winter

Today was one of those days: information overload a la the internet, paralyzing indecision, and lack of acceptance of the present moment. I gave myself a headache.

I fed all this for a while, but when the headache started, I realized it was time to bring myself out of self-induced paralysis.

Here are some of my favorite ways:
do the dishes
fold the laundry, put it away
write in my journal
listen to the wind
take a shower
make myself pretty
make chocolate "ice cream"


Journal: Welcoming Winter


The angle of the sun is softer now; less harsh.
With the leaves dropped from the trees, 
the sun's rays reach me and its warmth more gentle.

I wish for more longevity in my patterns: 
work, living situations, relationships.
I must struggle to find comfort ...
in the consistency inherent in my own repeated patterns. 

Pondering that, I realize that my peace comes not through other people but through the solitude of myself.

I remember to look to winter. 
It is through this season that I embrace my solitude.
Where others hide, I venture. 
Free at last, with only myself to see, feel, 
I feel my strength.
I feel my peace.

I meet you with comfort, Winter, as I remember that 
you are quiet,
and I am warm and strong.

Time spent walking, skating, reading,
with few words spoken.

Give time to be silent. To listen to what the wind has to say
as the last leaves fall. 




Chocolate "ice cream" recipe:

2 frozen bananas, peeled and chopped 
(Freezing bananas: I freeze them with the skins on, but that's just me. I get some sort of strange pleasure in peeling frozen bananas! Also, you don't have to worry about storing in plastic, can throw them in the freezer at the latest desirable ripeness, and it's easy.)

1/2 cup refrigerated canned coconut milk 
(I use canned coconut milk free of added thickening agents and sugars)

1 1/2 Tablespoons organic cocoa powder

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 1/2 Tablespoons water

Blend.
I used a cheap stick blender that was left behind at the art center where I live. Luckily, its motor is still going strong enough to do the little job. 

The result of the "ice cream" is still quite frozen, but liquidy enough to feel like ice cream that you have let sit for a couple minutes and mashed up to get soft. That's how I like it!

Sunday, March 10, 2013

"Tension is who you think you should be. Relaxation is who you are." - Chinese Proverb

With so much to piece together, sort out, a new way to navigate, it's nice to find an activity where I can let it all go, and just be in the complete present moment with what I'm doing, my sense of "aliveness" not originating from my head, but going into my body, into that interface where my physical body is in contact with nature.

The Forks, Winnipeg, Manitoba. The confluence of the Red and Assiniboine Rivers. 
This winter time activity has been ice-skating, even though it's been ten years since I've had on skates.

You know that feeling when you start something, and you just want to be good? And fast? And maybe do a triple lutz like an olympic figure skater? And then feeling like, I am no good at this. Why? Why are you no good at this? The mind answers: I have scoliosis. One of my legs is longer than the other, due to a sideways-S curve in my back. Is that true? Aren't there all sorts of olympic athletes that have some sort of slight limitation then learn how to work with it, and overcome it as a limitation?

And so I slow down, realizing that the only person I am competing with is myself, which guarantees success, as I only need to improve upon a previous version of me. And as long as I love the stillness of the cold, the silence of the morning, the awareness of skating on a frozen river, and being absorbed into the landscape, being alone, challenging myself, I realize I am happy, no matter if I am "good" or "bad" on skates.

And so I begin. Slowing down, grounding myself into the blades of steel atop a frozen river. Becoming aware that I lead with my left leg, and that in actuality, I am dragging my (longer) right leg along. With this awareness, the left is still leading, but the right is not so much dragging, but swiveling along. I can try for speed, but without the leg strength, skill, and confidence, speed does not come fast enough to feel satisfaction. And so, I settle in to the feeling of the skates. Where should I be resting my weight inside these skates?  I am aware that I am putting my weight on my arch and tension exists on the sides of my feet. When I am more tense and having a feeling of not being able to settle into the experience, my arches ache with tension.

Gradually, I settle in and just see if I can put some weight into the balls of my feet. And if I can put some pressure into the ball of my foot. How about my right foot? Yes. There it is! I'm on the ball of my right foot! Let's see if I can apply pressure there and get some resistance, to push myself along. Yes. My right foot is beginning to participate, and not merely keeping up. And, so I have settled in. And it becomes not about speed, or turns, but about how comfortable I feel in my own skates.

Does this sound familiar? How comfortable do you feel in your own skin? Are you down on yourself for not having done enough in the past, or for not having made the right decision? When you get going in a direction you are excited about, do you start to anticipate the prestige of achieving your destination?  It's the game of the ego, the mind, and it steals the present moment from us. The ego starts to again dream of the new possibilities with the attainment of the present skill at hand. Any physical activity that you can do will help you put your attention out of the mind, and into the body. Simply putting your attention into the body takes the power away from the mind. We learn how to control our mind, we begin to be able to use it as a tool when we need it, rather than it running the show at all times. If this does not sound logical to you, remember that there is vast intelligence that exists in the universe, in the functioning of nature itself, and all of this came before the development of the human mind.

The river trails have now closed for the season, and I was at first saddened, but use it as a reminder to never become too attached to one thing for happiness, or too reliant on one activity alone to achieve awareness. Instead, I must delve into other things, and use the experience of being present in one activity to bring presence into more experiences in my life.