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Welcome to the July Mindful Mama Carnival: Mindfulness and Nature

This post was written for inclusion in the Mindful Mama Carnival hosted by Becoming Crunchy and TouchstoneZ. This month our participants have shared their experiences of mindfulness and the natural world. Please read to the end to find a list of links to the other carnival participants.

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Nature

Nature (Photo credit: @Doug88888)

Sometimes, we just need to be quiet enough inside to be able to hear the outside.

 

Most of us spend our days with a constant chatter going on inside. We think about the things we need to do, things we didn’t finish, and the consequences of these actions. We worry over conversations or imagine how experiences could be different. There’s little time to be quiet and concentrate on what we are doing at that moment.

 

It doesn’t matter what age you are, getting your hands in the dirty, hearing the wind shake the leaves, and feeling the sun on your skin, can bring you back to the present moment, quieting the inner chatter, and bringing about an almost involuntary mindfulness. The natural world is meditation practice. If we allow ourselves the time to stop thinking, we can’t help but be in the present moment.

 

When I am feeling scattered or unfocused, I seek out the natural world. I often go for a walk in the park and find I can’t help myself from feeling more calm and centered. I find that my breathing slows and becomes deeper. At the same time, I feel a greater energy, even if I’m exhausted. Nature nurtures me. If I have my children with me, I notice I am more patient and my words are more kind. I notice they tend to relate to each other with more openness and willingness to cooperate.

 

This, to me, is mindfulness in action. It is our natural state when we don’t fill ourselves with “stuff.” As my friend, Katie shares similar experiences with her children:

 

One of the things about having a 4yo is that she has a LOT of energy, too much to stay pent up inside our very small house. So, now that good weather is finally here, we encourage her to go outside as much as possible.. and she loves it. She’ll spend hours in our back yard, all by herself, digging and I know not what.  She and our housemate (Uncle David) planted cucumber seeds a few weeks ago, and they have a little ritual of going to check on them, to see their growth.  Pretty soon they’re going to need to start weeding… as soon as the cucumber sprouts can be easily distinguished from the weeds.

 

My 18mo loves being outside in different ways.  A fairly new walker (she’s the sort who doesn’t start using a skill til she has it down pat), she’s a bit uncertain on the uneven grass yet.  But there are a few outdoors-only toys that she revels in.. and then there’s the pile of logs (supposedly waiting to be chopped for firewood) that are irresistible to her climber’s instincts.  She picks flowers and either smells them or tries to blow them (like dandelions) – or sometimes both!

 

What is your connection with mindfulness and nature? I’d love to hear from you.

 

 

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Mindful Mama Carnival -- Becoming Crunchy and TouchstoneZ Visit The Mindful Mama Homepage to find out how you can participate in the next Mindful Mama Carnival!

On Carnival day, please follow along on Twitter using the handy #MindMaCar hashtag. You can also subscribe to the Mindful Mama Twitter List and Mindful Mama Participant Feed.
Please take time to read the submissions by the other carnival participants:

  • Zen and the Art of Raising Chickens Jenn at Monkey Butt Junction has found a connection to nature in her very own backyard, thanks to her chickens.
  • Healing Gemstones and Crystals for Children Jennifer at Hybrid Rasta Mama discusses which genstones and crystals are best used by children to support physical, emotional, and/or spiritual healing.
  • A Gardener’s Meditation Andrea at Tales of Goodness shares how she finds peace and renewal through gardening.
  • Weeding My Thoughts Amanda at Let’s Take the Metro discusses how nature keeps her in the moment and stops her endless stream of thoughts.
  • Grounded in Nature Rani at OmSheSaid shares her walk in nature, and through expressive words, shares this journey to coming home.
  • Embracing the Magic of Moonlit Nights Lucy at Dreaming Aloud shares ways to embrace the magic of moonlit nights with your children and as a woman.
  • Meditation for a Mindful Mama Alinka at Baby Web guides you through her research on the science of meditation, its numerous benefits, and presents to you a life changing meditation exercise.
  • The Wild Within Naturemummy at Motherhood: My Latest Adventure reflects on the soothing qualities of wild places.
  • Nature’s Lessons in Mindfulness Tat at Mum in Search wants to bring the same mindfulness that comes so easily in nature to her relationships.
  • On Manicured Nature: We Roam in Small Spaces Featherstory at The Aniweda Dream shares her gratitude for her limited natural settings and her plans to expand her children’s experience with the natural world.
  • Garden (Time Out) Meditation Do you ever need a time out for yourself? Amy at Anktangle finds that during a difficult parenting moment, taking pause to spend a few minutes outside is just the thing she needs to be able to experience renewed patience, focus, and energy.
  • Nature Makes Me a Better Mother Terri at Child of the Nature Isle could not imagine parenting without Mother Nature.
  • The Healing Power of Sunshine Karen at Playful Planet shares her experiences of reneweal in the natural world.
  • Natural History Kenna at A Million Tiny Things gets out into nature, 200 years ago, and isn’t sure she likes it there.
  • Nurtured by Nature Darcel at The Mahogany Way shares with us how being in nature helps her feel centered and connected.
  • Mindfulness and Nature Zoie at TouchstoneZ explores the connection between mindfulness and the natural world.
  • A Sense of Awe and Wonder Kelly at Becoming Crunchy shares the feeling she never fails to get from the natural world and how it guides her to the mindfulness she craves.

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Welcome to the December Mindful Mama Carnival: Staying Mindful During the Holiday Season

This post was written for inclusion in the Mindful Mama Carnival hosted by Becoming Crunchy and TouchstoneZ. This month our participants have shared how they stay mindful during the holiday season. Please read to the end to find a list of links to the other carnival participants.

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I am honored to share this guest post for the carnival, written by Jennifer from Hybrid Rasta Mama.

Child 1

Image by Tony Trần via Flickr

In the spirit of the Mindful Mama Carnival, I have taken the opportunity to focus on Mindful Parenting Resolutions for 2012. My original post took on a life of its own (4000 + words) and Zoie at TouchstoneZ is kind enough to hostess the second part of this lengthy post. (Part 3, The 1-2-3’s of Mindful Parenting, will appear on my blog tomorrow). You can head over to my blog to check out Part 1 which focuses on the A-B-C’s of Mindful Parenting, letters A-M.

Below you will find 13 mindful parenting resolutions, letters N-Z. Many of these practices I already employ, others have fallen by the wayside, and still others are a work in progress. However, I think that this list serves as an excellent reference for ways in which you can be a more mindful parent both during the holidays as well as all year round.

And off we go…

 

No should be used minimally. When you overuse the word “no” children eventually stop hearing it or figure that you will say no and stop even asking. For very young children, the tendency is to always say “no” as a means of establishing boundaries. These no’s are better left saved for times when No really means No. Like if a child is about to touch a hot stove. A firm no is warranted. However, if a child is simply trying to open a drawer to explore what is housed inside, it would be more mindful to show our child what drawer she can explore versus just saying “no, leave that alone.” I like to tell my daughter that she may do XYZ instead and then succinctly explain why, at this point in time, she may not do whatever it is she was attempting or successfully doing.

Opportunity to develop at their own pace. I believe that mindful parenting involves allowing children to learn and grow at a pace they are comfortable with. Programs that move children beyond their developmental readiness can possibly harm your child in the long run.

Patience is key. Mindful parenting is not easy. It does get easier but as your child enters new developmental stages, your parenting approaches will need to adjust to his or her new needs. Patience is a virtue and one that every parents needs to cultivate. Without patience, it is impossible to master mindfulness. Children push their parents’ patience to the outer limits…sometimes hourly. Try not to look at these moments in a negative light. Instead, harness those feelings of impatience and find a way to address your child’s need. When children push us, there is always a reason for it. Mindful parenting requires us to extract and address those reasons whilst keeping our cool.

Playfulness will go a long way in parenting. (Sorry – I had to include two “p’s”). The more playful you are, the better chance your child will be on board with your agenda. I have found talking pictoriallyto be a blessing when it comes to getting Tiny from point A to point B.

Quality not quantity. Every family situation is different. Some children have a stay at home parent raising them. Others go to day care. Some have an in-home caregiver while others are cared for by a close friend or relative outside of the home. Some families are single parent families. Some families are more nomadic. Others are more rooted. And of course there is everything in between. It is critical to never compare or judge the amount of time you spend with your child with how much time another mother or father spends with their child. Spending quality time with your child when you are fully engaged and in tune with them is more important than how much time you spend together. Life happens. Bills have to get paid. Not everyone can or should spend every second of the day with their child. Take care to make the moments you do spend together count in a huge way. Make these moments into memories both you and your child will cherish.

Respecting your children, respecting your spouse/partner, and respecting yourself is a key piece of mindful parenting. Children learn to respect others when they are respected and when they see their parents treating each other and themselves with respect. It is difficult to enforce respect if you yourself are not respectful. Remember, children are mirrors. They reflect who you are in their presence. So be respectful of them and they will respect you.

Simplicity is freeing. The more “stuff” you have, the more it takes over your life. You should value, use, and respect the material possessions in your life. Things should not be purchased just to store. When you store things or are trying to cram more and more into a space that seems to get smaller and smaller then you have too much. Share your abundance and simplify your life. Do not let “things” own you. Things get in the way of happiness. Things create more work and take you away from what really matters – your family. In addition, simplify your commitments. Children do not need to be involved in 5 activities per week. The more children you have with multiple activities, the more stressed everyone is and the less you see each other. Spending time together as a family is more rewarding than any class will ever be.

Trust is a must! Mindful parenting means trusting your children to “do the right thing.” Mindful parenting means you have modeled behavior that is grounded in peace, comes from a virtuous place, is rooted in morality, and is right for your family. Trust that your children will make the best decision for themselves. Trust that they know what road to take in life. Let go and trust. Also, as a parent, it is important to trust your gut, trust your decisions, and let go of the habit of second guessing yourself. Yes, you will make mistakes and perhaps make a poor choice. But trust that these choices and mistakes will ultimately have a positive outcome and serve as a learning experience.

Unconditional love, trust, support, etc… is vital in mindful parenting. Children do not deserve to have conditions placed upon them. They have to, have to, have to know and deeply feel that their parents love them and support them no matter what. Through good times, bad times, hardships, triumphs, and every life circumstance in between, parents must always be unconditional parents.

Validate your child’s feelings. Never come down on your child for expressing themselves. How do you like it when you express your emotions and leave yourself vulnerable just to have someone mock you or make you feel like your response or feeling is unwarranted. It sucks. It makes you second guess the way you are feeling. Emotions and emotional reactions/responses are beautiful even when they look ugly or feel uncomfortable. Feelings are a release. Mindful parenting is all about allowing children to express themselves so let your child know that it is OK to feel how they feel. Never make a child feel like less of a person for expressing an emotion, even if it is at the worst time or in the worst place (middle of a grocery store comes to mind.)

Words – give your young children the words they do not have to help them work through their emotions. When your child is acting out, crying, screaming, growling, stomping, hitting, and the like, help them figure out their feelings by giving them words to describe their emotional and physical responses. “You are mad because your toy fell behind the coach and I was not able to get it fast enough.” “You hit your sister because she would not give you back the crayons. We may not hit each other when we get upset. Instead, tell your sister that you would like the crayon back.” “You are crying because you are sad that daddy left for work. It is ok to be sad. I miss daddy too but he will be home in time for dinner tonight and we can all play together then.”

Xenogenesis should be embraced and not worried over. (Xenogenesis means your child is completely unlike you in every way making you question of they are even your offspring). Children are not supposed to be carbon copies of their parents. They are individuals just like the rest of us. Children will have likes and dislikes entirely their own. Their personalities might be completely unlike ours. This is perfectly normal and something to embrace. Although you may not always understand your child (since you yourself are not like them) it is important to love them for who they are. And let them be. You do you, let them do them. (Totally defunct grammar there folks).

Yelling should be kept to a minimum. Ideally, yelling would never happen. Mindful parenting revolves around peace and a gentle approach. Yelling is clearly not gentle or peaceful. Again, we are all human and there are breaking points. Voices might become raised in the general direction of our children. If this does occur, immediately reconnect with your child through a sincere apology, hugs, cuddles, eye contact, and an explanation of why you blew your top.

Zwitterions and mindful parenting have a lot in common. A zwitterion is an ion carrying a positive and negative charge. Parents will have positive days filled with powerful, focused, harmonious energy. Parents will also have negative days where the vibes are off center, nothing seems to align, and at the end of the day you feel like you just make a train wreck of your relationships with your children. Both are ok. The positives balance out the negatives so long as the positives are more frequent and more intense than the negatives. Remember – life and being human happen even to the most mindful of parent.

The ABCs of mindful parenting would not at all be complete without the 1-2-3s of mindful parenting. Be sure to visit my blog tomorrow for the final post in this series.

Blessings,

Jennifer

Jennifer blogs at Hybrid Rasta Mama. You can also find her on Twitter and Facebook.

 

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Mindful Mama Carnival -- Becoming Crunchy and TouchstoneZ Visit The Mindful Mama Homepage to find out how you can participate in the next Mindful Mama Carnival!

On Carnival day, please follow along on Twitter using the handy #MindMaCar hashtag. You can also subscribe to the Mindful Mama Twitter List and Mindful Mama Participant Feed.
Please take time to read the submissions by the other carnival participants:

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Cultivating Contentment through Doing Nothing

Cultivating Contentment through Doing Nothing

Today I will spend 15 minutes doing nothing.

 

Did that sentences strike fear into your heart like it did mine?

 

Do nothing for 15 minutes?! No way, I have too many things to do. I’m too far behind. I already have so little time for everything that I’ve got to pack every moment with stuff or…

 

Or what?

 

What kind of life is this if I can’t take 15 minutes and do nothing? Not a life I want to have. So, why am I so resistant to the idea of doing nothing for 15 minutes?

 

Doing nothing doesn’t mean watching television or surfing the net. It doesn’t mean trading productive tasks for unproductive ones. It means literally doing nothing.

 

So, I tried it today. I sat and tried to do nothing. And I couldn’t do it.

 

The first 5 of the 15 minutes, I spent alternating between flogging myself with the guilt stick and flogging myself for flogging myself with the guilt stick. For the last 10 minutes, I made mental lists of all the things I need to do, reminding myself to stop making lists as I was supposed to be doing nothing, thinking about how much my partner would be pissed at me for doing nothing when he was so busy, and making lists again. Round and round the mulberry bush, the monkey chased the weasel…

 

Then, thank goodness, my alarm went off.

 

But, I learned something. I need to do this more often. Sure, I spend time meditating, practicing Yoga, reading, and writing. But, I have become incapable of wasting time in any sort of useful manner. I have to always be “doing” and this leads me to avoiding things in other areas in my life. The avoidance leads to more stress and it just gets bigger from there.

On the way to Contentment

On the way to Contentment

 

I have been concentrating solely on things to fill my bucket because it seemed like the way to be happy. Happy happy. And I don’t really want to be happy happy. I just want to feel content.

 

Contentment seems far more elusive to me than happiness or joy.

 

I think the way to contentment might be cultivating emptiness-not the emptiness of sorrow or pain. The rich emptiness of ease.

 

The doing of No Thing.

 

 

How does doing nothing for 15 minutes strike you? Can you cultivate contentment? I’d love to hear from you.

 

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This post was written for inclusion in the Mindful Mama Blog Carnival hosted by hosted by Kelly of Becoming Crunchy and Zoie of TouchstoneZ. Participants are writing posts about what mindfulness mean to them. Please read to the end to find a list of links to the other carnival participants.

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Mindfulness: The Places the Scare Me

Mindfulness: The Places the Scare Me

The Places that Scare Me

There is no easy walk to freedom anywhere, and many of us will have to pass through the valley of the shadow of death again and again before we reach the mountaintop of our desires.
~Nelson Mandela

There are parts of me I don’t like. There are parts of me I feel ashamed of and want to hide. Whenever I touch those spaces, I want to run away from them. I squirm in discomfort anytime I’m made to confront the places that scare me.

The corridors of my mind that I inhabit have corners I cannot turn and doors I have to keep locked if I’m to avoid these feelings. Sometimes the darkness escapes its special rooms and chases me until I can get on the other side of a thick enough door.

But, the longer I do this, the more trapped I become. Those dark beasts control more and more while I become the prisoner.

I feel that I spent most of my life learning to run away from feelings. I hid from things that made me uncomfortable while at the same time I have the tendency to poke them a bit. Yoga teacher training helped me begin to notice this. Having kids forced me to look at those areas on an almost continual basis, but the mind is adept at finding new ways to hide away.

It wasn’t until I admitted to having postpartum depression for the second time that I simply stopped struggling. It really was like transition in birth. I came across new territory and for the love of my children; I surrendered and stepped into the flow of grace.

Instead of struggling, fighting, and running away, I decided to just be with the feelings. If judgment arose, I would be with that, too. When judgment about judgment about having judgment arose, I would be with that, too. It’s slow, laborious, and painful. It’s also liberating.

This is what mindfulness means to me.

A drop of water frozen by flash

Image via Wikipedia

It means being fully present in the moment. It means fully accepting everything that arises-even the dark parts that scare me. It means giving lovingkindness to myself and others.

It means staying when I want to turn away. It means nurturing when I want to fight. It means holding on when I would let it all burn.

It means breathing through moments even when I think I won’t make it. It means allowing joy to arise even when I think I don’t deserve it.

Mindfulness can look like nothing. It can be a pause in activity for the blink of an eye. It can look like deep cleansing breaths. It can mean a timeout for me to get my bearings.

Dedicating single breaths, moments, hours, and sometimes entire days of outwardly appearing non-productiveness to this task has made me a better mother, wife, and person. I’m less likely to react. When I do react, I notice much faster and can take steps to repair any harm I have caused.

Gentle parenting is mindfulness is being fully alive is loving everyone is seeing that all of us are the same.

If you want to make peace with your enemy, you have to work with your enemy. Then he becomes your partner.
~Nelson Mandela

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Mindful Mama Blog CarnivalVisit the Mindful Mama Blog Carnival Homepage to find out how you can participate in the next Mindful Mama Blog Carnival!

Please take time to read the submissions by the other carnival participants:

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While I am away from my blog, I am honored to showcase a group of talented writers who have stepped forward with their unique voices in support. Every guest writer who is featured here is one that I strongly suggest you follow. Today, I am pleased to share with you this guest post from Kelly at Becoming Crunchy. I would greatly appreciate it if you would stop by her blog and leave some comment love.
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Madeline L'Engle

Author Madeline L

It’s a huge honor to be posting over here at TouchstoneZ – Zoie is hands down one of my favorite bloggers and I definitely consider her to be one of the greatest ‘friends I’ve never met’ – so very happy to be here today.

My name is Kelly – I blog at Becoming Crunchy, where I talk about the changes my family has been making toward living more sustainably and healthfully as inspired by the birth of our daughter.

Inspired by many of the posts I’ve read here at TouchstoneZ, I’ve been thinking a lot more about ‘mindfulness’ over the past few monthsand what exactly it means to me as I make attempts to become more mindful.

I believe there are many definitions and it may even mean something different to everyone, but one way that I’ve been framing mindfulness in my own experience lately has been the idea of awarenessbecoming more aware of things both inside and outside my sphere or frame of reference.

I’ve had very definite tunnel vision for most of my life – in many ways still do – and I don’t like it.

I get caught up in my own misery. I focus too much on the future, rather than what’s going on right now. I react to new ideas with disdain. I judge too quickly. I take offense too easily.

In an ideal (to me) state of mindfulness, I would be able to break out of all of that through awareness.

Awareness that I am not alone – that many others experience both misery and triumph along with me. Awareness of what is happening around me right now – living life over constantly looking forward. Awareness that new ideas (or new to me ideas) are not automatically bad or wrong. Awareness that there is always more to someone else’s story than I know. Awareness that people’s words don’t always perfectly convey their meaning – which is quite often benevolent, rather than harmful.

There are many ways to begin bringing this awareness into one’s life – most of them involve experiencing something new – something totally outside our frame that causes us to think, ‘Hmmm…maybe I don’t know it all, after all…” (It can, of course, also cause people to become only more entrenched within their own prejudices as well, because not knowing it all after all can be a very, very scary thing).

At any rate, I’ve been able to experience this type of more mindful awareness through things like travel, living in 3 different countries, education, getting married, having a child…but one of the greatest and most constant ways I’ve found to maintain it is through story – reading, hearing, seeing the stories of others, whether fiction or non – opens my mind to a new world of consideration that I probably never would have even thought about on my own.

Cultures and religions throughout the ages have relied on the power of story to convey understanding. Jesus, Buddha, Mohammed – they all taught through story (or parables, as some would call them). And these 3 are not the exception to the rule – pretty much every group of people out there in the world that you can find are just about bursting at the seams with story.

We share stories orally, in writing, through art, song, dance, poetry…

For me, reading is the most powerful way I begin to open my mind to that awareness – for you it might be art or song or something else altogether.

There are authors I value in particular who encourage me almost every day in being more mindful about things like social justice, environmental concerns, mindfulness itself and a lot more – Madeleine L’Engle, Barbara Kingsolver, Wally Lamb, C.S. Lewis, Margaret Atwood, John Steinbeck, and many more – too many to list.

But I’ve learned to truly value anyone who assists me on this path of mindful awareness – even when I don’t like it (which is, admittedly, quite often).

Among the values I wish to pass on to my daughter, this is one of the highest. It might also be defined as empathy or keeping an open mind, but I think it’s one of the greatest ways to be in this world, and it’s something I aspire to every day.

It’s been a long path for me from being an extremely judgmental, narrow-minded, scared person to moving towards the mindfulness of awareness, and I believe it’s one I’ll be on my entire life.

I’m thankful for the power of story, in particular, for helping me so much along the way. I’m also continually thankful to bloggers like Zoie and so many others who are willing to present their story to the world – and in many ways it is also why I do what I do – I just don’t think there can be enough of learning from one another in this way…

 

What are some of the things that have brought about the mindfulness of awareness in your life? I’d love to hear from you.

 

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Kelly blogs at Becoming Crunchy. You can also find her on Facebook and Twitter.

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