Klik op een omslag om naar Google Boeken te gaan.
Bezig met laden... Mindful Me: Mindfulness and Meditation for Kidsdoor Whitney Stewart
Geen Bezig met laden...
Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Health & Fitness.
Juvenile Nonfiction.
Sociology.
HTML: Sometimes kids' lives can get busy and out of control, and worries can take over. When that happens, knowing how to pause and regain composure with mindfulness can help! This easily digestible guide introduces kids to mindfulness as a way to find clarity, manage stress, handle difficult emotions, and navigate personal challenges. With step-by-step instructions to over thirty breathing, relaxation, and guided meditation exercises, readers will have an entire toolkit at their disposal and writing prompts will help them process their discoveries. Clearly written and incredibly relatable, this invaluable resource provides a positive introduction to the world of self-care and mindfulness. .Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
Actuele discussiesGeen
Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)158.1Philosophy and Psychology Psychology Applied Psychology Personal improvement and analysisLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
Ben jij dit?Word een LibraryThing Auteur. |
I think the language the book used to explain mindfulness is still a little confusing. It all sounds nice to hear, but when I actually put those explanation side by side with the activities they listed, they don't always match up. Based on the activities in the book, I understand mindfulness as a combination of three types of meditation: 1) Making your brain become super aware of how your behaves when you're breathing in and out. You need to be super focused and think of nothing but the breath. 2) Imagining and visualizing magical things like fire balls, colorful lights, or clouds, and linking these imageries to feelings you want to remove (e.g. imagine clouds that represent your different anxieties vanish in the sky) or increase (e.g. imagine you and everyone else in the world are engulfed by the light of kindness, or perseverance, or some other positive quality.) 3) Paying close attention to nature and how nature changes, and associating these changes with positive feelings, so as to help you not feel sad about changes in life.
I think the rationale behind 1) is to unplug your brain from whatever you're caught up with in the moment, because you're asked to totally stop thinking about anything else but your breath. It likely works very well. I have since asked both my kids, when they are stuck in a state of meltdown, or struggling over and over with the section of a piano piece, to take three mindfulness breaths. I think it will probably work just as well if you change the focus from "breath" to other things, as long as you are still really focused on that thing. For example, I understand Christians who meditate tend to focus on a short Scripture verse. I think 2) points to the fact, established by scientists and psychologists, that the human brain is more susceptible to what we choose to imagine than we think. In this case, I would want to imagine things that are close to God's truth in the spiritual realm. The value 3) is promoting resonate a lot with Buddhism. But I think the reason we get sad about things changing is because humans by nature seek eternity. It's what God has placed in our hearts. So I am leery of attempts to mold the brain to not feel bad about any type of change.
The book talks repeatedly about how when you unplug yourself from your thoughts and focus on your breath, you will gaze upon your "WISDOM MIND" (in all caps, LOL) and that WISDOM MIND will show you to think, feel, and behave wisely. I don't think unplugging has that much power, other than calming you down :P The Holy Spirit needs to move in the person, otherwise no one can help thinking, feeling or acting foolishly. ( )