2022/05/31

The Best Mindfulness Books of 2020 - Mindful

The Best Mindfulness Books of 2020 - Mindful

The Best Mindfulness Books of 2020

The Mindful editors look back on their favourite books from this year, covering diverse topics such as mindful eating, the truth of belonging, and emotional resilience.

Throughout this turbulent year, one of our enduring sources of hope and inspiration has been curling up with a good book. Fortunately, when the going got tough, these new titles were there to keep us going. From the books that expanded our knowledge about the brain and the body, to those that helped us ride the waves of emotion and reconnect with compassion, here are the Mindful editors’ favorites. 

1. Permission to Feel

Unlocking the Power of Emotions to Help Our Kids, Ourselves, and Our Society Thrive

Marc Brackett • Celadon Books

Brackett—founding director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence—came to this work with a mission born from his own experience of bullying and sexual assault, which he discusses poignantly in Permission to Feel. Before we learn his story, however, Brackett paints a vivid picture of why emotions matter so much for public health and education. Incidents of bullying and harassment in US K-12 schools doubled each year between 2015 and 2017; 46% of teachers report high daily stress; from 2016-2017, one in three students across 196 US colleges reported diagnosed mental health conditions; a quarter of US children between 13 and 18 suffer from anxiety disorders; and by 2030, mental health problems could cost the global economy up to $16 trillion. When our children learn unhealthy responses to emotion, tangible results ripple through families, schools, communities, and society. That’s the diagnosis.

Brackett’s prescription—as researched, taught, and advocated for at the Yale center—begins with a very simple question: How are you feeling? If the response is avoidance or lying, if no one is interested in our genuine answer, we’re almost certain to suffer, and that suffering will spread. Instead, Brackett recommends the RULER method: Recognizing emotions in oneself and others; Understanding the causes and consequences; Labeling emotions precisely; Expressing emotions, taking context and culture into consideration; and Regulating effectively. The book expands on this method and how it’s used for both adults and children. (In schools, RULER works with the adults before taking it to students.) Permission to Feel is an inspiring book with a timely message, not only for each of us, but for the organizations and institutions that model how we are supposed to carry ourselves. —BB

2. Stay Woke

A Meditation Guide for the Rest of Us

Justin Michael WIlliams • Sounds True

Many “spiritual” writings give only incidental mention of the social and material struggles people face. They imply, “Inequality, marginalization? That’s an out-there problem. Ignore it and meditate.” Having reckoned with homophobia, personal trauma, and stress rooted in poverty and domestic violence, Justin Michael Williams has no time for that: “You need a different type of meditation. One that doesn’t pretend the struggle doesn’t exist.” He demonstrates real strength through the honesty and vulnerability of his first book. With “Freedom Meditation,” he offers you 10 steps to create a meditation (and life) practice that’s about fearlessly embracing all of who you are, to explore both your inner and outer worlds: “Meditation is not about relaxing. Meditation is about becoming more alive.”—AT

3. The Monkey Mind Meditation Deck

30 Fun Ways for Kids to Chill Out, Tune In, and Open Up

Carolyn Kanjuro • Shambhala

With exquisite illustrations by Alexander Vidal, this pack of 30 cards mixes many images: We find weather (rainbow, gentle breeze, hurricane), natural features (tree, mountain, rushing river), and anthropomorphized animals (cranky crab, burrowing bunny, loyal dog) on one side, and simple, playful meditation practices on the other side. The result is a stunning variety of short, insightful practices that can be, according to the accompanying guide, “a source of invention and play, a safe way to reflect on difficult topics, and a form of nourishment and support for children navigating an increasingly complex world.” The instructions are very clearly expressed, and (best of all) the teachings embodied here avoid the extreme earnestness that can ruin meditation for people of all ages. —BB

4. Mindful Movement in Psychotherapy

Paul Salmon • Guilford Press

How many movies or TV series have you seen depicting psychotherapy? Every time it’s the same scene. The therapist in a comfortable chair, their hands nested beneath their chin, listening intently or speaking wisely. Across from them sits the client on a chair or couch, usually a little more anxious. Salmon, a clinical psychologist teaching in the department of psychological and brain sciences at the University of Louisville, asks us: Is anything missing from this picture?

Movement. Because movement is, he says, traditionally “viewed as outside the realm of ‘talk therapy.’” Salmon—who is also a certified exercise physiologist, registered yoga teacher, personal trainer, and mindfulness teacher—encourages clinicians to consider incorporating “purposeful, mindful movement” in their interventions. He is not talking simply about exercise but about movement infused with awareness of what’s going on in body and mind, which can “provide a way to rekindle appreciation for our ability to move and be physically active.” Moving, he emphasizes, is baked into our DNA, but our lifestyles have greatly reduced it. Physical activity itself can create tangible experience that helps us be more than sedentary bodies with overactive brains, providing “an anchor to moment-to-moment reality.”

Salmon leads off by offering five progressively more engaged ways to bring movement into therapy. He then defines mindful movement and makes a case for it, as well as reviewing how mindful movement is used in existing clinical programs. From there,Salmon offers practical applications, first in a general way, and then for various kinds of conditions, such as anxiety, depression, PTSD, eating disorders, and addiction. There are also 29 audio guided practices that purchasers of the book can use personally or with clients. —BB

5. Keep Calm and Log On: Your Handbook for Surviving the Digital Revolution

Gillian “Gus” Andrews, EdD • The MIT Press

This handbook is crammed with practical information, from understanding bias to figuring out who owns a particular website. Andrews points out that the digital revolution—with its promise of connecting us all, extending access, and generally spreading more fun—often makes us feel more disconnected and proliferates disinformation. Her book is for those of us who feel “bad at” technology, addicted to it, or at a loss for how best to navigate a world dominated by it. She addresses FAQs around privacy, online etiquette, critical thinking, intimate online relationships, and more. Worksheets, practices, advice, and resources for further reading make this guide valuable for anyone who wants to better understand one of the defining revolutions of our time. —SD

6. Well Nourished: Mindful Practices to Heal Your Relationship with Food, Feed Your Whole Self, and End Overeating

Andrea Lieberstein, MPH, RDN • Fair Winds

This step-wise approach to healing our relationships with food offers worksheets, charts, graphs, prompts, and practices to lead readers through an inventory of how, what, and why we eat and overeat. Lieberstein outlines what she calls our “eight bodies”: physical, emotional, psychological, spiritual, social, intellectual, and creative. A lack of nourishment of one or more of those bodies may lead us to overeat, Lieberstein writes. Subsequent chapters focus on each of those bodies—with research-based information about the importance of each to our well-being, along with tools for tapping into awareness, setting intentions, and making changes to better nourish each of our bodies. Well Nourished is a practical, compassionate, customizable approach to an issue that can feel insurmountable—we have to eat to survive, but failing to address our relationship with food and overeating can stunt our ability to thrive and live fully. —SD

7. Humankind

A Hopeful History

Rutger Bregman • Little, Brown, and Company

In 1971, professor Philip Zimbardo carried out the notorious Stanford Prison Experiment, wherein “a group of ordinary students morphed into monsters,” in the words of Rutger Bregman. In a pivotal chapter in Humankind, Bregman lumps this experiment together with Stanley Milgram’s 1961 study where subjects applied what they were told were electric shocks to people who answered questions incorrectly, and a full 65% of the subjects continued applying shocks up to the limit they were told to apply. To this pair, he adds studies of the “bystander effect” that came out of the 1964 murder of Kitty Genovese in New York, which occurred while many appeared to look on and do nothing.

Bregman brings this research up—after an earlier chapter on William Golding’s Lord of the Flies—to show us what has been marshaled to lead to the conclusion that we are, as one columnist put it after the Genovese incident, “a callous, chickenhearted and immoral people,” or as Golding wrote, “Man produces evil as a bee produces honey.”

Bregman gradually widens each frame to reveal bigger pictures. The Milgram and Zimbardo experiments suffered from the same disease as reality TV: The producers and directors are outside the picture hectoring and egging the participants on. Psychological research can’t be done this way anymore, and Zimbardo himself atoned by launching the Heroic Imagination Project. In the Genovese case, there were people who did something, but they were overlooked in the zeal to tell a sensational story.

This gets to the heart of what Bregman is about: Because people have done bad things, including some very shockingly bad things (see the Holocaust), we revert to a simplistic story of basic badness. Then, we design things based on that belief, leading to outcomes like mass incarceration. He’s asking us to consider what would happen if we started from a belief in people’s fundamental decency, for which we also have a great deal of evidence. Would we build a better world? —BB

8. You Belong: A Call for Connection

Sebene Selassie •  HarperCollins

This debut from meditation teacher Sebene Selassie is a pure delight. Selassie’s style tells the reader: You belong in these pages, and her message tells us: You belong, period. Selassie pulls from science, ancient Indigenous wisdom, Buddhism, art, pop culture, friends’ anecdotes, and her own experience (as an Ethiopian-Eritrean child of immigrants, regularly the only Black kid in any group, three-time survivor of cancer, longtime meditator, and life-long seeker of ways to belong) to build a convincing argument: “The only thing human beings who breathe a breath have in common are birth, death, and belonging.” That belonging, Selassie notes, is tied to knowing and loving ourselves, but also to the idea that we are intrinsically linked. In the end, belonging is love. It belongs to us all—and we to it. —SD

9. Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom

Creating Physical and Emotional Health and Healing

Christiane Northrup, MD • Penguin Random House

This fifth edition of Christiane Northrup’s landmark handbook for women’s health, first published in 1996, has been updated for the #metoo generation. As with Northrup’s four earlier revised editions, this one offers updated treatment and research data, and updated thinking, too, from Northrup’s new stage in life: grandmother.

Northrup is still all about a holistic approach to women’s health, and that includes considering the culture in which women live. Northrup doubles down on her avowal that having internalized our bodies as a problem is at the heart of women’s health, and that sexual trauma and abuse play out in our physical body. She notes that as the tide seems to be turning for sexual assault and harassment, so too must the tide turn for healthcare. This book will be for any woman who missed it the first time around—it’s comprehensively dedicated to women’s health, from the role of the patriarchy in women’s health care to understanding menopause, and includes a 12-step program for flourishing. —SD

10. Don’t Tell Me to Relax

Emotional Resilience In the Age of Rage, Feels & Freak-Outs

Ralph De La Rosa • Shambhala 

Spiritual bypassing, a term first coined in psychology, refers to misusing spirituality or wisdom teachings by zeroing in on their “feel-good” aspects, while minimizing the reality of pain (our own, as well as others’). But is the only alternative to feel paralyzed by raging despair?

Don’t Tell Me to Relax, De La Rosa’s second book, arrives at the perfect time to inform a growing cultural awareness that neither approach will get us very far. “May we never forget: Often the deepest truths are the ones that challenge us,” he writes.

Skillfully drawing on neurobiology, mindfulness teachings, and psychotherapy, De La Rosa acknowledges that suffering is caused by a multitude of factors: from the systemic, like racism, ableism, homophobia, and economic disempowerment, to the personal—dysfunctional upbringings, traumatic losses, physical and mental health struggles. Having faced some of these himself, he doesn’t negate their importance in our lives, nor claim we should just get over them. Instead he empowers us, through direct and insightful prose, to touch in with these parts of ourselves that hurt. The book’s focus is “on radical nonpathology, embedding it in an empowerment model: the truth that the inherent wisdom, clarity, and freedom of our deeper nature need not wait for anyone or anything else to come along.” Throughout, De La Rosa offers seemingly simple yet transformative practices to help us (re) discover our innate curiosity and introspection. When we don’t “relax” but instead deepen into awareness and compassion, we can channel our efforts in the direction of healing—both for ourselves and for our world. —AT

11. Thinking and Eating

Recipes to Nourish and Inspire

The School of Life

A cookbook unlike any other, Thinking and Eating explores “how the sensory realm can be deployed to help with the transmission of ideas.” Food, like art, can inform us about how we should live. In the first section, a list of virtues—each paired with a single ingredient— accompanies delicious-sounding recipes. Hope is a lemon, for instance, maturity a fig. Subsequent sections offer recipes and menus for a variety of moods: when alone (I don’t like myself very much), with friends (Why do we keep talking about house prices?), and in relationships (How can I graciously withdraw from a sulk?). What’s not to love about a book that asserts, “the mushroom is an edible treatise on the oddity of existence”? Seconds for me, please.—SD

12. A Kingdom of Tender Colours

A Memoir of Comedy, Survival, and Love

Seth Greenland • Europa Editions

Screenwriter, playwright, and novelist Seth Greenland brings his considerable powers as a storyteller to bear on recounting the journey he and his family traveled after his diagnosis of stage 4 lymphoma at 37. With a baby daughter and another child on the way and a writing career in mid-stride, he faced the prospect of losing it all—possibly leaving his new family in dire straits. His in-laws sent him a letter: “We hope you make the most of the time you have left.”

And indeed he has, in the three decades following, as evidenced by the free flow of this narrative, which he was inspired to write during the worst days of his illness, vowing that should he survive he would write the kind of book he wished he could have read while going through the darkest of dark nights. Dark yes, but also funny, since shtick runs thick in his veins. Greenland was a writer and producer on HBO’s Big Love, a satiric treatment of Mormon polygamy, and that irreverence is in full flower here, as he describes grappling with the eternal questions and finding various cosmologies seriously lacking. As he talks to God and asks the divine to please not kill him, he can’t help but share that he’s pretty sure He doesn’t exist, reprimand Him for the inquisition and the holocaust, and throw in a few choice f-bombs to boot.

It’s not all fun and games. We are gripped and moved and intrigued, as he traverses chemotherapy and complications leading to near death; meditation, tai chi, and other mind-body approaches; topped off with far-out alternative treatments that would be inappropriate to mention in polite company. Along the way, his wife Susan takes up meditation to help herself and her kids, leaves her career as a lawyer, becomes the successful author of The Mindful Child, and founds a groundbreaking program of mindfulness for children. Even the darkest clouds hide silver linings. —BB

Book cover of Real Change, by Sharon Salzberg
Cover image by Flatiron Books

13. Real Change

Mindfulness to Heal Ourselves and the World

Sharon Salzberg • Flatiron

Sharon Salzberg is one of the mindfulness field’s most beloved teachers and prolific authors, with multiple best-selling titles including Real Happiness and Love Your Enemies. In her most recent book, Real Change, Salzberg turns her considerable wisdom toward the now ever-present question of how we can show up and help the world from a place of compassion, without succumbing to rage or burning out. 

You could be forgiven for assuming that someone with dozens of years practicing meditation and loving-kindness under her belt is too grounded and heart-centered to get upset about what’s in the news. Salzberg tells us that it does sometimes leave her “burdened, tired out”—adding that it’s completely human to feel overwhelmed sometimes and to want to turn away from it all. Yet, “The truth is,” she tells us, “meditation would not be as meaningful for me at this time in my life if it were just about me.” She describes our built-in tendency toward either fight, flight, or freeze in the face of the powerful emotions. Gently, gradually, we can shift out of these responses, through mindfulness and loving-kindness practices that help us learn “to cultivate a sense of agency, to understand that a range of responses is open to us… to have the space in the midst of adversity to recall our values, what we really care about—and to find support in our inner strength, and in one another,” she says. 

Real Change journeys through many richly nuanced topics including how to transform the energy of anger and resentment, instead of getting lost in it; how to work with the bottomless pain of grief and trauma by tapping into our innate resilience; and how we can start to enact a shared vision of the world by making the choice to care and to take action. In the latter part of the book, Salzberg leads us into deeply insightful teachings on interconnectedness, bias, and our habitual, knee-jerk judgments toward both self and “other.”  Each chapter ends with a mindfulness practice to help us further integrate our expanded view in each area. 

Reading this book feels in some ways like entering a collage of wisdom—and real hope. Salzberg features many voices of courage and care, from feminist author bell hooks to survivors of the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas high school shooting, to researchers and experts in fields too numerous to name, including many from the contemplative sciences. Salzburg also draws connections from Buddhist psychology to augment our current scientific understanding of the mind and how significantly our minds create our world. A profound and timely offering, Real Change will resonate for years as a guidebook for creating heart-centered, mindful change in the midst of so much uncertainty. —AT

The 10 Best Mindfulness Books, According to Experts

The 10 Best Mindfulness Books, According to Experts


The 10 best mindfulness books, according to 3 psychologists
By Julia Métraux Jun 16, 2021
===

It can be difficult to try and stay in the moment, acknowledge our negative emotions without letting them control us, and try to relax. This is why mindfulness can be a very important practice to implement in your life, and research has found that it's associated with both higher levels of happiness and a greater purpose in life.


With the plethora of self-help books out there, it can be tough to know where to start, especially if you're looking for mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditation
Mindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.
Read more


Image related to article exercises that are rooted in science-based practices. That's why I reached out to psychotherapist Jennifer Coren, Wake Forest University's Assistant Professor in the Department of Counseling David A. Johnson, and clinical psychologist Allison Gilson to get their recommendations on books that can teach people about mindfulness, based on what they found helps for their clients.


Whether you're looking for effective ways to de-stress or want to just learn more about the science behind mindfulness, these books can be a calming read. If anything, they can help you carve out space for yourself and focus on one thing at a time – which are major mindfulness skills themselves.

====

The 10 best mindfulness books, according to experts:

'Wherever You Go, There You Are' by Jon Kabat-Zinn
Wherever You Go, There You Are by Jon Kabat-Zinn
Amazon
Whether you're new to
mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditation
Mindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.

Read more
Image related to article or need a refresher, this book is an excellent primer of how you can apply mindfulness to your life to help you feel more present as you go through your day. "Kabat-Zinn is well known in the modern-day mindfulness world, as he is viewed as the mindfulness guru and founder of what we know to be mindfulness today," Coren says. "His book explores the core value of concentration, and that can help any beginner along their journey."


$9.71 FROM AMAZON
$17.00 $15.64 FROM BOOKSHOP
'The Miracle of Mindfulness' by Thich Nhat Hanh
The Miracle of Mindfulness: An Introduction to the Practice of Meditation by Thich Nhat Hanh

Amazon
While washing your dishes may be a mundane task for many, Hanh guides the reader through how small moments like these are perfect times to be more aware of what's going on around you. "This text is a great introduction to
mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditation
Mindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.
Read more

Image related to article," Johnson says. "Grounded in Buddhist teachings, Hanh explains mindfulness using everyday examples paired with pragmatic recommendations."


$10.99 FROM AMAZON
$15.00 $13.80 FROM BOOKSHOP
'Practicing Mindfulness' by Matthew Sockolov
Practicing Mindfulness Book cover

Amazon
One great thing about
mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditation
Mindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.
Read more
Image related to article is that there is not just one way to practice it, and you may find which one works best for you in these 75 exercises. "A collection of 75 simple and brief exercises for practicing
meditation
What is meditation? How the popular wellness practice can benefit you
The use of meditation increased by more than three times in the US from 2012 to 2017. Here's what you should know about this practice.
Read more

Image related to article, this book will give you a variety of practical ways to practice mindfulness and find the strategies that work for you," Gilson says. "Full of brief, 5- to 15-minute exercises, this book will help you build a sustainable mindfulness practice and tackle some of the common challenges, such as a wandering mind, that beginners often experience."


$12.79 FROM AMAZON
$16.99 $15.63 FROM BOOKSHOP
'Self-Compassion' by Kristin Neff
Self-Compassion: The Proven Power of Being Kind to Yourself by Kristin Neff
Bookshop
If you tend to be tough on yourself, this book offers action plans for how to deal with issues that may arise in our day-to-day lives, with a focus on being kinder to ourselves. "We all know we're harder on ourselves than we are on others, saying things we'd never say about other people," Gilson says. "In this book, you'll learn to notice and modify your self-critical thoughts, leaving you with more compassion for yourself and better able to treat yourself the way you treat your friends."


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$13.19 FROM AMAZON
'Unf*ck Your Brain' by Faith G. Harper
Unf*ck Your Brain: Getting Over Anxiety, Depression, Anger, Freak-Outs, and Triggers by Faith G. Harper

Amazon
Starting something new can be difficult when we're in a bad mental state, but
mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditation
Mindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.
Read more


Image related to article may be what we need to address our anxious, depressive, and angry responses to triggers in our lives. "Dr. Faith dives into how to retrain your brain to respond in ways that are not problematic to your daily life," Coren says. "She helps her readers in understanding mindfulness techniques and the effective way to apply them to their lives."


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'The Mindful Way Workbook' by John Teasdale, Mark Williams, and Zindel V. Segal
The Mindful Way Workbook

Amazon
If you're ready to embrace
mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditation
Mindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.
Read more


Image related to article but need a plan to get you started, this eight-week plan may be the extra kick that you need to get started. "It will teach you to observe the relationship between your thoughts and your emotions, and make shifts in your thinking to make you less vulnerable to emotional stress," Gilson said. "Broken up into an eight-week plan, the book introduces the basics of mindfulness, and walks you through practicing and reflecting on mindfulness exercises such as slow breathing and mindful self-compassion."


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'How to be an Adult in Relationships' by David Richo
How to be an Adult in Relationships by David Richo
Amazon

Mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditation
Mindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.
Read more


Image related to article practices can also be used to help improve our relationships with others, as outlined in this book by Richo. "Drawing on the Buddhist concept of mindfulness, this book explores five hallmarks of mindful loving and how they play an important role in our life, transitional times, and relationships," Coren says.


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'Aware: The Science and Practice of Presence—The Groundbreaking Meditation Practice' by Daniel J. Siegel
Aware: The Science and Practice of Presence—The Groundbreaking Meditation Practice by Daniel J. Siegel

Bookshop
For the skeptics who are interested in how this practice actually works, neuroscientist Siegal writes about the science underlying
mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditation
Mindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.
Read more



Image related to article meditation's effects in "Aware." "[Siegal] explains how building focused attention and awareness can literally change how the neurons in our brain interact," Gilson says. "Slightly dense, this is a good book for the interested learner who is willing to take a bit more time to digest the sometimes technical but still useful information contained within."


$16.95 $15.59 FROM BOOKSHOP
$4.99 FROM AMAZON
'Full Catastrophe Living: Using the Wisdom of Your Body and Mind to Face Stress, Pain, and Illness' by Jon Kabat-Zinn
Full Catastrophe Living
Amazon
"Full Catastrophe Living' is a great resource for anyone interested in applying
mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditation
Mindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.
Read more



Image related to article to their daily lives," Johnson says. By engaging in mindfulness, people's mental health may improve, and physical issues like chronic pain may as well. "It provides clear instructions on multiple mindfulness and
meditation
What is meditation? How the popular wellness practice can benefit you
The use of meditation increased by more than three times in the US from 2012 to 2017. Here's what you should know about this practice.
Read more
Image related to article practices while also addressing how mindfulness can address physical and emotional pain, as well as everyday stressors such as time, work, and relationships," he added.


$13.99 FROM AMAZON
'Altered Traits: Science Reveals How Meditation Changes Your Mind, Brain, and Body' by Daniel Goleman and Richard J. Davidson
Altered Traits
Amazon
If you want to learn more about the history of
mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditation
Mindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.
Read more



Image related to article (as well as learn why some assumptions about it are false), this book is for you. "Altered traits is an accessible review of the science of mindfulness and the story of western scientists studying mindfulness," Johnson says. "Readers gain an understanding of not only how concepts grounded in Eastern spiritual practices became the focus of neuroscience, psychology, counseling, and medicine, but also an informed and realistic perspective of the benefits and limitations of mindfulness."


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Julia Metraux
Julia Métraux
Freelance Writer


Julia Métraux is a health and culture writer whose work has appeared in Narratively, The Tempest, BUST, and Poynter. You can follow her on Twitter at @metraux_julia and read more of her work at https://juliasmetraux.journoportfolio.com/. Learn more about how our team of experts tests and reviews products at Insider here.
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The 10 best mindfulness books, according to 3 psychologists
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Jun 16, 2021





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It can be difficult to try and stay in the moment, acknowledge our negative emotions without letting them control us, and try to relax. This is why mindfulness can be a very important practice to implement in your life, and research has found that it's associated with both higher levels of happiness and a greater purpose in life.

With the plethora of self-help books out there, it can be tough to know where to start, especially if you're looking for mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditationMindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.Read more exercises that are rooted in science-based practices. That's why I reached out to psychotherapist Jennifer Coren, Wake Forest University's Assistant Professor in the Department of Counseling David A. Johnson, and clinical psychologist Allison Gilson to get their recommendations on books that can teach people about mindfulness, based on what they found helps for their clients.



Whether you're looking for effective ways to de-stress or want to just learn more about the science behind mindfulness, these books can be a calming read. If anything, they can help you carve out space for yourself and focus on one thing at a time – which are major mindfulness skills themselves.
The 10 best mindfulness books, according to experts:


'Wherever You Go, There You Are' by Jon Kabat-Zinn
Amazon


Whether you're new to mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditationMindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.Read more or need a refresher, this book is an excellent primer of how you can apply mindfulness to your life to help you feel more present as you go through your day. "Kabat-Zinn is well known in the modern-day mindfulness world, as he is viewed as the mindfulness guru and founder of what we know to be mindfulness today," Coren says. "His book explores the core value of concentration, and that can help any beginner along their journey."


$9.71 FROM AMAZON
$17.00 $15.64 FROM BOOKSHOP

'The Miracle of Mindfulness' by Thich Nhat Hanh
Amazon


While washing your dishes may be a mundane task for many, Hanh guides the reader through how small moments like these are perfect times to be more aware of what's going on around you. "This text is a great introduction to mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditationMindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.Read more," Johnson says. "Grounded in Buddhist teachings, Hanh explains mindfulness using everyday examples paired with pragmatic recommendations."


$10.99 FROM AMAZON
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'Practicing Mindfulness' by Matthew Sockolov
Amazon


One great thing about mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditationMindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.Read more is that there is not just one way to practice it, and you may find which one works best for you in these 75 exercises. "A collection of 75 simple and brief exercises for practicing meditation
What is meditation? How the popular wellness practice can benefit youThe use of meditation increased by more than three times in the US from 2012 to 2017. Here's what you should know about this practice.Read more, this book will give you a variety of practical ways to practice mindfulness and find the strategies that work for you," Gilson says. "Full of brief, 5- to 15-minute exercises, this book will help you build a sustainable mindfulness practice and tackle some of the common challenges, such as a wandering mind, that beginners often experience."


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'Self-Compassion' by Kristin Neff
Bookshop


If you tend to be tough on yourself, this book offers action plans for how to deal with issues that may arise in our day-to-day lives, with a focus on being kinder to ourselves. "We all know we're harder on ourselves than we are on others, saying things we'd never say about other people," Gilson says. "In this book, you'll learn to notice and modify your self-critical thoughts, leaving you with more compassion for yourself and better able to treat yourself the way you treat your friends."
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'Unf*ck Your Brain' by Faith G. Harper
Amazon


Starting something new can be difficult when we're in a bad mental state, but mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditationMindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.Read more may be what we need to address our anxious, depressive, and angry responses to triggers in our lives. "Dr. Faith dives into how to retrain your brain to respond in ways that are not problematic to your daily life," Coren says. "She helps her readers in understanding mindfulness techniques and the effective way to apply them to their lives."


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'The Mindful Way Workbook' by John Teasdale, Mark Williams, and Zindel V. Segal
Amazon


If you're ready to embrace mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditationMindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.Read more but need a plan to get you started, this eight-week plan may be the extra kick that you need to get started. "It will teach you to observe the relationship between your thoughts and your emotions, and make shifts in your thinking to make you less vulnerable to emotional stress," Gilson said. "Broken up into an eight-week plan, the book introduces the basics of mindfulness, and walks you through practicing and reflecting on mindfulness exercises such as slow breathing and mindful self-compassion."


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'How to be an Adult in Relationships' by David Richo
Amazon


Mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditationMindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.Read more practices can also be used to help improve our relationships with others, as outlined in this book by Richo. "Drawing on the Buddhist concept of mindfulness, this book explores five hallmarks of mindful loving and how they play an important role in our life, transitional times, and relationships," Coren says.


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'Aware: The Science and Practice of Presence—The Groundbreaking Meditation Practice' by Daniel J. Siegel
Bookshop


For the skeptics who are interested in how this practice actually works, neuroscientist Siegal writes about the science underlying mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditationMindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.Read more meditation's effects in "Aware." "[Siegal] explains how building focused attention and awareness can literally change how the neurons in our brain interact," Gilson says. "Slightly dense, this is a good book for the interested learner who is willing to take a bit more time to digest the sometimes technical but still useful information contained within."


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'Full Catastrophe Living: Using the Wisdom of Your Body and Mind to Face Stress, Pain, and Illness' by Jon Kabat-Zinn
Amazon


"Full Catastrophe Living' is a great resource for anyone interested in applying mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditationMindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.Read more to their daily lives," Johnson says. By engaging in mindfulness, people's mental health may improve, and physical issues like chronic pain may as well. "It provides clear instructions on multiple mindfulness and meditation
What is meditation? How the popular wellness practice can benefit youThe use of meditation increased by more than three times in the US from 2012 to 2017. Here's what you should know about this practice.Read more practices while also addressing how mindfulness can address physical and emotional pain, as well as everyday stressors such as time, work, and relationships," he added.


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'Altered Traits: Science Reveals How Meditation Changes Your Mind, Brain, and Body' by Daniel Goleman and Richard J. Davidson
Amazon


If you want to learn more about the history of mindfulness
Learn about mindfulness and its benefits — and how to practice it with or without meditationMindfulness is about paying attention to the present moment. It has many health benefits — here's how to practice it with or without meditation.Read more (as well as learn why some assumptions about it are false), this book is for you. "Altered traits is an accessible review of the science of mindfulness and the story of western scientists studying mindfulness," Johnson says. "Readers gain an understanding of not only how concepts grounded in Eastern spiritual practices became the focus of neuroscience, psychology, counseling, and medicine, but also an informed and realistic perspective of the benefits and limitations of mindfulness."


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Julia Métraux
Freelance Writer

Julia Métraux is a health and culture writer whose work has appeared in Narratively, The Tempest, BUST, and Poynter. You can follow her on Twitter at @metraux_julia and read more of her work at https://juliasmetraux.journoportfolio.com/. Learn more about how our team of experts tests and reviews products at Insider here.Read more


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Disclosure: Written and researched by the Insider Reviews team. We highlight products and services you might find interesting. If you buy them, we may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our partners. We may receive products free of charge from manufacturers to test. This does not drive our decision as to whether or not a product is featured or recommended. We operate independently from our advertising team. We welcome your feedback. Email us at reviews@insider.com.More: Insider Picks Insider Re


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the 5 basics of mindfulness practice - Google Search

best book on mindfulness - Google Search


What are the 5 basics of mindfulness practice?

Five Steps to Mindfulness.
  1. First Mindfulness Exercise: Mindful Breathing.
  2. Second Mindfulness Exercise: Concentration.
  3. Third Mindfulness Exercise: Awareness of Your Body.
  4. Fourth Mindfulness Exercise: Releasing Tension.
  5. Fifth Exercise: Walking Meditation.
Five Steps to Mindfulness
https://uhs.berkeley.edu › sites › default › files › article_-...


Search for: What are the 5 basics of mindfulness practice?



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The Seven Pillars of Mindfulness

  1. Non-judging. The world isn't black and white. ...
  2. Patience. As the saying goes, patience is a virtue. ...
  3. Beginner's Mind. It's easy to lose yourself if you begin to believe that you have heard, seen and experienced everything. ...
  4. Trust. ...
  5. Non-Striving. ...
  6. Acceptance. ...
  7. Letting Go.
6 Oct 2021


The Seven Pillars of Mindfulness | EHN Canada
https://www.edgewoodhealthnetwork.com › blog › the-se...


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What are the best mindfulness practices?

Some examples include:
  1. Pay attention. It's hard to slow down and notice things in a busy world. ...
  2. Live in the moment. Try to intentionally bring an open, accepting and discerning attention to everything you do. ...
  3. Accept yourself. Treat yourself the way you would treat a good friend.
  4. Focus on your breathing.

Mindfulness exercises - Mayo Clinic
https://www.mayoclinic.org › in-depth › art-20046356


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How do I learn mindfulness books?


6 Essential Books On Meditation & Mindfulness For Beginners
“The present moment is the only time over which we have dominion.” ...
  1. The Miracle Of Mindfulness.
  2. Start Where You Are.
  3. Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind. ...
  4. Real World Mindfulness For Beginners.
  5. The Headspace Guide To Meditation & Mindfulness.
  6. I Am Here Now.