Meditation as a Superpower

I’ve been engaged in the Headspace course, “Managing Stress” in the last few weeks.  At first, they start you out light with brief 5 minute meditation sessions, and a few other short videos and breathing exercises each day.  Now into the third week, the sessions have lengthened to 10-15 minutes.  It sounds a bit hard to believe that such a short session each day can help you.  However, I have found that my calmness meter and my “cloak of resilience” has strengthened over these last few weeks.

In our winter “cloaks” to block out the cold, while enjoying beautiful leg lamps to christen the Christmas season.  I hope my developing “cloak of resilience” (thanks to meditation) will continue to keep me “warm” and calm.

Little things that would irritate me matter much less, and seem to bounce off of me instead of sticking with me.  I have a better perspective on the “big picture” and I am less caught up on little things that used to bother me.  The course encourages other ways to boost stress management, including exercise, mindful eating, a gratitude practice, and journaling.  I am still in the middle of the course, but I feel myself building a superpower – a superpower of managing my emotions.  I am still learning and nowhere near a master.  However, I plan to keep building my “meditation muscle”.  It is not easy or comfortable.  But it is very inspiring to monitor myself and how I feel, and see how I am already emotionally flourishing.

Exercise as Medicine

I just read the book “Exercised” by Daniel Lieberman (see here). It discusses the evolution of exercise, and how we have evolved to need this term and to need this idea of separate exercise in our daily lives. I found the story to insightful and educational. It really made me think.

Exercise makes this girl happy.

A big takeaway I gained from it is that exercise can be medicine.  It can help with mental health, which I have felt firsthand.  It can help decrease your risk of chronic illness.  It can slow the effects of aging and debility.  It is by no means easy to do, and the book argues we are evolved to rest.  But once we can become regularly active, and find ways to make it social and fun, the endorphins and “feel good” aspects of regular exercise keep us going back for more and more.  If you are interested in diving into a history of exercise and an analysis of activity now compared to our ancestors, this book is one to definitely checkout.

Summertime and the Living’s Easy

Summer is here and in full swing!  I enjoy the longer days, warmer weather, and kids having time off of school and their frenetic school year activities.  Soon enough school will start, and fall will bless us with cooler days.  For now, though, the warmth is very welcome!

Fun times, new discoveries.

Though fall is still my favorite season, summer is a close second.  I like that this year, we have been blessed to take some time for vacations away from home.  It has provided a much appreciated way to liven up our lives, and spend some time away from the nitty gritty and the boring day to day.  I feel recharged after this time away.  And the anticipation leading up to vacation is fun, too!