Slowing Mental Activity

Slowing Mental Activity

TRY DOING NOTHING

A SHORT EXERCISE

Do you think too much? Try this 30-second exercise: Be still. Close your eyes. Take a deep breath. Now watch your mind…see those thoughts going by? Do you constantly shift from one thought to another? Do you find it impossible to stay separate from those thoughts? Are there any moments of peace?

Because this mind, which is just a bubble, as i told you, and is so limited, that it cannot comprehend the beauty, the glory, the expanse of relity.

Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi

AVOIDING THE PRESENT MOMENT

Thinking is an important aspect of human awareness. But sometimes, our mind can occupy our attention to the point where you are never really in the present moment. When you have an active mind, you can constantly feel anxious about things that haven’t and might never occur: what if that meeting that will take place tomorrow doesn’t go well, and I get fired and wait a minute, the credit card bill is due next week!

STRESS AND HUMAN EVOLUTION

Through our evolution, we are conditioned to imagine and prepare for potential dangers; stress is a physiological response that helps us respond to them. Fortunately, we aren’t living in the savannah among lions. Unfortunately, parts of our brain are wired to produce stress as if we are. This is the fabled fight or flight response, treating a tough meeting as if it is exactly like a charging lion.

REDUCING STRESS THROUGH MEDITATION

You can reduce stress through meditation. In Sahaja Yoga meditation, stress is produced by an imbalance in our right channel, and is caused by physical or mental overactivity – all that thinking and work. The direct effect occurs on our liver, which, within our subtle system helps manage our attention.  Through meditation, you can cool down the liver and the right channel. This will help slow down your thoughts, improve your attention, and reduce stress.

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