Book Read Free

From Suffering to Peace

Page 28

by Mark Coleman


  pleasure: consumer culture and maximization of, 261; dissatisfaction with, 117–19, 260; grasping after, 66–67; life dedicated to, 260; reactivity to, 8–9

  pleasure-pain polarity: awareness of, 65, 67; equanimity and, 214; exploring (practice), 67–68; inner, 64–65; as polarity, 213; reactivity to, 65–67; in the world, 63, 64

  polarity, 213–15

  pollution, 256

  Poonja-ji (Advaita Vedanta teacher), 150–51

  poverty, 176, 231

  Practice of Letting Go, The (practice), 128–30

  praise-blame polarity, 213, 214–15

  preferences: mindfulness of, 132–33, 134–35; mindfulness practices, 135–37; nonattachment to, 133–34; reactivity to, 65–66; in relationships, 239–40; as unavoidable, 245

  prejudice, 88, 114, 252

  presence: to awareness, 168, 169–70; balanced, 214–15; death and, 165–66; embodied, 17–19, 69

  present, the, 104, 107–8

  present moment awareness: abiding in, 169–70; as human condition, 4; impermanence as wake-up call for, 45, 60–62; self-centeredness reduced by, 244–45; sensory experience and, 108, 273–74

  projection, 85

  proliferation, 79–80

  Protecting What We Love (practice), 286

  purpose, life of, 260–61

  racism, 88, 114, 159–60, 176, 268–70

  Radical Acceptance in Relationship (practice), 240–41

  Ram Dass, 236

  reactive nervous system, 184

  reactivity: awareness of, 68, 127–28, 129–30; to criticism, 140–41; freedom from, 7–11; letting go of, 125–26; mind and, 68, 78–79; mindfulness and, 127–28, 238–39, 262–63, 279; negativity as result of, 158; other people triggering, 223; to pain, 36–37; to pleasure/pain waves, 65–67; in relationships, 237; stress caused by, 190

  reading, 161

  reality: labels mistaken as, 152; perceptions mistaken as, 87–88; thoughts mistaken as, 83, 107

  Recognizing the Judging Mind (practice), 100–102

  Reflecting on Causality (practice), 162–63

  refugees, 252

  relationships: causality and dynamics of, 161; challenging nature of, 235–36; childhood relationship dynamics mirrored in, 237–38; conflict in, 199, 236; dissatisfaction with, 119; emotional triggering in, 185–86, 236; inner critic and, 199; instability of, 212; preferences in, 239–40; radical acceptance in (practice), 240–41; reactivity in, 237

  renunciation, 211

  repression, 211–12

  resilience, 7

  resistance, 36, 37

  responsibility, shared, 285

  rest, 30

  Rilke, Rainer Maria, 70, 235

  road rage, 182

  Roman Catholic Church, 113

  Roosevelt, Eleanor, 91

  Rumi (Sufi poet), 139, 205, 240

  rumination, 244

  sadness, 19

  Salt March (1930), 253–54

  San Francisco (CA), 228–29, 261

  Sapiens (Harari), 254

  sarvodaya (welfare of all), 259

  Sarvodaya Shramadana movement, 259–60

  sati (recollection; remembering), 4

  scarcity, 222, 264

  “School Prayer” (poem; Ackerman), 285

  Search Inside Yourself Leadership Institute, 235

  Seeing through Perceptual Distortion (practice), 89–90

  self, sense of: at birth, 139; body and, 69–70, 71–74, 145; changing nature of, 140–43, 145, 154, 277; felt, as fixed, 139–40; letting go of, 156; mindfulness of, 142, 153; mindfulness practices, 142–43, 154–56; nature and dissolution of, 276–77, 278; scientific research on, 150; as thought, 150; views/beliefs about, 115. See also identity

  self-awareness, 114–15, 159, 161, 184, 237, 239, 249, 262

  self-care, 246

  self-centeredness: attunement to others as antidote to, 246–48; examining (practice), 248–49; meditation and, 243–44, 262, 279; mindfulness and reduction of, 244–45; nature as antidote to, 276; self-care vs., 246; shifting to service from, 259–60, 261–64; societal prevalence of, 243; as unavoidable, 245–46

  self-compassion: components necessary to foster, 191; developing (practice), 194–95, 230–31; during emotional pain, 190–91, 193–95; identity and, 153–54; for inner critic, 200–202; loving awareness as source of, 190–91; loving-kindness for developing, 202; vulnerability and, 177

  self-hatred, 50, 176, 198

  self-identity, 92–94

  self-image, 152–53, 183

  self-judgment, 9, 176, 191, 197–202, 204–5. See also inner critic

  self-kindness, 191

  self-talk, 197–202. See also inner critic

  self-worth, 99, 198

  Seligman, Martin, 260

  Sensory Awareness Walking Practice, 23–24

  sensory experience: awareness of, 166, 170–71; body and, 146; dissatisfaction with, 119; embodied presence in, 20–25; as impermanent, 22–23, 119; in nature, 20, 273–74, 277; present moment awareness and, 108, 244–45; walking practice for, 23–24

  separateness, 251–55, 261, 283. See also interconnection

  service: consumer culture vs., 260, 261; happiness and, 261; interconnection and, 261; leaders exemplifying, 261–62; methods of, 264–65; mindfulness and, 279–80; mindfulness practices, 266; purposeful life and, 260–61; shifting to, from self-centeredness, 259–60, 261–64

  service organizations, 265

  sexual orientation, 270

  Shabkar Tsogdruk Rangdrol, 167–68, 171

  shadow, 33–34

  Shaw, George Bernard, 279

  Shifting from Judgment to Kindness (practice), 201–2

  “should have,” 101

  Siani, Carmelene, 50–51

  sickness, 30, 120–21, 148, 175–76, 179–80

  Siddhartha Gautama, xvii

  Simons, Daniel, 268

  simplicity, 275–76

  sleep, 30, 166

  snorkeling, 282–83

  social media, 92–93, 95, 97, 260

  social status, 183, 268, 270

  social work, 246–47

  Softening into Loss (practice), 208–9

  species extinction, 231, 256, 281, 282

  “spiritual bypass,” 126, 212

  spiritual traditions, 260, 265

  Sri Lanka, 259–60

  stress: aging and, 50; causes of, 158–59; as human condition, 225; identity attachment and, 153; reduction of, 43–44; vulnerability to, 179–80

  success-failure polarity, 213

  suffering, 78, 123

  suffering, freedom from, xix

  Sufi literature, 71, 240

  suicidal thoughts, 198

  suicide, 260

  Sumedho, Ajahn, 165

  superiority, feelings of, 92, 95, 98–99

  surrender, 36–37, 53–54, 178

  Switzerland, 261

  Syed, Adnan, 106

  Syrian Civil War, 252

  Taoism, 79, 135

  Tao Te Ching, 262

  Tassajara (Zen monastery; CA), 255–56

  teaching, 246–47

  technology, 161

  Teresa, Mother, 227

  Thailand, 73

  therapy, 246–47

  thoughts: anticipatory, 35; awareness of, 78, 80–81, 166, 171; causes of, 159; conditioned, 85–86, 158, 270; critical, 97–102; daily numbers of, 79; identification with, 148–51, 155; “I” thoughts, 150–51, 154–55; labeling, 83; letting go of, 125–26; mindfulness and, 80–81, 106–7; mindfulness practices, 82–83; personality as, 152–53; process of, 149–50; proliferation of, 79–80; as reactive, 78–79, 158; as reality, 83, 107; self-awareness and, 114–15; self-centered, 248–49; suicidal, 198

  Tibetan Dzogchen tradition, 168

  time: the future, 103–5; measurements of, 107; as mental construct, 103, 105; mindfulness practices, 108–9; mystical view of, 104; the past, 105–7

  Time magazine, 150

  tolerance, 217–18

 
transience, 42. See also change; impermanence

  tribalism, 251–55

  Turning Suffering Inside Out (Cohen), 33–34

  Tutu, Desmond, 227

  Twain, Mark, 50, 79

  Understanding Dissatisfaction (practice), 122

  “unfairness,” 215–16, 217

  United Nations, 255, 261

  United Nations World Happiness Day, 261

  universal statements, 101

  unmindfulness, 166–67, 169–70

  Utah, 276

  vegetarianism, 282–83

  views/beliefs: attachment to, 114, 132, 133; identification with, 149; inner critic and, 114; mindfulness of, 113–16; mindfulness practices, 116; about others, 114; about permanence, 115; personality as, 152–53; power of, 111–13; about self, 115; unconscious, 112, 114

  vipalasa (perceptual distortion), 86

  vulnerability: attuning to (practice), 178–80; change and, 43; comparing mind and, 92, 95–96; ego-identity structure and, 94; generosity and, 263; heart as site of, 176–77; as human condition, 176, 179–80; inner critic and, 102; kind attention to, 177–80; sickness and, 175–76; social, 179; of wildlife, 283

  walking meditation, 6, 23–25, 157

  warfare, 176, 231, 252

  Watson, John, 225

  “We Protect What We Love” (author’s Facebook page), 284

  “When Death Comes” (poem; Oliver), 59–60

  wisdom, 7, 8–9, 11–12, 135, 282

  work, 212

  work ethic, 29

  Working with Triggers (practice), 186–88

  world: curiosity about, 23–24; as illusion, 85; mindfulness and, 12; pleasure/pain waves in, 63, 64. See also bias; interconnection; nature; relationships; self-centeredness; service

  worry, 103–4, 105, 276

  worst-case scenarios, 8, 9

  “would have,” 101

  Wright, Frank Lloyd, 49

  wrinkles, 52–53

  xenophobia, 268

  youth culture, 50, 58

  Zen Buddhism, 107, 111, 133–34, 262

  About the Author

  Mark Coleman is an inner and outer explorer who has devotedly studied mindfulness meditation practices for over three decades. He is passionate about sharing the power of meditation and has taught mindfulness meditation retreats worldwide for the past twenty years. Mark is a senior meditation teacher at Spirit Rock Meditation Center.

  Mark likes to share the fruits of meditation with wider audiences, so he founded the Mindfulness Training Institute, through which he has brought mindfulness programs to companies and the nonprofit sector across North America and Europe. Through the Institute, Mark leads professional mindfulness teacher trainings in the United States and United Kingdom annually. Mark is also a trainer for the Search Inside Yourself Leadership Institute, developed at Google, and teaches in its teacher trainings.

  Mark is an unabashed nature lover, and through his organization Awake in the Wild, he shares his passion for integrating mindfulness, meditation, and nature. He leads wilderness meditation retreats from Alaska to Peru, taking people on inner and outdoor adventures. Through Awake in the Wild, Mark also leads yearlong meditation-in-nature teacher trainings in the United States.

  Mark is the author of Make Peace with Your Mind: How Mindfulness and Compassion Can Free You from Your Inner Critic and Awake in the Wild: Mindfulness in Nature as a Path of Self-Discovery. He holds an MA in clinical psychology and draws on his extensive experience in working with people and organizations as a coach and consultant.

  Mark lives in Marin County, California, and enjoys spending his free time in nature, hiking, backpacking, biking, and kayaking.

  NEW WORLD LIBRARY is dedicated to publishing books and other media that inspire and challenge us to improve the quality of our lives and the world.

  We are a socially and environmentally aware company. We recognize that we have an ethical responsibility to our readers, our authors, our staff members, and our planet.

  We serve our readers by creating the finest publications possible on personal growth, creativity, spirituality, wellness, and other areas of emerging importance. We serve our authors by working with them to produce and promote quality books that reach a wide audience. We serve New World Library employees with generous benefits, significant profit sharing, and constant encouragement to pursue their most expansive dreams.

  Whenever possible, we print our books with soy-based ink on 100 percent postconsumer-waste recycled paper. We power our offices with solar energy and contribute to nonprofit organizations working to make the world a better place for us all.

  Our products are available wherever books are sold. Visit our website to download our catalog, subscribe to our e-newsletter, read our blog, and link to authors’ websites, videos, and podcasts.

  customerservice@newworldlibrary.com

  Phone: 415-884-2100 or 800-972-6657

  Orders: Ext. 10 • Catalog requests: Ext. 10

  Fax: 415-884-2199

  www.newworldlibrary.com

 

 

 


‹ Prev