Mindfulness is currently all the rage in the mental health world, and can mean pretty much anything under the sun. Some find it life-changing; others are underwhelmed, and for others it is actively unhelpful.
The first kind of mindfulness I was introduced to is one where you are supposed to observe your thoughts as they go by, not engaging with them but acknowledging their presence and not letting yourself get distracted into thought. I didn't find it useful. Maybe I never cracked it, but it didn't do anything for me!
More recently, I have come across mindfulness described by several different people more as being present in a moment. According to this view, I have recently come to realise that I naturally live in quite a "mindful" way.
A technique often suggested for people with anxiety or panic attacks to regulate or ground themselves is to name one thing they can taste, two they can smell, three they can feel, four they can hear and five they can see. I do this automatically.
The tree above my bench |
It adds up really (in my head anyway!). At Jo Grace's Sensory Engagement for Mental Wellbeing training day, she commented that according to the general definition of mindfulness (similar to the one I use of being present in the moment), sensory beings are by nature always mindful. Their experience of the world is primarily sensory, and they are therefore constantly present. (She then went on to explore what mindfulness for mental wellbeing could look like for sensory beings - being completely caught up in, engaged in and delighted in a moment.) I'm not a sensory being; I am a linguistic being - I am writing this, after all - but my sensory awareness is perhaps higher than that of some linguistic beings.
I lost my track of thought there, but I think this is mainly me bringing together all my previous thoughts as I have been discovering the sensory world, and realising that my natural inclination towards sensory mindfulness could be a useful tool to mental wellbeing.
Not only this but it with the right people and in the right contexts it can be even more than that: a vehicle to connection and communication from others, which in everyday life I can find stressful or draining. This connection itself is of course a contributor to mental wellbeing.
So at this point in my exploration of sensory awareness and its effects, I think I am going to employ my discoveries by putting meaningful sensory experiences, and especially shared sensory experiences, down as a tool to boost my wellbeing and to be intentional about pursuing such opportunities.
Any thoughts?
This series has made me think about my relationship with my own senses. At the moment it's rather love-hate, characterised by avoidance, guilt and confusion. Now I'm thinking I'd like to make that all nicer!
ReplyDeleteI like that observation. Well, not the fact that the senses are being a pain in the backside, but I like the way you have explained your thoughts about it.
DeleteWould be interesting to hear more about what that looks like for you, and how it might be possible to bring more positive sensory experiences.
Lovely to read that you found the Mental Well Being day useful. My book Sensory-being for Sensory Beings describes creating sensory experiences to capture someone in a sensory moment.
ReplyDeleteIt's on my wish-list! Let's whether my waiting-for-somebody-to-buy-it willpower lasts or whether impatience for interesting and useful reading material wins. Not much question there...
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