Deeper Meaning Behind Being Mindful of the Present Moment

I have learned an important lesson over the last several years.  Denial runs deep in our veins.  For some reason we are clearly able to see issues that other people hold but are  unable to acknowledge those same issues in ourselves.  We insist on perceiving the world through our own distorted lens. It does not matter a hill of beans what the reality of the situation is.

There is no question about it. Denial runs deep in everyone’s veins.  We deny – and I’m holding my hand up here – that life is very fragile indeed.  I think to myself,

“I’ve got many years to live. I’m in a strong body. I’m healthy. I’m good to go for years and years.”

The truth of the matter is that this is a form of denial.  There are bacterial infections out there that I may be exposed to and unable to release. There are delicate balances of potassium and magnesium in my body that must be maintained for life to be sustained. These could spin out of balance anytime.

There are certain systems in our body that maintain the sleep cycle. It could be that when driving I will slip off to sleep and veer off the road. Who knows what might happen to anyone in the future?

I’m not intending to be pessimistic or dire in any sense of the word.  What I’m really doing with this mindfulness challenge, for myself and for you is to respect the magical mystery of each and every moment. When we do just that, each moment is enriched immeasurably.

We can all continue to have conversations with others when we are only partially present. When we choose to switch the habit of listening partially and haphazardly to being fully and completely present, we become fully engaged with the present moment. We connect to the other person with our heart and soul.

When we part, we know that we have made a profound encounter and connection.  The experience of being present in the moment taps into the juice of our life force. It feeds our energy and enthusiasm for life

The Japanese honor a very special tradition. When a person leaves, whether through walking or through a car or through a train or plane, the person waving them goodbye waits until the car or the plane or the person has disappeared. Why? This may be the last time they will ever see that individual.  It is a divine ritual for all of us to adopt whether we are Japanese or not!

The chant quoted below is taken from a Zen monastery of Jan Bays, who is a medical doctor and author of Mindful Eating as well as How to Train a Wild Elephant. I invite you to say it every day this week.

“May I respectfully remind you life and death are of supreme importance. 

Time swiftly passes by and opportunity is lost. 

When this day is past, our days of life will be decreased by one. 

Each of you should strive to awaken. 

Awaken!  Take heed. Do not squander our life.”

Robert

© Parkinsons Recovery

How to be Mindful of the Present Moment

I have a challenge for you this week that I have been practicing now for some time. My own experience has been profound. Each and every encounter that you have with another individual, whether it is –

  • Over the phone
  • Through an email exchange
  • During a chat on the internet
  • In person

Think to yourself –

“There is a possibly this person may not be alive tomorrow.” 

Let me be perfectly clear here. You are certainly not wishing that the person will die. Rather, you are honoring the reality that life is very fragile and very temporary. I have never met a person who is 140 years old.

You and I well know that we have friends and acquaintances who were alive and perfectly healthy one day. The following day they died from an entirely unexpected turn of events; automobile accidents, traumas, unexpected illnesses. It happens.

It happens to those who are one-day-old. It happens to those who are 100-years-old.  Death comes to all living entities; animals, humans, everyone.  We do not know when death will be knocking at our own door, but we can be assured it will pay us a visit eventually.

Recognizing this possibility enriches each and every encounter we have with another person.  How many of you have experienced the following thought sequence?  A family member or a treasured friend dies unexpectedly.  You are very saddened. You are grieving.  Some of your thoughts take the following form.

“The last time I saw my friend was three weeks ago.  There were so many things I wish I had told them.  I didn’t really have time for them then because I was rushing off to another appointment.  They wanted to hang out but I didn’t have the time the last time I saw them alive. Oh how I wish I had had an opportunity once again to have that encounter. I would do it differently.” 

I have had thoughts just like that in my life.  Thoughts of regret and guilt will not surface when we are present and mindful of the present moment. The realization that it is possible (though of course not probable) that our friends and family may not be alive tomorrow is the thought that provides a powerful inventive to live in the present rather than being preoccupied with popping off to the next appointment.

The acknowledgment that every living being dies enriches the practice of mindful attention to each and every moment, to each and every encounter.  It enriches the loveliness of being alive in a body.

To summarize, with each and every encounter – whether it comes through email correspondence, a telephone conversation or face-to-face encounters – think to yourself –

“This person may not be alive tomorrow. We can never really know what the future has in store for anyone.”

Then, initiate the interaction.  Notice how you feel about the exchange which ensues.  Speaking for myself, all of my encounters became richer and more meaningful.

Why is that?  I am not anticipating the future. Rather. I am living in the present moment, mindful that whatever thoughts I have and whatever feelings I may experience need to be expressed now. There may be no tomorrow to say what I had thought about saying yesterday but did not have enough time.

Robert

© Parkinsons Recovery

Deeper Implications of Suffering

You may well have been thinking to yourself these past few days –

“The mindfulness challenge this week to be attentive to suffering has not been any fun at all. What a horrible idea!”

Some of you might have decided to set this particular mindfulness assignment aside and either revisit a previous challenge or take a much deserved vacation from mindfulness challenges. Why in the world did I suggest that you become attentive to suffering?

Suffering as it turns out is an extra burden we create that overlays mental angst and emotional distress on top of physical pain. Suffering is not required or necessary. It is something that we impose on ourselves that amplifies the physical pain.

How many times have you seen an individual, particularly those that you love, suffer.  You think to yourself or even say to them –

“Stop! Get over it. Get on with your life.” 

How many times have you had that thought or expressed it to another person?

Permit me to introduce a rambling tirade which imposes additional challenges that are quite necessary. Dealing with the physical pain taken alone is a formidable challenge in itself. Imposing the additional burdens of suffering is overwhelming and unmanageable.

Perhaps the following tirade may sound vaguely familiar to you?

“This is the second painful cramp that I’ve had in my right calf this week, yuck!  This time I’m sure it’s going to get worse just like it did before when this happened several weeks ago.  This cramp is more than I can stand.  What in the world is wrong with me?  First there was the problem of tremor, then unsteadiness and now cramping?  What’s really going on?  Oh my God.  Perhaps the cramping that I’m experiencing right now is something really, really serious.  Maybe the reason I’m cramping is that I have a brain tumor.  Maybe I have cancer.  Maybe it’s something really serious like a stroke is about to unfold.  Oh my God.” 

The tirade above gives you a flavor of the irrational impositions that we too often attach to physical pain. This cacophony of worries and frets adds a thick layer of anxiety which is entirely unnecessary. Adding the overlay of suffering makes the pain seem so much acute.

All of the statements and thoughts in this tirade are fabrications of the imagination. They impose additional burdens which need not be assumed because they never existed in the first place. The person above did not have a stroke. They do not have cancer.

It is recommended to set suffering aside when the rattle trap of negative thoughts creep into your head.

“Oh, I’m sure my reasoning is obviously ridiculous.  Let me just place this tirade on the top shelf of my ‘stupid and silly thoughts’ kitchen cabinet. I can always take them out tomorrow if I choose to enjoy suffering again tomorrow.” 

Place the tirade of suffering on the cabinet shelf. Shut the cabinet door. Of course you may want to re-visit the thoughts tomorrow, especially if you are eager to find a little pleasure out of it all. Admittedly, we can all derive pleasure from suffering. Most people however discover that once the thoughts have been locked up, they have no need to re-visit them.

Once the overlay of suffering has been dissolved, initiate a dialogue with the cramping in your right calf or your right thigh or your left thigh or with whatever difficulties you might currently be having.

  • What’s up here? 
  • What’s going on? 
  • How does that discomfort actually feel?
  • Does it come and go? 
  • Does it have intensity that fluctuates? 
  • Is it sharp in character?
  • Is it dull? 
  • What does that discomfort actually feel like in the moment? 

When people wipe away the overlay of suffering that they imposed on the pain and the   discomfort, guess what?  The pain and discomfort lesson. You begin to feel a little better.  The pain is not as acute or as bothersome.

I know you probably think I have got it all backwards. It would seem more logical to predict that when you pay closer attention to pain it should get worse. Right?  Not true.

If you really sink into what is going on with your body, you can not only get an accurate fix of the character of the discomfort but determine its root cause. Once you get a few good clues about the cause, you are finally in a position to do something about it.

To summarize – suffering is actually unnecessary.  It is something that we do to ourselves. Symptoms become significantly worse when we add the unnecessary ingredient of suffering.

It is easiest to notice the suffering in others which is the reason for the challenge this week. If your experience has been like mine, it is overwhelming to realize how much suffering people create for themselves.  Shift that awareness to yourself. Why not take suffering out of the equation when physical pain is present?

When you impose suffering on top of the pain and discomfort, gather together all thoughts of suffering that ramble on and on. Place the entire tirade inside your kitchen cabinet of “stupid and silly thoughts.” Shut the door. Forget about them.

Once suffering is out of the picture you can become much more mindful and attentive to the signals your body is sending moment to moment.  Disengage suffering from the physical character of symptoms. Your body is always trying to send messages to you moment to momentPut suffering aside and listen mindfully to the messages your body is sending.

You body is always talking.

We just have to learn how to listen mindfully.

Robert

© Parkinsons Recovery

Notice Suffering

My mindfulness challenge for you this week is to become fully and completely attentive to the suffering of other persons.  Let me make something absolutely clear at the outset.   The invitation is not that you suffer yourself. Rather, become aware and sensitive to the suffering of other persons.

Suffering can come in rather extreme packages.  We are certainly all aware of the suffering of individuals who are seriously ill and in pain.  Suffering can also assume milder forms.  There can be many nuances of suffering in the tone of a person’s voice, in their expressions or even in the way they may hesitate or stumble over the words they speak. With each and every encounter with another individual, become fully attentive and aware of all suffering that may be evident with the other person.

Some examples may help flesh out the idea behind the challenge this week.

  • You are driving in your car down the street. A person driving in their car behind you decides that they need to drive a couple of inches next to your back bumper.  Look in the mirror. Examine the expression on their face. Sink in to what may be going on with the person who is on your tail. There is obviously suffering present.
  • You are standing in a line waiting to pay for groceries.  The person behind you is obviously very agitated. Their body is tense and contorted. They are eager to pass through the line very, very quickly.  Look. Notice the expression on their face. Be attentive to what is going on with them in the present moment.
  • You are sitting at the dinner table when a family member shifts into an emotional outburst. Pay close attention to their ever changing feelings as they unfold over the course of the outburst. Suffering can settle in for a spell and – all of a sudden – vanish in a flash. Obverse any indications of irritation, flashes of anger and little flares of frustration that slip out uncontrollably. Take delight in a release from the suffering which may be accompanied by a funny tale. The shifts can be shocking and the nuances flabbergasting.
  • You are listening to your favorite radio show when a listener calls in to rant. Extend your assessment of suffering to people on the radio who rant. You can hear suffering in their voices.

Suffering is ever-present in every one’s life. We do not have to be licensed detectives to confront it firsthand in ourselves or others.

Be aware of what suffering looks like. How does it feel inside your body when you connect from a deep place inside of you with the suffering of another?  Is there a unique sensation in your physical body that emerges? Does the suffering you encounter assume an intensity that ranges from mild to severe? Or, is the intensity even handed and reserved? Make no judgments. Simply observe. Be mindful of each and every encounter you have with a person who is suffering in the moment.

When you observe suffering – and you are likely to observe it often over the course of one day – do a quick assessment of its character, intensity and extensiveness for the individual.

Most of us (myself included!) prefer to run away from suffering. Turn that fear around this week. Become more and more sensitive and attentive to the suffering of each person you encounter. Please keep in mind – as I said at the outset – please do not take on the suffering of others. It is not yours to have. Simply become aware of the suffering of others and leave it at that.

Robert

© Parkinsons Recovery