This is not one of the exercises in the book, but I thought I’d mention it here, because I find it interesting.
In the last chapter, O’Connor gives “Twelve Easy Steps to Rewire the Brain.”
Here I want to say something about number eight:
8. Think with your whole mind.
This means to think with both logic and intuition, intuition informing logic, logic checking intuition.
This past week I noticed two instances of this at work. During the marking of papers, I used this to check my addition. After I had given all the ticks, I wrote down the mark, then I glanced at the answer again, to see if the student’s knowledge matched the mark they got. This was a surprisingly easy and effective check.
Yesterday at the factory I was curious about a pile of recently-soldered parts, and I bent over then to look closer. I happened to be mindful at the time, and I noticed that I was holding my hands clasped behind my back. This was my intuitive mind keeping my curious logical mind from making me reach out and touch something that was hot.
Nov 18, 2007, 05:02AM PST | 1 cheer | 0 comments
I’m not procrastinating on this, I’ve lent the book to someone else!
Apr 09, 2006, 01:24PM PDT | 1 comment
Exercise 8 goes very well with 43Things. In it one examines the reasons why one cannot do the things you’ve always wanted to do.
Feb 19, 2006, 10:00AM PST | 0 comments
Exercise 6 is writing a biography in a mindful way. I’ve done it.
Feb 19, 2006, 09:22AM PST | 1 cheer | 3 comments
Exercise 6 is writing a biography, using mindfullness as a guide.
I have to say at this point that these exercises are really exercises that can be repeated from time to time, and not just simple workbook problems.
Feb 17, 2006, 08:55AM PST | 0 comments
Exercise 5 is an introduction to mindful meditation.
Feb 17, 2006, 08:52AM PST | 0 comments
Exercise 1 is a list of questions that makes one think about the quality of one’s life.
Feb 13, 2006, 12:50PM PST | 1 cheer | 0 comments
Done Exercise 4. It is a little exercise in observing the mind thinking.
Feb 13, 2006, 11:48AM PST | 2 cheers | 0 comments
The book Undoing Perpetual Stress by Richard O’Connor has a number of exercises that one can do to improve mindfulness, his term for the opposite of mindless existence.
I think he really has some very good ideas. One has defences to protect the self from the effort of change, and reading the book and agreeing with it but not doing the exercises is one of them. So I’m putting this up as an achievable goal.
Feb 12, 2006, 11:00PM PST | 1 cheer | 2 comments