Meditation Archives - Samahita Retreat https://samahitaretreat.com/category/meditation/ Thu, 15 Feb 2024 09:47:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://samahitaretreat.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/cropped-favicon-samahita-1-36x36.webp Meditation Archives - Samahita Retreat https://samahitaretreat.com/category/meditation/ 32 32 Music makes the world go round! https://samahitaretreat.com/music_makes_the_world_go_round/ https://samahitaretreat.com/music_makes_the_world_go_round/#respond Tue, 21 Nov 2023 21:09:40 +0000 https://samahitaretreat.com/?p=60889 The post Music makes the world go round! appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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No matter who you are, what language you speak or where you come from, music is a Universal language that we can all understand, and enjoy. Music is as old as humanity itself and may have even begun before we began to create languages. It’s difficult for archeologists and historians to pinpoint as prehistoric instruments were made from soft materials like reeds, wood and animal skins and haven’t survived, the oldest being a flute made from bone. So, what is the function of music? Why has it survived and continued to evolve alongside humanity? In today’s blog I will shed a little more light on the magic of music and sound and how it contributes to our overall wellbeing. 

A brief history of music

So when did humans start to play music and why? Where did it start and what were the first instruments created? We listen to music everyday and it’s such a big part of our lives, memories, traditions, cultures, it brings people together! Some suggest that music helped create and form society itself. We all have a different idea of what constitutes sounds being called “music”, for example, I may consider a mother humming to her baby music, but you may not. Aside from that, the first music to have been created was likely singing, using the voice and then rhythm, created by hand clapping or sticks and stones being tapped together. Some of the oldest instruments found are flutes made from bone which date back to about 40 000 yrs ago. Simpler instruments like drums, shakers and rattles are thought to have existed before that, however being made of weaker more biodegradable materials, have not survived. 

Our tribal hunter gatherer ancestors played music and danced around the fire before a hunt to bring people into a cohesive group, and after to enjoy the success of the hunt together, for entertainment, happiness. Flutes are thought to have been used to attract birds for hunting, for survival. Drums were used in sacrifices and military processions. Music was played to Kings and Queens in courts and castles. It has been shared amongst peoples through exploration and the trade routes, instruments and melodies evolving over the ages as new sounds were discovered. Music forms a big part of ritual and religions. Music keeps workers happy when doing repetitive or boring work, thus increasing productivity. 

Music and Yoga

In the Indus valley about 3500 years ago, the Vedas: 4 “books of knowledge” were created and are regarded by Hindus as the sacred foundation of their religion. The Vedas embrace a multitude of texts and interpretations in ancient Sanskrit comprised of poetry, hymns, philosophical dialogue, rituals, myths, mantra and musical arrangements in 4 parts: the Rig, Yajur, Sama and Athar Vedas. Originally passed down orally and preserved by Brahmin priests chanting the verses in a very specific way. To ensure that the sound of each word remains unaltered, practitioners are taught from childhood complex recitation techniques that are based on tonal accents, a unique manner of pronouncing each letter and specific speech combinations. 

Mantra is a form of meditation using a sound, word, or phrase recited silently or aloud and are often combined with breath and rhythm. At its core, it harnesses the inexplicable, inseparable human connection to sound and has been purposefully composed to produce a certain effect on the mind and the body. Chanting is a deep devotional practice (bhakti) to be done with care and respect of the culture from which it comes. When the correct technique is used, chanting can help to alleviate anxiety and stress and improve one’s mood. Humming, like when practicing Brahmari (bee breath) or chanting Om can boost the production of nitric oxide in the body which helps regulate the nervous, immune, and cardiovascular systems. This in turn, can help increase blood flow and promote muscle relaxation.

Sound and wellbeing

Sound has long been used by ancient peoples to heal and explore altered states of consciousness. Aborigines used the didgeridoo over 40 000 years ago as a sound healing instrument. Tibetan singing bowls have long been used in spiritual ceremonies. Sound and mantra meditation is a form of focused awareness type of meditation. One kind that has become more popular is called “sound baths”, which uses Tibetan/quartz singing bowls, gongs, bells, tuning forks and voice to guide the listener. These practices show how sound manifests not only through hearing but through tactile physical vibrations and frequencies. Although science is still catching up to understanding how sound heals, sound-based vibration treatment has been shown to improve stress, anxiety, pain from arthritis, fibromyalgia, stiffness, and increases blood circulation and lowers blood pressure. 

Binaural Beats and Solfeggio frequencies

Sounds emit a frequency which is measured in Hertz (Hz). These frequencies are said to have different effects on our body, mind and emotions. The human brain is essentially an electrical device, with different tasks and emotional states generating various frequencies. There are 5 widely recognized brainwaves (gamma, beta, delta, theta, alpha), each having a distinct purpose in helping us how to think, behave, move and process information. If our physiology, diet or environment causes an over or underproduction of a certain brainwave, it can alter the balance of our bodies and induce many negative effects such as insomnia, anger, stress, learning difficulties or anxiety. This is why it’s key to optimize our brains for a better wave balance, rather than aiming to increase or decrease a particular one. 

Solfeggio frequencies make up a 6-tone music scale, which was used in religious music of the 10th century, first introduced by Benedictine monk Guido d’Arezzo, and are most commonly associated with the Gregorian chants. They were lost over time and were rediscovered by Dr Joseph Puleo in the 1970’s. Solfeggio frequencies are widely used today in sound therapy. (They also relate to the chakras/energy centres within the body)

  1. 396 Hz – Associated with Liberating Guilt and Fear
  2. 417 Hz – Associated with Undoing Situations and Facilitating Change
  3. 528 Hz – Associated with Transformation and Miracles (DNA Repair)
  4. 639 Hz – Associated with Connecting/Relationships
  5. 741 Hz – Associated with Expression/Solutions
  6. 852 Hz – Associated with Returning to Spiritual Order

Binaural Beats involve playing two slightly different frequencies simultaneously, creating a perceived third frequency that impacts brainwave activity. Used in relaxation, meditation, and focus enhancement and can induce states conducive to astral projections and lucid dreaming.

The crescendo

Music influences the limbic system of the brain through pitch and rhythm, affecting our emotions, feelings and sensations. Ancient cultures understood the power of rhythm, harmonics and tone. Music is vibration, and everything in nature is vibrating, resonating at different frequencies. So, sounds played at specific frequencies with the right intention, have the power to effect healing. When it comes to your health and wellbeing, you could certainly benefit from exploring some of these sound healing modalities like listening to Binaural beats before bed or trying brainwave entrainment like what we offer here at Samahita on our Brain Health Upgrade program or joining the weekly gong/sound meditation. As new research continues, it will be exciting to see the potential impact of future sound technologies and how they will evolve in entertainment, retail, healthcare and beyond! For now though, simply consider the kind of music you listen to while commuting to the office, when you’re working out, practicing yoga, working or relaxing. The impact of your musical choices will have an effect on you, so notice these differences and continue to explore the magic of music!

References: 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_music 

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/06/170620093153.htm 

https://www.musicianwave.com/history-of-music/ 

https://www.healthline.com/health/sound-healing 

https://thehumancondition.com/sound-healing-therapy/ 

https://mindeasy.com/the-9-solfeggio-frequencies-and-their-benefits/ 

https://www.mindvibrations.com/solfeggio-frequencies/ 

https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/tradition-of-vedic-chanting-00062 

https://www.healthline.com/health/mind-body/mantras-for-anxiety 

https://lucid.me/blog/5-brainwaves-delta-theta-alpha-beta-gamma/ 


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Understanding transforms your life and can change the world https://samahitaretreat.com/understanding-transforms-your-life-and-can-change-the-world/ https://samahitaretreat.com/understanding-transforms-your-life-and-can-change-the-world/#respond Sun, 11 Sep 2022 12:51:19 +0000 https://samahitaretreat.com/?p=56753 The post Understanding transforms your life and can change the world appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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You may walk into Samahita’s dining area, get a plate and start filling it up with salad on the buffet, yet feel pulled to lift your head. You spot a painting on the back wall in front of you. For now you admire its abstractness and leave it at that. After all, when the belly rumbles go put more than salad on that plate. Part of your new experience while at Samahita in this new era is a hybrid-buffet of delights to fill your plate with and fresh items to order directly from the kitchen. Yummilicious.

Food aside, hunger and tastebuds satisfied, your eye goes back to the painting. So you get up and walk over there and realize it needs a bit of study. It triggers a thought about yoga and what its place in one’s life might mean. Beyond that, it causes you to just think about how am I managing my “inner” world, the one where I go on private, solo roller coaster rides of hidden mental valleys and peaks, with rare plateaus?

And though one of the key indicators to a balanced life in this Translational Model of Yoga (for that is what this painting depicts at a base level) is “practice regularly,” a phrase oft-heard, less followed, your eye gets caught on another key, one that says “Develop Understanding.”

The meditative process requires engagement and reflection, fine tuning insight which results in heightened discernment. This one essential key to aiding balance in life now occupies your thoughts. What is understanding? How to develop it? Understand what?

So you decide to walk up the path and pass the main shala, Samahita’s centerpiece, and are struck by the quote message beautifully written, with added drawing, in chalk on the board outside the shala. The message you read says:

“Compassion is always born of Understanding. And Understanding is the result of Looking Deeply.” – associated with Zen but attributed to the beautiful Vietnamese monk, Thich Nhat Hahn.

That one message leaves you standing there, motionless, for hours (ok maybe only seconds but hours would really do it).

Now it becomes clearer. As part of the going-internal process, which is the entire yoga process, which is the complete meditative process, which is a rich life, a balanced life, an inner peace being cultivated, eventually in a centered state, to Develop Understanding is essential. And why? Because, as TNH just told you, compassion is its direct output. And such understanding can only come from engaging and tuning within.

Compassion, easily overused and thrown into cliche statements, is really one of the highest human capacities. To be able to replace aggression with compassion not only transforms your life but changes the world. Understanding that is developed by looking in gives one insight into how people feel, suffer (ah this sounds like empathy) ……

…..but cultivates an added level of super power: enables you to step away from anger, hate, resentment, even emotional upset, because you understand how people behave, feel, (mis)think, and more. You cannot fill your life up with these unrewarding, but overly consumed, conditioned human responses anymore.

You now not only empathize but you have the power to step away from your own shortcomings, which result in anger and resentment, with fear lurking in the background, and instead have compassion – which involves not just feeling others but a capacity to help.

Because you don’t just understand, rather you have developed understanding. Which is insight. Which is true discernment, to see things how they really are.

Remember, this is your personal process. It does not condone others’ hurtful actions or undo any of that from the past. Rather it represents your clearer state of mind where compassion is never replaced by aggression, a characteristic of such inferior vibration that your emotional self may want to justify because “they did that to them or me …”

However, as understanding is developed, clarity prevails, compassion is a far greater response for your own psyche and the good of all beings on this planet. It arises from a strong character and leads to far greater change and improvements than aggression, anger, or resentment ever have or ever will. As noted, a positive action is included in compassion.
Change for the better is the outcome.

So in developing understanding we in a sense have to get over ourselves, our own limitations that trip us up and keep us thinking or behaving small.

Hmmmm. Was it seconds or hours? You decide to walk on up to reception and book a massage and a near infrared sauna session (which aids in understanding) and let all that rest for today.

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Paul Dallaghan’s expertise with breathwork, body and meditative practices comes from three sources: over 25 years of daily dedicated practice and teaching these techniques; immersion in the original culture through one-on-one direct training in practice and study of ancient texts; doctoral scientific research at a leading US university (Emory) on yoga and breath in terms of stress, health and aging. Paul occupies a unique space to impart genuine teaching and science on these practices, acknowledged by his teacher and lineage (Kuvalayananda) in India as a Teacher-of-teachers and a Master of Breath, identified to carry the tradition (Pranayama). This places him as the only master-level yoga and breath practitioner currently immersed in scientific academic research on breathwork, stress and health. His sincere and ongoing role is to teach, write and research to help put out experienced and authentic information on these areas in a world full of confusion and conflicting messages both off and online.

For more on his background see his bio.

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Do You Ask for Help? https://samahitaretreat.com/do-you-ask-for-help/ https://samahitaretreat.com/do-you-ask-for-help/#respond Thu, 29 Jul 2021 02:20:54 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=54406 The post Do You Ask for Help? appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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How are things going for you lately? Some challenges? Nice surprises?
Do you stay evenly balanced through the challenge-surprise cycle? Or does it get wild? Does practice go on and off?

Have you ever heard that line how a man will never ask for directions so instead ends up driving all over the place, not actually finding his destination, but convinced (or really deluded) that he’s on the right track?
Or, does that sound familiar, more personal, to you?
And though in the case of travel directions it is most often portrayed as a male trait, all are victim to it (though we won’t get into this debate now :).

If it is the stereotypical male in the car saying “I know where it is”, and doesn’t, what is going on inside that head? And why can the … in this cliche story … woman sitting beside him feel freer to ask for directions? Of course in reality it has nothing to do with gender. It is one part social conditioning, and perhaps another part psychology.

Pride and self-preservation mix with delusion, in the form of mind (manas) and ego (ahankara) ruling as bedfellows. What happened to real intelligence, which is governed by the heart, whereby discernment dominates? Yet not in this case.

So it applies to all human beings equally – what will it take to ask for help? Simply. Humbly. Sincerely.

First, acknowledge “I know nothing.” In reality we know little, understand less, cannot really see what is going on because we don’t have the advantage of that (elevated) perspective. So to think one knows and has the solution is unsteady ground on which to tread.

Then, note “I have my intelligence of insight and can do my best to see what is going on now, in front of and around me, and I have some experience, a little bit of knowledge, to draw on.” It’s easy to imagine and make up a future in your head, worry about it or turn it into something fantastical. Memory is also fickle as we look at the past. So what do you know, now, from deep within?

This point is at the heart of ‘yoga’, ‘meditation’, ‘contemplative’ life, as the combination of virtue and discernment. Your own virtuous qualities will become evident in the situation you are facing. Meaning, how do you behave, treat others and yourself? This impacts how you see things. A clearer, sharper, yet virtuous mind is one that constantly discerns. Thereby understands the state of what is going on with them or others, now. This is different from “I know what is going on”.

Virtue and discernment lead to behavior and understanding.
That line is basically the distillation of an entire system of life philosophy.

” A clearer, sharper, yet virtuous mind is one that constantly discerns. Thereby understands the state of what is going on with them or others, now. This is different from “I know what is going on”……”

Virtue and discernment lead to behavior and understanding.
That line is basically the distillation of an entire system of life philosophy.

BUT …… there is another important aspect, out of “I don’t know,” where humility leads virtue and discernment. Then, one can ASK FOR HELP.

ah, well is that all it takes?
Simple really. Come from your heart and you won’t feel pride, shame, concern about how you’ll be judged or look. You can just simply ask for help.

In this case it’s acknowledging that there is no way I can figure any of this out. Hopefully I can stay sharp and clear and respond well as this fickle universe continues its game of constant flux and change.

So simply I ask for help.
But be specific. Do it as a morning open-your-day contemplation. Get absorbed into it. Be clear on what and where in life you need help, which often revert back to the level of virtue and discernment, often low or lacking, and from which issues arise.

Some feel it selfish and egotistical to ask for help. Then the understanding of asking for help is confused. Following the above example, if you are driving others and don’t know the way it is more selfish and egotistical to think you know the way and keep driving without asking, essentially putting that on others.

You ask for help, not for things. We all need help.

And help comes in subtle ways. So when some ask “but who do I ask for help from?” It’s not who or what, it’s tune into your heart, open up, see where you’re stuck, or what is stuck around you, and be simple and humble asking for help. Put it out there. It’s personal for you what you’ll associate that with. No one can or should dictate that for you. But if you are really in your heart the rest takes care of itself.

“But does it work?” Until you ask how would you know? How can anyone else tell you? I know my experience. And it’s powerful.
Tune in, in the heart.
Simple, humble, be specific.
Open up, no conditioned limitations blocking you (but unfortunately they’ll arise). And ask for help.

Make it part of your daily life.

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As a result, Paul occupies a unique space to impart genuine teaching and science on the breath, body, and meditative practices, seen as a Teacher-of-teachers and identified to carry on the tradition of Pranayama. His sincere and ongoing role is to teach, write and research, to help put out experienced and authentic information on these areas of how we live, breathe and be, to help people improve their mental and physical health, and live more fulfilling lives. For more on his background see his bio [/av_textblock] [/av_two_third][/av_section]


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Sustainability

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1 Minute Meditation – Self Compassion https://samahitaretreat.com/1-minute-meditation-self-compassion/ https://samahitaretreat.com/1-minute-meditation-self-compassion/#respond Tue, 26 Jan 2021 04:54:45 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=54201 The post 1 Minute Meditation – Self Compassion appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Paul teaches how to go deeper within and process deeper blockages with self-compassion.

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As a result, Paul occupies a unique space to impart genuine teaching and science on the breath, body, and meditative practices, seen as a Teacher-of-teachers and identified to carry on the tradition of Pranayama. His sincere and ongoing role is to teach, write and research, to help put out experienced and authentic information on these areas of how we live, breathe and be, to help people improve their mental and physical health, and live more fulfilling lives. For more on his background see his bio [/av_textblock] [/av_two_third][/av_section]


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1 Minute Yoga-Janu Sirsasana

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The Benefits of Pranayama https://samahitaretreat.com/the-benefits-of-pranayama/ https://samahitaretreat.com/the-benefits-of-pranayama/#respond Fri, 11 Sep 2020 04:54:42 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=53914 The post The Benefits of Pranayama appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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What are the benefits of pranayama? Sri O. P. Tiwari explains briefly how pranayama allows us to see reality for what it is and not as it appears.

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As a result, Paul occupies a unique space to impart genuine teaching and science on the breath, body, and meditative practices, seen as a Teacher-of-teachers and identified to carry on the tradition of Pranayama. His sincere and ongoing role is to teach, write and research, to help put out experienced and authentic information on these areas of how we live, breathe and be, to help people improve their mental and physical health, and live more fulfilling lives. For more on his background see his bio [/av_textblock] [/av_two_third][/av_section]


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meditation img meitation

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Meditation From Your Heart to a World in Need of Healing, Justice & Caring https://samahitaretreat.com/meditation-from-your-heart-to-a-world-in-need-of-healing-justice-car/ Wed, 03 Jun 2020 12:38:35 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=53529 The post Meditation From Your Heart to a World in Need of Healing, Justice & Caring appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Samahita in heart and physical space accepts all people. We cannot tolerate racism, discrimination, or needless prejudiced violence of any kind. Whether police brutality in the US or Yemeni warlords’ severe human rights abuses, our hearts yearn to spread healing love to all suffering, the focus of this 20 minute meditation offering. Please join in an active heart support of solidarity.

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As a result, Paul occupies a unique space to impart genuine teaching and science on the breath, body, and meditative practices, seen as a Teacher-of-teachers and identified to carry on the tradition of Pranayama. His sincere and ongoing role is to teach, write and research, to help put out experienced and authentic information on these areas of how we live, breathe and be, to help people improve their mental and physical health, and live more fulfilling lives. For more on his background see his bio [/av_textblock] [/av_two_third][/av_section]


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Richard Freeman & Mary Taylor Live – Compassionate and Clear in the Midst of it All https://samahitaretreat.com/richard-freeman-mary-taylor-live-at-samahita-3-4-2020/ Tue, 07 Apr 2020 04:54:40 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=52939 The post Richard Freeman & Mary Taylor Live – Compassionate and Clear in the Midst of it All appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Richard Freeman and Mary Taylor’s Samahita Live event “Leaning into the Curve; Grounded, Compassionate and Clear in the Midst of it All” Originally streamed live on April 3rd, 2020

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Finding it difficult to practice, get moving? Let the mind lead the body https://samahitaretreat.com/let-the-mind-lead-the-body/ Tue, 31 Mar 2020 08:24:24 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=52860 The post Finding it difficult to practice, get moving? Let the mind lead the body appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Stuck at home without much to do? Or too much to do but it’s all stressful? Or bored? Or just not interested that much in what has to be done or what could be done? Thinking more about “what if’s”?

You are not alone as a new limited personal freedom situation seems difficult to adapt to and not sure when it will change again. If you carefully take a look at the objections, frustrations, limitations and more you will see a predominant mental source.

You would like to exercise, do more yoga practice, avoid over-snacking, and so on ….. but you don’t. Is it because you lack the physical capability? Most likely not. The mental side wavers, offers up excuses, follows the path of least resistance and falls prey to irritation and poor judgment, enough to challenge any relationship but also have you question what is life about?

Well, it’s a question we should all ask and reflect on deeply at some point. But that is not the aim of this blog. Nor is it to focus on the aforementioned gloom. Rather the focus is a solution to all this – though physical activity is essential for your health its driver, meaning what gets it going, is your cognitive ability. In short, first exercise your mind and you will find the physical activity will follow. By this I do not mean mere will power – your Trojan effort to get out of bed and do something!! Rather, a well-trained and cognitively active mind wards off inactivity setting up a virtuous cycle where the mind improves the physical and the engagement in the physical improves the mind.

A clear understanding of the yogic teaching reveals yoga is complete attention to the mental aspects of life to take care of the cognitive, emotional and physical elements that make up a lived life. This can come down to where you choose to put your attention throughout the day, what you read, what you watch, who you talk to, what you talk about, and so on. And now science confirms this too. A recent study published in the journal Health Psychology last week clearly demonstrates that cognitive capacities mainly influence physical activity and not vice versa (1).

To make the point even stronger, another very recent study looked at cognitive decline in middle-aged and older adults after retirement (2). Those who withdrew from mental engagement in any type of task had steeper declines in cognitive abilities, and this showed up more so amongst women (nothing to do with me I promise).

Back to the question, how to engage, how to lead with the mental side? Is it sitting at home doing crossword puzzles, word games, scrabble and more? Though not bad exercises that’s not really where it shows up. Consider the following in your daily routine now:

  1. Take care – in who you talk to about what and for how long, including what you read or watch
  2. Schedule in blocks of mental focus time on certain work or personally rewarding tasks
  3. Allow total non-mental times – this means not stuck in ruminating thoughts or having to deal with problems that perhaps work or home brings
  4. Sit and engage in a contemplative meditative practice. I offered a very thorough one last week [click here for video] that, if done well, entrains the mind on one particular topic, in this case deeply feeling gratitude, to forgiveness, to being open to ask for help
  5. Sit and do breath practices – fully engaged. My own upcoming research is the first to study such engagement in practice and its outcomes. However, in this instance being engaged channels your mental activity. A greater ease for physical activity, meaning non-sedentary, basically not sitting around, follows
  6. As you engage even in gentle physical yoga techniques fully put your attention into each action and move you do – be one with what you do
  7. Even if you do end up running, biking or working out see if you can drop the music in the ears or watching the news on tv and instead fully engage in what you are doing
  8. Set aside a separate time to just listen to music or just watch the news. Even total “out” time to chill and watch something totally enjoyable (my recent recommendation a week ago still stands: Jo Jo Rabbit)

Lastly, you have spent some amount of time before this crisis in a yoga or fitness class, or at Samahita learning breathwork, meditation, or some physical yoga practices. Can you do them on your own? Why not? This is the perfect example of the mental leads the way. Yes, it is difficult, perhaps complicated. But now is the ideal time to take a bite at it. You can follow loads of practices online. But that’s all that will happen – you will follow. Take this time to learn, do, and engage that virtuous cycle of a better mind state and improved physical health.

This is what ‘now’ means.

(1)

Boris Cheval, Dan Orsholits, Stefan Sieber, Delphine Courvoisier, Stéphane Cullati, Matthieu P. Boisgontier. Relationship between decline in cognitive resources and physical activity.. Health Psychology, 2020
https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fhea0000857

(2)

Jeremy M. Hamm, Jutta Heckhausen, Jacob Shane, Margie E. Lachman. Risk of cognitive declines with retirement: Who declines and why? Psychology and Aging, 2020
https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fpag0000453

[av_section min_height='' min_height_pc='25' min_height_px='500px' padding='no-padding' custom_margin='0px' custom_margin_sync='true' svg_div_top='' svg_div_top_color='#333333' svg_div_top_width='100' svg_div_top_height='50' svg_div_top_max_height='none' svg_div_top_opacity='' svg_div_bottom='' svg_div_bottom_color='#333333' svg_div_bottom_width='100' svg_div_bottom_height='50' svg_div_bottom_max_height='none' svg_div_bottom_opacity='' color='main_color' background='bg_color' custom_bg='' background_gradient_direction='vertical' background_gradient_color1='#000000' background_gradient_color2='#ffffff' background_gradient_color3='' src='' attachment='' attachment_size='' attach='scroll' position='top left' repeat='no-repeat' video='' video_ratio='16:9' overlay_opacity='0.5' overlay_color='' overlay_pattern='' overlay_custom_pattern='' shadow='no-border-styling' bottom_border='no-border-styling' bottom_border_diagonal_color='#333333' bottom_border_diagonal_direction='' bottom_border_style='' custom_arrow_bg='' id='' custom_class='post-bio' template_class='' aria_label='' av_element_hidden_in_editor='0' av_uid='av-l28hpj3l' sc_version='1.0'] [av_one_third first min_height='av-equal-height-column' vertical_alignment='av-align-top' space='' row_boxshadow_color='' row_boxshadow_width='10' margin='0px' margin_sync='true' mobile_breaking='' mobile_column_order='' min_col_height='' padding='' padding_sync='true' svg_div_top='' svg_div_top_color='#333333' svg_div_top_width='100' svg_div_top_height='50' svg_div_top_max_height='none' svg_div_top_opacity='' svg_div_bottom='' svg_div_bottom_color='#333333' svg_div_bottom_width='100' svg_div_bottom_height='50' svg_div_bottom_max_height='none' svg_div_bottom_opacity='' border='' border_style='solid' border_color='' radius='' radius_sync='true' column_boxshadow_color='' column_boxshadow_width='10' background='bg_color' background_color='' background_gradient_direction='vertical' background_gradient_color1='#000000' background_gradient_color2='#ffffff' background_gradient_color3='' src='' attachment='' attachment_size='' background_position='top left' background_repeat='no-repeat' highlight_size='1.1' animation='' link='' linktarget='' link_hover='' title_attr='' alt_attr='' mobile_display='' mobile_col_pos='0' id='' custom_class='' template_class='' aria_label='' av_uid='av-1fljhev' sc_version='1.0'] [av_image src='https://samahitaretreat.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/paul-bio-headshot.jpg' attachment='44398' attachment_size='full' copyright='' caption='' image_size='' styling='' align='center' font_size='' overlay_opacity='0.4' overlay_color='#000000' overlay_text_color='#ffffff' animation='no-animation' hover='' appearance='' link='' target='' title_attr='' alt_attr='' img_scrset='' lazy_loading='disabled' id='' custom_class='' template_class='' av_element_hidden_in_editor='0' av_uid='av-zpv2cn' sc_version='1.0' admin_preview_bg=''][/av_image] [/av_one_third][av_two_third min_height='' vertical_alignment='av-align-top' space='' row_boxshadow_color='' row_boxshadow_width='10' margin='0px' margin_sync='true' mobile_breaking='' border='' border_color='' radius='0px' radius_sync='true' padding='15px' padding_sync='true' column_boxshadow_color='' column_boxshadow_width='10' background='bg_gradient' background_color='' background_gradient_color1='#93adab' background_gradient_color2='#ffffff' background_gradient_direction='vertical' src='' attachment='' attachment_size='' background_position='top left' background_repeat='no-repeat' highlight_size='1.1' animation='' link='' linktarget='' link_hover='' title_attr='' alt_attr='' mobile_display='' id='' custom_class='' aria_label='' av_uid='av-j5lg07'] [av_textblock size='' av-medium-font-size='' av-small-font-size='' av-mini-font-size='' font_color='' color='' id='' custom_class='' template_class='' av_uid='av-l28hkww9' sc_version='1.0' admin_preview_bg=''] Dr. Paul Dallaghan’s expertise with breathwork, body and meditative practices comes from three sources: (1) three decades of daily dedicated practice and teaching these techniques; (2) uniquely acknowledged in the Yoga tradition by the title of “Master Yogi-Prānācharya (expert in breath)”, following an immersion in the original culture through one-on-one direct training in practice and study of ancient texts; (3) a PhD in doctoral scientific research at a leading US university (Emory) covering both the tradition and science of yoga and breath practices in terms of stress, health and aging. As a result, Paul occupies a unique space to impart genuine teaching and science on the breath, body, and meditative practices, seen as a Teacher-of-teachers and identified to carry on the tradition of Pranayama. His sincere and ongoing role is to teach, write and research, to help put out experienced and authentic information on these areas of how we live, breathe and be, to help people improve their mental and physical health, and live more fulfilling lives. For more on his background see his bio [/av_textblock] [/av_two_third][/av_section]


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Overcoming Fear https://samahitaretreat.com/overcoming-fear/ Tue, 31 Mar 2020 06:38:56 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=52856 The post Overcoming Fear appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Overcoming Fear

Paul Dallaghan guides us through a contemplative meditation to help overcome fear

Originally streamed live at Samahita on 26 March, 2020


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Contemplative Meditation https://samahitaretreat.com/contemplative-meditation/ Tue, 31 Mar 2020 06:32:28 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=52855 The post Contemplative Meditation appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Contemplative Meditation with Paul Dallaghan

Get Centered with Contemplative Meditation with Paul Dallaghan. Listen and be guided through Gratitude, Forgiveness, Compassion and more.

Originally streamed live on Monday 24 March, 2020

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As a result, Paul occupies a unique space to impart genuine teaching and science on the breath, body, and meditative practices, seen as a Teacher-of-teachers and identified to carry on the tradition of Pranayama. His sincere and ongoing role is to teach, write and research, to help put out experienced and authentic information on these areas of how we live, breathe and be, to help people improve their mental and physical health, and live more fulfilling lives. For more on his background see his bio [/av_textblock] [/av_two_third][/av_section]


More from the Samahita Blog

The post Contemplative Meditation appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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