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A pocket-sized collection of mindfulness practices anyone can do
anytime--from the author of "Mindful Eating."
Mindfulness can reduce stress, improve physical health and quality
of life, and give you deep insight. Meditation practice is one way
to do it, but not the only way. In fact, there are easy ways to fit
it into your everyday life. Jan Chozen Bays provides here 25
practices that can be used on the go to cultivate mindfulness. The
three-breath practice, the mindfulness of entering rooms, offering
compliments, tasting your food one careful bite at a time--these
deceptively simple practices can have a cumulative effect for the
better. The book is an abridgment of Bays's longer collection "How
to Train a Wild Elephant: And Other Adventures in Mindfulness."
A growing body of research is showing that mindfulness can reduce
stress, improve physical health, and improve one's overall quality
of life. Jan Chozen Bays, MD -- physician and Zen teacher -- has
developed a series of simple practices to help us cultivate
mindfulness as we go about our ordinary, daily lives. Exercises
include: taking three deep breaths before answering the phone,
noticing and adjusting your posture throughout the day, eating
mindfully, and leaving no trace of yourself after using the kitchen
or bathroom. Each exercise is presented with tips on how to remind
yourself and a short life lesson connected with it.
How making a vow consciously setting an intention can be a powerful tool for achieving all sort of goals, from the author of the best-selling "Mindful Eating."
Making a vow is a powerful mindfulness practice and all you have to do to tap into that power is set your intention consciously. A vow can be as "small" as the aspiration to smile at someone at least once every day, or as "big" as marriage; as personal as deciding to be mindful when picking up the phone or as universal as vowing to save all sentient beings. It can be deeply spiritual, utterly ordinary, or both. Zen teacher Jan Chozen Bays looks to traditional Buddhist teachings to show the power of vows and then applies that teaching broadly to the many vows we make. She shows that if we work with vows consciously, they set us in the direction of achieving our goals, both temporal and spiritual.
Jizo is an important bodhisattva or "saint" of the Mahayana
Buddhist tradition. Most prominent today in Japanese Zen, Jizo is
understood to be the protector of those journeying through the
physical and spiritual realms. This bodhisattva is closely
associated with children, believed to be their guardian before
birth, throughout childhood, and after death.
Here, an American Zen master offers an engaging and informative
overview of the history of this important figure and conveys the
practices and rituals connected with him, including a simple
ceremony for remembering children who have died. Inspired by her
own personal experience with Jizo practice, Bays explains how the
Buddhist teachings on Jizo can bring peace to those confronted with
suffering and loss.
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