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Mindfulness: The practice of being "here"
Merlin Mann | Apr 7 2006
As I mentioned in a recent Lifehacker interview with Matt, I’ve been casting about for a good way to work in my newfound interest in mindfulness, or the ostensibly Buddhist practice of bringing your attention and focus back to the present moment, primarily through breathing and awareness. Well, here you go: one rank Western novice’s collection of blurbs and excerpts on an ancient (yet oddly timely) method for easing yourself back into this moment — any day, at any time, and in anything you choose to do. Mindfulness is this and here
Just seeing
Being here for this
“Real life” mindfulness
So, why here?The question will naturally arise: what does all this stuff have to do with manila folders, Getting Things Done, Quicksilver, and the rest of the usual smorgasbord on 43F? And I’ll confess that my answer for today is “I have pretty much no idea.” I do know that the more time I spend observing how people improve their decision-making at home and at work, the clearer it is to me that they are each developing a more cogent understanding of what’s “really going on” in their lives — they’re not being driven by some unseen motor to stay busy or overstimulated for its own strangely modest rewards. For some people this might mean the ability to quickly re-prioritize on a busy day. For others it’s reflected in the calm concentration that can come from not checking email for an hour. And for a great many it’s the astoundingly simple realization — that obvious moment of realization — that this task and all of the others waiting behind it can just wait until tomorrow if it means I get to go home right now and enjoy an evening with my family. It means reacting to real reality rather than always dancing the manic watusi demanded by the ten-thousand monkeys in your head. Over the next little while, I’ll be returning to the subject of mindfulness in sometimes overt and sometimes orthogonal ways, sharing some ideas about how people are finding its place in medicine, mental health, physical and health improvements, and — yes — even in the context of personal productivity. But even (or especially) when decoupled from its practical role in solving any given problem, mindfulness has much self-evident value all by itself. If you never learn to be here for this particular moment, you’ll remain a sleepy captive to every anxiety, fantasy, or unintentional habit that’s ever popped into your life. And that, my friends, is a crappy way to go through life. 50 Comments
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![]() I'm so glad to see...Submitted by ZenFilter (not verified) on April 12, 2006 - 2:45am.
I’m so glad to see you expanding on the latent Zen philosophy in GTD, making it explicit, relevant, and comprehensible. I think you’re on the right track. »
![]() There is nothing to do,...Submitted by Mark Mason (not verified) on April 11, 2006 - 8:47am.
There is nothing to do, and no one to do it. Forty-three folders. Who is the who who wants to know? Getting things done, one by one. Were I to divide my doing, and being, undone? »
![]() MindfulPodcasts Any one interested in the...Submitted by Michael Rose (not verified) on April 11, 2006 - 1:48am.
MindfulPodcasts Any one interested in the Steve Hagen quotes (and is looking for some mindful podcasts) will be delighted to hear some of the MP3s at dharmafield.org Mindfulness & GTD As for mindfulness and GTD I’d like to spin it on its head. I’ve been a meditator for a number of years, and a GTDer for less than one, and what got me the most about the procees is “getting everything off your mind and onto paper”. Anyone who’s meditated properly for more than a few minutes will know what it’s like to get distracted, it’s natural right?, but over the years I’ve really started to noticed what it is I’m being distracted by again and again. I’ve been grouping them and analysing their roots rather than just dismissing them as ‘mere distractions’. GTD has helped get a lot of it off my mind. The traditional advice is don’t get involved with the thoughts (at all) but I’ve found it very useful to make a quick note of the Next Action relating to the thought and… more often than I’d have expected… I can drop the distracting rat-hole much easier. It’s early days but meditation is helping my GTD as much as my GTD is helping my meditation. Holistic huh?! »
![]() oops. Forget to mention the...Submitted by Michael Rose (again) (not verified) on April 11, 2006 - 1:53am.
oops. Forget to mention the fantastic ZenCast podcasts. »
![]() To see a world in...Submitted by John (not verified) on April 10, 2006 - 8:15pm.
To see a world in a grain of sand, And a heaven in a wild flower, Hold infinity in the palm of your hand, And eternity in an hour. -William Blake, Auguries of Innocence. First stanza. »
![]() [...] Contrast and compare: 43Folders...Submitted by Greenviolet » Blog Archive » it’s all abou (not verified) on April 10, 2006 - 4:56am.
[…] Contrast and compare: 43Folders Mindfulness and last night’s movie, Saw 2. […] »
![]() [...] In the meantime, I’m...Submitted by millennium winter :: a reflection not so whole » tryin (not verified) on April 10, 2006 - 5:56am.
[…] In the meantime, I’m trying to make sure I’m here, now. […] »
![]() This is a really good...Submitted by Army Brat (not verified) on April 9, 2006 - 10:54am.
This is a really good reminder. It’s so hard for me not to live in the future, and miss what I am living in right now. »
![]() On this subject I highly...Submitted by Keith (not verified) on April 9, 2006 - 4:21pm.
On this subject I highly recommend the book “Mindfulness” by Ellen Langer. Surprised no one has mentioned it yet. It says a lot of the same things. http://tinyurl.com/e7e6j »
![]() After reading Mind Performance Hacks,...Submitted by Chris Elliott (not verified) on April 7, 2006 - 4:11am.
After reading Mind Performance Hacks, this is something that I have been attempting as well. I think it is very useful in the GTD methods, because it allows focusing on that next action you are working on. When you allow yourself to get caught up in every thought and tangent, you find a straying from your actions. I think that this practice will help you get back on track. »
About Merlin MannBio Merlin Mann is an independent writer, speaker, and broadcaster. He’s best known for being the guy who started the website you’re reading right now. He lives in San Francisco, does lots of public speaking, and helps make cool things like You Look Nice Today. Also? He looks like this, answers questions, and has something like a life. Merlin’s favorite thing he’s written recently is a short essay called, “Better.” |
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