2022/06/14

Contemplative Practices in Action 3] Managing Stress Mindfully

 3] Managing Stress Mindfully

Contemplative Practices in Action

Hooria Jazaieri and Shauna L. Shapiro



Mindfulness, a translation of the traditional Eastern words including smrti (Sanskrit), sati (Pali), and dranpa (Tibetan), is associated in contem- porary Western psychology as the awareness one achieves through intentionally attending in an accepting and discerning way to one’s current moment-to-moment experience.1,2 Mindfulness involves an intimate knowing of what is arising as it is arising, without trying to change or control it. Thus, the process of mindfulness involves changing one’s relationship to experience as opposed to changing experience itself.

Any activity can be an opportunity to practice mindfulness—walking, washing dishes, eating, conversing—anything, as long as you are bringing full attention to the present. Essentially, life itself becomes the practice as every moment is a new opportunity to train your attention, thus creating the ability to respond to stress instead of habitually react- ing. Mindfulness is a natural human capacity, and it can be cultivated through formal practice.

Often we are told that being mindful takes too much time or effort, or at times, seems counterproductive to our culture of doing. Mindfulness does in fact require us to stop in a sense—this may feel awkward, uncomfortable, or unproductive at first. However, when practicing mindfulness, the goal is not to get anywhere or do anything. It is not about being or feeling a certain way. It is about trusting that you are already where you need to be, and you already are the way you need to

 

be. Mindfulness requires the element of letting go and allowing things to unfold in their own natural way:

[It is] an invitation to cease clinging to anything—whether it be an idea, a thing, an event, a particular time, or view, or desire. It is a conscious decision to release with full acceptance into the stream of present moments as they are unfolding. To let go means to give up coercing, resisting, or struggling, in exchange for something more powerful and wholesome which comes out of allowing things to be as they are without getting caught up in your attraction to or rejection of them, in the intrinsic stickiness of wanting, of liking and disliking. It’s akin to letting your palm open to unhand some- thing you have been holding on to.3

Although the notion of mindfulness is often associated with the rich, 2,600-year-old tradition of Buddhism, it is currently being applied as a universal technique that transcends its religious and cul- tural roots. With this recontextualization of mindfulness comes differ- ent aims; among them the contemporarily relevant aim of managing stress through easing suffering and improving health and well-being. In this chapter, we will briefly describe the historical and religious context from which mindfulness arose, describe the dimensions of the practice and how someone may begin some of the basic exercises, briefly review the empirical literature supporting mindfulness as a treatment intervention, discuss preexisting applications of this prac- tice, and present ideas for new research directions. Our hope is to introduce practices and resources to help manage stress, as well as a radically different way of seeing and being in the world that naturally gives rise to greater states of happiness and ease.


CONTEXT


Although most often associated with Buddhism, mindfulness can be found in various forms in virtually all religions and spiritual practices.4 Methods to enable individuals to focus their attention have been around for centuries, and while the approaches are different, the intention behind them is similar—to alter people’s lives.5 According to Buddhist psychology, suffering comes from our wanting things to be different from what they really are, whether that is wishing for another job, for more money, for a different appearance, or even to be happier. Neuroscientist Daniel Siegel5 suggests that stress and

 

suffering occur when the mind grasps onto what “should be” and cre- ates this tension between what really is. Though we are presenting mindfulness meditation here as a means of stress management, it is important to note that in Buddhism, the intention of mindfulness training is not for “stress management” but to achieve complete liber- ation from suffering and compassion for all beings.6

However as mindfulness has gone “mainstream”—a recent Google search of the term returned 2,630,000 results—the aims and under- standings have been recontextualized to fit a modern Western culture. The clinical application of mindfulness meditation (also referred to as “insight meditation” or “Vipassana”) in Western psychology can largely be attributed to Jon Kabat-Zinn and colleagues at the Univer- sity of Massachusetts’s mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR)7 program. Though MBSR was originally developed to help manage chronic pain, it is currently practiced worldwide and is used with a variety of populations ranging from grade school students to those with psychopathology. The skills one acquires through MBSR have been shown to reduce anxiety and depression symptoms8 as well as increase positive emotional states.9 MBSR truly is “compatible with diverse cultural and religious backgrounds.”10 Regardless of its reli- gious and cultural origins, mindfulness-based interventions have been introduced by researchers and clinicians as an empirically supported treatment (or component of) program.

Our lives are full of chronic and acute stressors—some are predictable

while others catch us off guard. Some are real while others are imag- ined. Mindfulness mediation is thought to affect the stress response in four stages—first, by freeing the senses from anything that is occupying them. Second, with practice,  it  provides the participant  with tools to observe patterns of reacting or responding. Third, with even more practice, conditioned and habitual ways of reacting and responding gradually weaken. Finally, mindfulness meditation affects the stress response by allowing one to have a more effective and “wiser” response to any experience that emerges.11


DIMENSIONS OF THE PRACTICE


Some claim that in order to gain success in any field, one must practice the specific task for 10,000 hours.12 We are not suggesting that you attempt to practice mindfulness meditation for 10,000 hours, through electroencephalogram studies of experienced (10,000–50,000 hours)

 

and novice meditators have shown that meditation provides both short- and long-term benefits to health and well-being.13 Therefore, we are simply suggesting that you practice, in whichever way happens to be your way.

If at first you can manage only five minutes a day, or even one minute, that is fine—there is no right way of practicing. Simply stopping and remembering to shift your attention, even momentarily, from your usual state of doing and into a state of being is enough (and even more imperative to practice when feeling stressed). This comes from one’s ability to experience with a sense of curiosity and kindness instead of with judgment or preference. It requires an enormous amount of patience and practice because it is a completely different experience from what we are used to—“if you happen to stumble upon somebody who is meditating, you know instantly that you have come into the orbit of something unusual and remarkable.”14


THE SITTING PRACTICE


Sitting meditation is one of the most frequently practiced approaches to formally exercising mindfulness. There are several sit- ting practices you may choose to experiment with. We will discuss three of the most common, observing the breath, body scan, and Hatha yoga.


Observing the Breath

Observing one’s breathing is considered to be one of the simplest and most effective ways to begin practicing mindfulness. Observing the breath is simply that—paying attention to the inhalation and exha- lation of air without changing what is currently going on. The breath is really the foundation to a mindfulness practice because with any of the exercises, one begins by focusing all of the attention on the breath. You can begin the practice of observing the breath by sitting in a com- fortable, upright fashion, closing your eyes, and simply breathing naturally—making no effort to control or change the breath, just focusing all of the attention on the breath. Observing the rhythm, the length of each in-breath and each out-breath, the temperature, how the body moves—the nostrils, shoulders, chest, rib cage, and belly. Continuing to observe all of the qualities of the breath, without elaborating on its implications or creating any need for action. Prac- tice for two to three minutes to begin with and then try extending it

 

for longer periods of time. Some find it helpful to set an intention before beginning this sitting exercise by silently speaking something that resonates for them in the moment. “May I be nonjudgmental,” or “May I be gentle with myself ” are examples of such intentions.

Throughout the practice,  attention  will  inevitably  wander  off the breath to thoughts, memories, fantasies, and feelings that arise. Sim- ply notice them and let them go, gently bringing the attention back to the breath. Observe judgmental thoughts (e.g., “there are so many better things that I could be doing with my time instead of this”) in a nonjudg- mental manner. Steadily repeat the process of directing your attention back to your breath each time you notice your mind is wandering—this may happen dozens of times in the span of minutes. Continue to practice using your breath as an anchor, as your breath is always there and you may come back to it at anytime, whether you are feeling anxiety, stress, or even in moments of delight. Your breath is always there to help you cope with the next moment, stressful or otherwise.


Body Scan


Another form of sitting practice is the body scan where you pro- gressively move your attention throughout the body, feeling each region. You can begin the practice by first comfortably lying down on your back with your legs extended, your arms by your sides with your palms facing up, and gently closing your eyes. If you choose, you may begin by setting an intention for this practice, speaking silently something that resonates for you in this moment; for example, “May I accept my body,” or “May I cultivate greater patience.” Begin by focusing your attention on the breath and observe nonjudgmentally as it moves in and out of your body.

Once you are in touch with the breath, you may start by bringing attention to the toes of the left foot, slowly moving up the foot and the leg. Upon reaching the pelvis, do the same with the toes of the right foot, gradually moving up the body to the torso, lower back, abdomen, upper back, chest, and shoulders. Upon reaching the shoulders, slowly and systematically go to the fingers of the left hand, moving up the arm and returning back to the shoulders and then repeating on the fin- gers of the right hand. Upon reaching the shoulders again, move to the clavicle, the neck, throat, and continuing to the face, bringing attention to the lips, nose, eyes, and ears. Conclude the body scan by moving to the back of the head and to the top of the head. Attempt to keep focus on each part of the body for at least one minute and really pay close

 

attention to the sensations in that particular area. After moving through the regions of your body, return to the breath and focus attention to whatever arises.


Hatha Yoga

Though there are many ways of practicing being in your body, Hatha yoga is a method whereby participants incorporate gentle yoga stretches and postures that are designed to enhance mindful awareness of bodily sensations and to balance and strengthen the musculoskele- tal system. Each pose and each exercise is done deliberately with the intention of paying attention to the moment-to-moment sensations that arise while keeping awareness fixated on the breath. Yoga is practiced in the same spirit and attitude that is applied to the other meditation practices, including gentleness, curiosity, nonattachment, beginner’s mind, patience, nonjudging, nonstriving, and acceptance. While a by-product of mindful yoga is that it may help you become stronger, more flexible, and improve balance, it also helps with relaxing yourself and reducing stress.

For your yoga practice you may choose to use a mat or a pad and place it on the floor. Perhaps you may choose to use a manual or DVD to guide you through this practice. It is important not to compare yourself with others if doing this in a group setting or even not to com- pare yourself to your past performances. Instead, be aware of what is happening to your body, in that very moment. While practicing, it is essential to bring your attention to subtle thoughts or commentary run- ning through your mind, as these unconscious notions influence our state of being and may cause great distress. This awareness and ability to continually redirect attention back to your practice will increase your sense of self and encourage your mindful yoga exercise.


INFORMAL PRACTICES


There are numerous ways of bringing mindfulness practice into your daily life outside of the formal meditation period. Remembering to simply be being, rather than be doing is a useful mantra. Just as a vio- linist practices his or her violin, we too must fine-tune this new skill of mindfulness so that with time, this practice of paying attention to the present moment-to-moment experience becomes effortless.

As we mentioned previously, any activity, as long as you are awake, can be an opportunity to practice mindfulness. We can be mindful

 

during routine activities such as taking a shower, kissing our signifi- cant other good-bye, writing an e-mail, or petting our dog. Deliber- ately bringing the minutia of the experience into awareness—these individual moments are what make up our lives, and too often, we are not fully awake for them: feeling the sensation of water streaming through your hair in the shower as you rinse out the shampoo; truly being in the moment as you kiss your significant other good-bye as you part ways for the day; being aware of any thoughts, feelings, or physical tensions as you type an e-mail to someone; experiencing the way your dog’s hair feels between your fingers as you run your hands through her coat. As Kabat-Zinn7 writes, it is “really doing what you’re doing.” Intentionally choose to live your life more fully and vividly, instead of on automatic pilot, which makes our daily routines seem exhausting and monotonous. In this section we will discuss two ways of really doing what you are already doing in everyday life more mindfully—eating and walking.


Mindful Eating

One method of practicing mindfulness in an informal fashion is through eating mindfully. First, simply observe how you eat, without changing anything about it. Do you eat with someone? Do you eat standing up or sitting down? Perhaps while doing something else? Where do you eat—on a couch, in bed, at a table, in front of the com- puter? How much do you eat? How long does it take you to eat? How do you feel before and after you eat? How do you determine what to eat?

Eating is an activity that plays a central role in our lives—physically, emotionally, and socially. Eating provides us the nourishment and sustenance to live, and yet we often do not pay close attention to the activity of eating, or to how we decide what we are going to eat and how much. Mindful eating involves setting an intention before you eat, becoming aware of the process of choosing what to eat, listening to your body to determine what it needs, and then eating slowly, con- sciously with your full attention on the moment-to-moment experience of eating.

As a mindful eating exercise, try sitting down to a meal and pausing before you begin eating. Set an intention for this meal, for example, “May this food nourish me”; “May I be present for this meal”; “May I appreciate all that was involved in providing this meal.” Then, not- ing the food on your plate, taking it in with all of your senses—notice

 

the color, size, shape, and aroma. Note any sensations in your body or any anticipation of eating—perhaps you feel a bit of saliva building up in your mouth. Slowly take a small bite but do not begin chewing yet—continue to pay attention to anything that comes to your mind about the taste, the temperature, the texture, and any thoughts or sen- sations you are experiencing. Begin to chew slowly—noticing what it feels like to chew, the movement of your jaw, any changes in the tex- ture or flavor of the food. When your mind inevitably wanders, con- tinue to redirect your attention back to your food. Notice the feeling of the subtle transition from chewing to swallowing. Take another bite and repeat the exercise. Maybe this meal is triggering memories for you, perhaps memories of a person, a fond vacation, or the last time you had this meal. Simply note where your attention has wan- dered off to and gently bring it back to where you are and what you are intentionally doing. Perhaps impatience arises; simply notice it nonjudgmentally, and continue to chew and swallow slowly and mind- fully. After you finish your meal, observe how you feel immediately afterward, and an hour or two later. Notice your energy level, your mood, how your belly feels.

We are not suggesting that all of your meals are consumed in this

meticulous of a manner; however, we are presenting another way of practicing mindfulness in your everyday life and a way of changing your relationship to food. As an alternative to practicing mindful eating with an entire meal, you may choose to practice with a raisin or strawberry, or even the first bite of a meal—something small where you are able to direct your attention to the practice of eating even if for just a few minutes.


Walking Meditation

Most of us spend at least some of our day walking, whether it is from the car to the store, from the office to a meeting, or from our house to the park. Typically, we are just trying to get from one point to the next without paying much attention to how we are getting there. Walking is another everyday activity where you may bring the formal practice of mindfulness into this informal realm. Walking can become meditative only when we are intentionally bringing awareness to each step we take.

We invite you when you are walking to just walk. Walk purely for the sake of walking instead of combining it with your usual habit of planning, thinking, talking, and worrying. Perhaps begin by selecting

 

a place where you can practice walking back and forth at a leisurely rate. First, become aware of yourself and your surroundings, then begin to walk. Make an effort to be fully and completely aware of each foot as it makes contact with the earth; what part of your foot comes down first? How does weight shift in your body? How long is each stride? At what point do you pick up your other foot? It may be helpful to note what you are experiencing in each movement, whether you are “lifting,” “stepping,” or “placing” your foot. When you reach the end of your path, briefly pause and turn around. Do this at whatever speed feels right for you and keeps your attention focused. Thoughts or judgments may arise; acknowledge their presence and gently direct your attention back to each methodical step. You may choose to prac- tice this for 15 or 20 minutes.

Try to bring this same spirit of awareness of your walking when you park your car and go into stores to shop or run errands, when you are walking from one building to another at work, or when taking a stroll as a way to relax and decompress after a long day. We are often rushing through all of these things to the next activity, so we fail to really expe- rience them. Through practicing walking mindfully, you are teaching yourself to walk through life more wakefully.


CULTIVATION OF ATTITUDES


In Kabat-Zinn’s book Full Catastrophe Living: Using the Wisdom of Your Body and Mind to Face Stress, Pain and Illness,7 he describes seven attitudinal foundations of mindfulness: nonjudging, the mindfulness practice that requires us to intentionally suspend judgment and evalu- ation and just simply be aware of whatever arises; patience, whereby we allow things to unfold in their own time, as there is no reason to rush one moment to get to the next; beginner’s mind, a willingness to see everything in life as if it were being experienced for the first time; trust, the quality of trusting in the knowledge that there is innate wisdom in all of us and therefore looking within ourselves for guidance rather than outside for clues on how we should be; nonstriving, which is being fixed on achieving nothing, having no goals, going nowhere, getting nothing, detaching oneself from any particular outcome; acceptance, coming to terms with reality by being receptive and open to whatever is actually here in the present moment, regardless of whether we agree or approve of it; and finally, letting go, which was described at the beginning of the chapter as a way of just letting things be and

 

accepting them for what they are, holding onto nothing. All seven of these attitudes are interconnected; practicing one almost always inevi- tably leads to practicing another.

In addition, Shapiro and Schwartz15,16 have included the qualities of nonattachment, letting go of grasping or clinging to a particular out- come and allowing things to unfold; curiosity, a genuine interest in one’s experience, being willing to explore and investigate; gentleness, a tender quality that is soft though not to be confused with undisci- plined or passive; nonreactivity, the ability to respond where we come from a place of clarity and consciousness instead of automatically reacting in a conditioned or habitual way; and finally, loving kindness, demonstrating love, benevolence, and friendliness.

These attitudes can be thought of as the manner in which we go about our mindfulness practice. It is with these attitudes that we approach observing the breath, the body scan, Hatha yoga, eating, walking, or whatever activity we choose to be mindful while doing. Keeping these interrelated attitudes at the forefront of the practice allows us to create a space where empathy and compassion for our- selves and others may be cultivated.


SPIRITUAL MODELS


Many people tend to seek and want to feel connected to something greater than themselves, without necessarily being tied to a formal religion. Since “most human behavior is learned observationally through modeling,”17 it seems logical that we look to spiritual models. Due to the context where mindfulness arose, the Buddha is a common example of a spiritual model who exemplified seeking a clam or medi- tative state.

Spiritual modeling has been defined as the act of learning spiritually relevant behaviors or skills through observing other people—spirituality is “caught, not taught.”18 Through observational spiritual learning, four processes are used: attention, retention, reproduction in behavior, and motivation.19 MBSR supports all four spiritual modeling processes and allows us to link spiritual beliefs to practices.20 Oman and Beddoe21 examined MBSR and suggested that it offers support for spiritual mod- eling in several ways. The group format through which MBSR is taught facilitates collaboration between fellow participants and allows them to draw upon each other as models. Furthermore, text from “spiritually oriented poets such as Jalaluddin Rumi, Walt Whitman, or others, are

 

commonly used in MBSR session to illustrated and support meditative states of mind.”20

Whether everyday models, such as a mother, a close friend, or col- league, or revered models, such as the Buddha, Jesus, Mother Teresa, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, or Nelson Mandela, spiritual modeling is all around us if we pay atten- tion. For many, these spiritual models motivate us through our daily lives or our practices as we seek meditative or calm states of mind.


OTHER CONSIDERATIONS


It is important to note that although you may be practicing mind- fulness in a formal setting, you are encouraged to also bring mindful- ness to seemingly ordinary activities like walking, eating, or standing. It is useful to apply these same general principles outside of the formal meditation practice as much as possible, keeping you grounded in the here and now instead of focusing on ongoing streams of thoughts that are often confused with reality, worries that tend to only increase your stress levels, or rumination that drains us of energy that can be better used elsewhere.

You may find that different practices fit you better than others; that is fine. It is important to find your way of practicing by experimenting— varying the length of time, the location, the time of day which you practice, the quality of your attention, and seeing how it effects your practice. For most of us, the practice of mindfulness is quite challenging and requires practice, discipline, and intentional effort. It is important to remember to set aside time for yourself to practice formal meditation, whether it is 20 or 40 minutes, once or twice a day, whatever you find to be most effective at alleviating your stress.


REVIEW OF THE THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL LITERATURE


Although researchers have attempted to empirically examine mind- fulness through some of the constructs associated with it including the cultivation of compassion, awareness, insight, wisdom, and empathy, this rigorous investigation of mindfulness is in many ways antithetical to the rich tradition from which it stems. Nevertheless, numerous scientific research studies have examined the beneficial effects (both psychological and physiological) of mindfulness in clinical and

 

nonclinical samples ranging from chronic-pain patients, individuals with Axis I disorders (e.g., binge eating disorder, panic, generalized anxiety, depression), Axis II disorders (e.g., borderline personality disorder), mixed clinical populations (Axis I and Axis II disorders com- bined), other medical disorders (e.g., cancer, fibromyalgia, psoriasis, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, HIV/AIDS), and nonclinical populations (e.g., elementary, undergraduate, graduate, and medical students; community volunteers; experienced mediators). Research has shown that mindfulness meditation promotes cognitive change, self-management, relaxation, and acceptance in participants.22,23

Physiologically, mindfulness mediation has shown to exhibit signifi- cant impacts on the autonomic nervous system by slowing heart rate (Cuthbert et al., as cited by Kristeller11) and decreasing blood pressure (Benson, as cited by Kristeller11). More recently, brain-imaging tech- nology such as electroencephalogram studies have shown the positive effects of which even short mindfulness meditation-training programs are capable, such as changing the brain and immune functioning of the participant.24 If stress decreases one’s immune functioning, and mind- fulness has been shown to increase one’s immune functioning, then it is only natural to suggest that it is even more imperative that we prac- tice mindfulness when we are experiencing moments of stress, acute or otherwise.

Several studies have found an increase in spirituality due to participa- tion in MBSR. Carson, Carson, Gil, and Baucom25 found that couples who participated in mindfulness-based relationship enhancement experienced statistically significant increases in spirituality as compared to those who did not received the treatment. When examining under- graduates who received MBSR, Astin26 also found increase in spiritual experiences. Carmody, Reed, Merriam, and Kristeller27 recently found that participation in MBSR intervention significantly increased spirituality, which was associated with medical and psychological improvements.


APPLICATIONS/INTERVENTIONS


There are several empirically validated interventions that are based on mindfulness and also include mindfulness as a component of the treatment program. The most well known is MBSR,7 which is typically designed as an eight-week course with groups of up to 35 participants who meet on a weekly basis for two and a half to three hours and a

 

six-hour weekend retreat after the sixth class. Participants are taught both formal and informal mindfulness techniques, ranging from sitting mediation, walking mediation, body scan, yoga, and informal daily prac- tices. In addition to class, participants practice for at least 45 minutes a day, six days per week from home and are given audiotapes to assist with their practice.

MBSR has been offered to undergraduate and graduate students alike at both public and private universities. At Santa Clara University, a graduate course in the counseling psychology program entitled “Stress and Stress Management” provides training in mindfulness meditation (through an eight-week MBSR course). Likewise, in Montana State University’s counseling psychology program a course called “Mind/ Body Medicine and the Art of Self-Care” provides students with stress management training through MBSR.28 Recently, MBSR has been applied in the professional workplace, as an increasing number of com- panies offer the course to employees because they recognize that stress poses negative consequences on an employee’s professional effective- ness in addition to his or her personal well-being. Davidson et al.24 examined the effects of MBSR on employees at a biotechnology com- pany compared to a wait-list group and found that antibody production measured four months after the MBSR program was significantly higher in the treatment group.

In addition, there are other therapies that draw largely on Kabat-

Zinn’s MBSR program with specific populations in mind, such as mindfulness-based cognitive therapy,8 a manualized eight-week group approach to the treatment of depression. Recently, we have seen numerous other therapies emerging in the mindfulness-based field: mindfulness-based eating awareness training,29 designed for individuals with binge eating disorder and most recently, obesity; mindfulness- based art therapy,30 which was developed for use in medical populations and also has been applied to women with breast cancer: mindfulness- based relapse prevention,31,32 which has been applied to alcohol and drug abuse as well used as a treatment for smoking cessation; and MBRE25 (mentioned earlier), designed to enhance the relationships of couples.

There are also cognitive-behavioral interventions that use mindful- ness as a component of the treatment program. Dialectical behavior therapy33,34 is a manualized, multifaceted group and individual thera- peutic approach originally developed for the treatment of borderline personality disorder and is now currently being used with a variety of clinical and nonclinical populations. One of the modules in DBT is

 

mindfulness, where patients are instructed on how to pay attention to the present moment in a nonjudgmental manner. Acceptance and commitment therapy35 is a treatment whose core principles include acceptance and being in contact with the  present  moment  while also taking into consideration one’s goals and values. It is typically delivered in an individual format but can also be delivered in a group format. Acceptance and commitment therapy has been shown to be successful when applied to individuals with a broad range of psycho- logical problems.


NEW RESEARCH DIRECTIONS


Many have attempted to define the term mindfulness for the purposes of Western psychology. Brown and Ryan9 define mindfulness as “the presence or absence of attention to and awareness of what is occurring in the present” (p. 824). Wallace and Bodhi have stated that mindfulness is simply “bare attention” (as cited by Shapiro and Carlson).23 Bishop and colleagues,36 presented mindfulness as having two components, the first involving the ability to self-regulate attention and maintain focus on present experience, and the second, the adaptation of an open, curious, and accepting orientation to one’s present-moment experien- ces. Shapiro and colleagues2,23 have proposed that mindfulness is both an outcome (mindful awareness) and a process (mindful practice) that involves three key elements: intention (e.g., why you are practicing), attention (e.g., observing moment-to-moment experiences both inter- nal and external), and attitude (e.g., how you attend—the qualities that are brought)—collectively referred to as IAA (Intention, Attention, Attitude).

Current research, as demonstrated previously, suggests that mind- fulness practice is an effective means of reducing stress and enhancing well-being across a wide range of populations. Future research, how- ever, is needed to determine the mechanisms of action for how mind- fulness works. In addition, examining how to best teach mindfulness to diverse populations is crucial, and determining any adverse effects of mindfulness on certain clinical and nonclinical populations would be beneficial to the field.

Another area for future research is to expand the measures used to assess the effects of mindfulness intervention. The majority of the out- come measures in mindfulness studies have been self-report, while some have expanded research to more objectively observable and quantifiable

 

measures such as electroencephalogram, functional magnetic resonance imaging, and cortisol levels—leading the research in mindfulness to strive toward more objective outcome measures. Though the neuroscientific study of mindfulness meditation has shown exciting preliminary results, it is still in its infancy. Current findings must be supplemented with longitudinal randomized clinical trials to examine the long-term effects mindfulness has on the participant.


CONCLUSION


Four decades of empirical research suggest that mindfulness practice has numerous positive effects such as enhancing physical health, increasing spiritual and psychological well-being, and lowering stress. The intention of this chapter was to introduce mindfulness both as a way of being and as a practice to help with the management of stress. Through the cultivation of mindfulness, we are better able to effectively respond with greater awareness instead of automatically reacting to stress. As our mindfulness builds and becomes more integrated into our moment-to-moment experience, we have greater degrees of free- dom of how we choose to respond, how we choose to live and be in the world. Building a new relationship with our experiences is necessary to finding peace, as Germer37 illustrates:

While striving may allow us to acquire physical comforts, living in the present enables us to live more fully. Everyone feels stress to one degree or another. The conditions of our lives never seem quite right, because our inner experience of them is unsatisfactory. We find ourselves either running headlong toward the future for relief or dwelling in the past, or both. A changed relationship to our experience is needed to find lasting peace. (p. 114)


We believe mindfulness offers one avenue to cultivate this “changed relationship to experience”—and that through this, we will be better able to manage stress and ultimately lead more joyful and fulfilling lives.


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16. Shapiro, S. L., & Schwartz, G. E. (2000b). The role of intention in self-regulation: Toward intentional systemic mindfulness. In M. Boekaerts,

P. R. Pintrich, & M. Zeidner (Eds.), Handbook of self-regulation (pp. 253–273). New York: Academic Press.

17. Bandura, A. (1986). Social foundations of thought and action: A social cognitive theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.

 

18. Oman, D., & Thoresen, C. E. (2003). Spiritual modeling: A key to spiritual and religious growth? International Journal for the Psychology of Religion, 13(3), 149–165.

19. Bandura, A. (2003). On the psychosocial impact and mechanisms of spiritual modeling. International Journal for the Psychology of Religion, 13(3), 167–173.

20. Oman, D., Shapiro, S. L., Thoresen, C. E., Flinders, T., Driskill, J., & Plante, T. G. (2007). Learning from spiritual models and meditation: A ran- domized evaluation of a college course. Pastoral Psychology, 55(4), 473–493.

21. Oman, D., & Beddoe, A. E. (2005). Health interventions combining meditation with learning from spiritual exemplars: Conceptualization and review. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 29, S126.

22. Baer,  R.  A.  (2003).  Mindfulness  training  as  a  clinical  intervention: A conceptual and empirical review. Clinical Psychology: Science & Practice, 10, 125–143.

23. Shapiro, S. L., Carlson, L. E., Astin, J. A., & Freedman, B. (2006). Mechanisms of mindfulness. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 62, 373–386.

24. Davidson, R. J., Kabat-Zinn, J., Schumacher, J., Rosenkranz, M., Muller, D., Santorelli, S. F., Urbanowski, F., Harrington, A., Bonus, K., & Sheridan, J. F. (2003). Alterations in brain and immune function produced by mindfulness meditation. Psychosomatic Medicine, 65, 564–570.

25. Carson, J. W., Carson, K. M., Gil, K. M., & Baucom, D. H. (2006). Mindfulness-based relationship  enhancement  in  couples.  In  R. A.  Baer (Ed.), Mindfulness-based treatment approaches: Clinician’s guide to evidence base and applications (pp. 309–331). London: Academic Press.

26. Astin, J. A. (1997). Stress reduction through mindfulness meditation.

Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 66, 97–106.

27. Carmody, J., Reed, G., Merriam, P., & Kristeller, J. (2008). Mindful- ness, spirituality and health-related symptoms, Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 64(4), 393–403.

28. Christopher, J. C., Christopher, S. E., Dunnagan, T., & Schure, M. (2006). Teaching self-care through mindfulness practices: The application of yoga, mediation, and quigong to counselor training. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 46, 494–509.

29. Kristeller, J. L., Baer, R. A., & Quillian-Wolever, R. (2006). Mindfulness-based approaches to eating disorders. In R. A. Baer (Ed.), Mindfulness-based treatment approaches: Clinician’s guide to evidence base and applications (pp. 75–91). London: Academic Press.

30. Monti, D. A., Peterson, C., Kunkel, E. J., Hauck, W. W., Pequignot, E., Rhodes, L., et al. (2005). A randomized, controlled trial of mindfulness- based art therapy (MBAT) for women with cancer. Psycho-Oncology, 15, 363–373.

 

31. Marlatt, G. A., & Gordon, J. R. (Eds.). (1985). Relapse prevention: Maintenance strategies in the treatment of addictive behaviors. New York: Guilford Press.

32. Marlatt, G. A., & Witkiewitz, K. (2005). Relapse prevention for alcohol and drug problems. In G. A. Marlatt & D. M. Donovan (Eds.), Relapse preven- tion (pp. 1–44). New York: Guilford Press.

33. Linehan, M. M. (1993a). Cognitive-behavioral treatment of borderline personality disorder. New York: Guilford Press.

34. Linehan, M. M. (1993b). Skills training manual for treating borderline personality disorder. New York: Guilford Press.

35. Hayes, S. C., Strosahl, K., & Wilson, K. G. (1999). Acceptance and commitment therapy. New York: Guilford Press.

36. Bishop, S. R., Lau, M., Shapiro, S., Carlson, L. E., Anderson, N., Carmody, J., Segal, Z., Abbey S., Speca, M.,  Velting,  D.,  &  Devins,  G. (2004). Mindfulness: A proposed operational definition. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 11, 230–241.

37. Germer, C. K. (2005). Teaching mindfulness in therapy. In C. K. Germer, R. D. Siegel, & P. R. Fulton (Eds.), Mindfulness and psychotherapy (pp. 113–129). New York: Guilford Press.

 

CHAPTER 4


Contemplative Practices in Action 0 Content

 0] Contents


Foreword by Huston Smith vii

Preface ix

Acknowledgments xi

Chapter 1 Introduction: Contemplative Practices in Action Thomas G. Plante, Adi Raz, and Doug Oman

PART ONE: INTEGRATED CONTEMPLATIVE PRACTICE SYSTEMS 5

Chapter 2 Similarity in Diversity? Four Shared Functions of Integrative Contemplative Practice Systems 7  Doug Oman

Chapter 3 Managing Stress Mindfully 17 Hooria Jazaieri and Shauna L. Shapiro

Chapter 4 Translating Spiritual Ideals into Daily LifeThe Eight-Point Program of Passage Meditation 35 Tim Flinders, Doug Oman, Carol Flinders, and Diane Dreher

Chapter 5 Centering Prayer: A Method of Christian Meditation for Our Time 60 Jane K. Ferguson

Chapter 6 Mantram Repetition: A “Portable Contemplative Practice” for Modern Times 78 Jill E. Bormann

PART TWO: CONTEMPLATIVE TRADITIONS 101

Chapter 7 “The Eternal Is with Me, I Shall Not Fear”: Jewish Contemplative Practices and Well-Being 103 Zari Weiss and David Levy

Chapter 8 A Comprehensive Contemplative Approach from the Islamic Tradition 122 Aisha Hamdan

Chapter 9 The Path of Yoga 143 T. Anne Richards

Chapter 10 Zen and the Transformation of Emotional and Physical Stress into Well-Being 159 Sarita Tamayo-Moraga and Darlene Cohen Roshi

PART THREE: CONTEMPLATIVE PRACTICES IN ACTION: APPLICATION 181

Chapter 11 The Impact of Meditation Practices in the Daily Life of Silicon Valley Leaders 183 Andre L. Delbecq

Chapter 12 “Shaking the Blues Away”: Energizing Spiritual Practices for the Treatment of Chronic Pain 205 Amy B. Wachholtz and Michelle J. Pearce

Chapter 13 A Pilgrimage from Suffering to Solidarity: Walking the Path of Contemplative Practices 225 Gerdenio Manuel, SJ, and Martha E. Stortz

Chapter 14 Contemplative Practices in Action: Now What? 243 Thomas G. Plante and Adi Raz

Index 247

About the Editor and Contributors 257

 




Foreword


If I ask myself why it is I who has been asked to write the Foreword to this important book, I suspect that it is because it is in line with my own book, The World’s Religions, which is, like this one, ecumenically inclusive. In its 14 chapters, Contemplative Practices in Action introduces a broad array of contemplative practices drawn from Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. No faith or religion is accorded privileged status above others.

However, towering above the virtue (which I consider it to be) of ecumenism, is this book’s persuasive conviction that the world’s reli- gions house inexhaustible resources for transforming and augmenting the human spirit, a conviction with which I concur.

There is another and somewhat more personal connection, however, which has to do with the fact that the Eight-Point Program of Passage Meditation developed by the late Eknath Easwaran figures importantly in several chapters of Contemplative Practices in Action. Easwaran was a professor of English from Kerala, in South India, who came to this country on a Fulbright fellowship in 1959  and became  a widely read and deeply respected teacher of meditation who lived out his days in an ashram in Northern  California.  I  had  the  privilege  of  meeting him more than once and held him in high regard.

On several occasions, friends drove me to Easwaran’s ashram to participate in the evening gatherings of the community that sprang up around him. After supper, residents would join their teacher to lis- ten to his short homilies, ask questions about their spiritual practice, or simply sit quietly in the community’s soothing, collective peace. Those evenings made me think of Mahatma Gandhi’s ashram, where, after their simple suppers, villagers would gather around their leader for brief prayer meetings. Gandhi always made sure those services included prayers and scriptural readings from all the great religious traditions, and so did Easwaran.

That is half of the story, and the book in hand tells the other half. Contemplative evenings with a great spiritual teacher are not ends in themselves. It would not be amiss to think of them as times when com- municants recharge their batteries for the next day’s work. The title of this book, Contemplative Practices in Action, splices the two halves together. Like Gandhi, like the Buddha, like all great spiritual teach- ers, Easwaran had no use for beliefs unless they generated actions. Doing, not saying, is what counts.

Welcome to this book, which ought not to leave any serious reader unchanged.

Huston Smith Berkeley, California

January 2010

 ===

Goodreads Reviews:


Apr 08, 2012Jill rated it really liked it

Picked this up in the recommended book section of the library. An excellent exploratory book for anyone as new to comparative religion as I am. And this book is helpful because it gives you action points, ways of practicing mindfulness, for example, instead of just barking religious dogma at you. I imagine this would be a useful book to have around if you're looking to change your life in a positive way. Suggestion: I found it best to skip around to chapters that grabbed my attention rather than reading it beginning to end.


"According to Buddhist psychology, suffering comes from our wanting things to be different from what they really are, whether that is wishing for another job, for more money, for a different appearance, or even to be happier...Though we are presenting mindfulness meditation here as a means of stress management, it is important to note that in Buddhism, the intention of mindfulness training is not for "stress management" but to achieve complete liberation from suffering and compassion for all beings."


On Observing the Breath: "Some find it helpful to set an intention before beginning this sitting exercise by silently speaking something that resonates for them in the moment. "May I be nonjudgmental," or "May I be gentle with myself" are examples of such intentions."


Mindful Eating: "First, simply observe how you eat, without changing anything about it. Do you eat with someone? Do you eat standing up or sitting down? Perhaps while doing something else? where do you eat--on a couch, in bed, at a table, in front of the computer? How much do you eat? How long does it take you to eat? How do you feel before and after you eat? How do you determine what to eat?"


Mindful Eating: "As a mindful eating exercise, try sitting down to a meal and pausing before you begin eating. Set an intention for this meal, for example, "May this food nourish me"; "My I be present for this meal"; "May I appreciate all that was involved in providing this meal". And it goes on to explain how to observe your eating, how you feel during and after, paying close attention to your body.


"Recent surveys show that as many as one-third of Americans place themselves in the category of "spiritual, but not religious," rejecting traditional organized religion as the sole means of furthering their spiritual growth."


Source: Rumi

Passage:

"Everything you see has its roots.

In the unseen world.

The forms may change,

Yet the essence remains the same.

Every wondrous sight will vanish,

Every sweet word will fade.

But do not be disheartened,

The source they come from is eternal."




(less)

flag1 like · Like  · comment · see review

Gloria

Apr 22, 2011Gloria rated it really liked it

Shelves: for-the-spirit

I can see this book being used as a textbook for a class on spiritual practices. It is rather dry like a textbook, but is also quite thorough in presenting viewpoints and practices among all the major faiths. Not particularly inspiring, but certainly educational. Lots of resources included.

flag1 like · Like  · comment · see review

Mila Gamaiunova

Aug 11, 2018Mila Gamaiunova rated it it was amazing

The book makes an introduction of different types of contemplative practices rooted in various traditions.












Contemplative Practices in Action 2] Similarity in Diversity? Four Shared Functions of Integrative Contemplative Practice Systems

 2] Similarity in Diversity? Four Shared Functions of Integrative Contemplative Practice Systems



Doug Oman


The reader of this volume, impressed by the rich descriptions of many diverse systems of spiritual practice, may start to wonder, “What are the shared themes? What patterns emerge amidst this inspiring profu- sion of perspectives?” In this chapter, I sketch one possible answer— one way of characterizing shared themes and functions that appear in many different systems of practice. Along the way, I propose using the term integrated contemplative practice to describe systems of practice that meet a certain functional threshold.

Four common elements or themes can be found, I suggest, in most of the practice systems described in the next eight chapters. These commonalities exist even though some chapters describe com- prehensive and clearly defined systems, whereas others present instruc- tively selected highlights from venerable traditions. More specifically, the next four chapters in Part One examine well-defined systems of interrelated practices that are challenging, but can be undertaken by individuals in their entirety. Three systems partly or wholly tran- scend individual faith traditions (e.g., Mindfulness, Passage Medita- tion, Mantram), whereas the fourth (Christian-derived Centering Prayer) arose within a particular faith tradition. In contrast, all four chapters in Part Two explore venerable schools (yoga, Zen) or major traditions ( Judaism, Islam)1 that constitute storehouses of wisdom

 

8 Contemplative Practices in Action: Spirituality, Meditation, and Health


accumulated over many centuries. Each of these schools or tradi- tions, viewed in its entirety, has accumulated a richer repertoire of techniques than any one individual can fully implement.

One shared function of many spiritual practice systems was described in the 1980s by Daniel Goleman. He surveyed more than a dozen methods of meditation, both East and West, and reported that “the need for the meditator to retrain [his or her] attention ... is the single invariant  ingredient  in  the  recipe  ... of  every  meditation  system” (p. 107).2 Indeed, it seems quite likely that almost all of the practices dis- cussed in this book, when undertaken regularly over time, will affect— and may sometimes transform—how people habitually deploy their attention. But can we identify any specific and concrete forms of resem- blance between traditions?

Several concrete resemblances can indeed be identified. Recently, my colleagues and I at the Spirituality and Health Institute (SHI) observed several elements in common between two paradigmatic sys- tems of practice.3,4 More specifically, we found four distinct functions that were each accomplished, in slightly different ways, by these two integrated contemplative practice systems: Passage Meditation (PM) (Flinders et al., this volume) and mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) (Jazaieri and Shapiro, this volume).

Both PM and MBSR, we noted, require setting aside time—substantial

time—approximately half an hour daily—for undertaking a powerful attention-training activity. For this purpose, PM and MBSR each use a form of sitting meditation. Similarly, PM and MBSR each recommend specific mental centering/stabilizing practices to be used throughout the day to stabilize and balance the mind in conditions of stress or boredom (PM uses mantram repetition, and MBSR uses informal mindfulness practices). These analogous elements do not perform functions that are fully identical matches—rather, to borrow a phrase from positive psychology, these analogous elements, and the precise functions they perform, may be said to share a “coherent resemblance” (p. 35).5

Table 2.1 shows that with few exceptions, variants of these four elements are prevalent not only in PM and MBSR, but in each set of contemplative practices covered in the next eight chapters. These four shared elements, or features, are as follows:


1. Set-aside time—time that is set aside regularly, usually daily, for a disciplined activity or exercise that has a comparatively

 

Similarity in Diversity? 9


powerful effect on training attention.2 Variants of sitting medi- tation are commonly used. Some systems in this book also use prescribed postures (e.g., yoga, Islam). Such attention training can support optimal performance in all spheres of life, since “attention is the first and often most effective line of defense in nearly every sphere of self-control” (p. 1172).6 Most attention training fosters concentration, and “powerful concentration amplifies the effectiveness of any kind of activity” (p. 168).2 The attention-training functions of meditation are supported by recent neuroimaging evidence.7

2. Virtues and character strengths—qualities of character and behavior, such as compassion, forgiveness, or fearlessness. In many sys- tems, such qualities are to be cultivated throughout the day by making appropriate choices in thoughts, words, and actions. Typically, the recommended qualities involve subsets of six cross-culturally prevalent classes of virtues recently identified by positive psychologists—wisdom, courage, humanity, justice, temperance, and transcendence.5

3. Practices for centering/stabilizing that are usable throughout the day— such as during occasions of stress, anxiety, or unstructured time. Examples include returning the mind to the breath (MBSR), or returning the mind to repeating a mantram or holy name.8,9 Here, the contemporary word “center” (small c) is used to designate recovery of a sense of inner strength and balance. (This contrasts with the term “Centering Prayer,” which designates a specific sys- tem of Christian-derived practices,10 described elsewhere in this volume by Ferguson.)

4. Spiritual models—attending to individuals whose behavior reflects desired spiritual qualities—provide a unique resource for spiri- tual growth. Spiritual and religious educators have long viewed spirituality as primarily “caught, not taught” (p. 149),11 since so much of human learning is social. Spiritual and religious tradi- tions, and many of the practice systems described in this book, transmit words of revered or instructive spiritual models, such as Jesus, the Buddha, Muhammad, or various sages and saints.12 Attending to spiritual models’ words and actions can motivate sustained practice, and guide or inspire implementation of other spiritual practices (e.g., #1–#3).

 





Table 2.1. Presence and Naming of Features by Contemplative Practice Type

1 2 3 4

 


Practice System

 

Set-Aside (/Dedicated) Attention Training

 

Virtuous/Mindful Attitudes

 

Centering Practice Usable Throughout Day

 

Spiritual Models/ Exemplarsa

 


 

Integrated Contemplative Practice Systems (Part One)


 

Mindfulness (/Vipassana)b

 

Sitting meditation (on breath)

 

Mindfulness attitudes Informal practices Poetry

 


 

Passage Meditationb Sitting meditation

(on a passage)

 

Put others first;

+ additional

 

Mantram repetition Passages; reading

 


 

Centering Prayer Sitting meditation

(with sacred word)

 

Implicit;c silence, solitude, service

 

Prayers: active; welcoming

 

Implicitc

 


Mantramd Focus; slow Mantram repetition


Contemplative Traditions (Part Two)


 

Judaism Sabbath;e prayer; meditation

 

Implicit;c peace, calm, equanimity

 

Repeat verse (liturgy/ scripture)

 

Implicit;c teachers/ Rebbesf

 


 

Islam Five daily prayers Many (justice, gentleness, etc.)

 

Dhikr (remembrance); supplication

 

The Prophet/aha¯dı¯th

˙

 


 

Yoga Asanas +meditation Yamas (truth, nonviolence, etc.)

 

Lineage of teacher

 


 

Zen Sitting meditation (Zazen) Brahma Viharas (compassion, etc.)

Others Combinations or Systems—Yours, Your Client’s, or Your Student’s


1. 

 

Mindfulness; letting go

 

Teaching stories; teacher

 


2. 


3. 


Note: For a fuller explanation of each practice system, see corresponding chapter in this volume; lists of practices contained in each cell may be incomplete. aThe final column describes learning from traditional or prominent models, but most systems also encourage spiritual fellowship to foster learning from positive models in the local community.

bMindfulness and Passage Meditation are the two paradigms used to develop the four categories.

c“Implicit” practice categories are typically enacted when an individual engages in traditional observance, especially communal worship. For example, Jewish and Christian services in synagogues and churches often include scripture readings about virtuous conduct and spiritual models such as Moses or Jesus. dMantram/holy name repetition as presented by Bormann lacks the full set of four elements that comprise an integral contemplative practice system, but it is extracted from such a system (Passage Meditation).

eThe Sabbath cycle is weekly (not daily).

fSee Silberman25 on Rebbes as spiritual models.

 

Figure 2.1 shows how these four elements of practice can work together in concert to foster spiritual growth and related outcomes. In every system, these elements are intended for integration into one’s daily and weekly routines of life,13 through which they may gradually transform “character, conduct and consciousness” (p. 37).14 As tools for retraining attention, they reinforce each other. They address multiple needs and opportunities that arise in the ordinary rhythms and textures of daily living. Like a well-designed course of instruction or a healthy physical exercise routine, they provide for periods of heightened intensity and immersion (#1, set-aside time), application of skills in diverse contexts (#2 character strengths and #3 centering/ stabilizing), and overall guidance and inspiration (#4 spiritual models). The model in Figure 2.1 suggests that these four elements function synergistically, by reinforcing each other. Like the nutritional contri- butions of complementary food groups,15 these four types of practice together may generate greater benefits than obtainable separately from individual practices. Of course, the model in Figure 2.1 is far from complete in representing all of the psychological and spiritual processes that operate in real time. Other factors include an



Figure 2.1. Elements Function Dynamically in Concert.


 

individual’s need for a valid and coherent worldview,16 and the influ- ence of spiritual fellowship.11,17 For this reason, forms of “spiritual shopping” (p. 126)18 that are blind, that incoherently mix and match incompatible elements from discordant practice traditions, will rarely be optimal. Spiritual benefits, one might hypothesize, are maximized when the elements interface and cohere harmoniously with each other, like pieces of a well-constructed musical instrument, or threads in a well-crafted tapestry. How to best evaluate the coherence of a set of prac- tices is, of course, a perennially controversial and important issue— and one that cannot be resolved here.

Practical applications flow from recognizing the synergistic interre- lation of elements in these four categories. For example, an individual could use the four categories as a checklist to review the complete- ness of his or her own practice, from the standpoint of the model in Figure 2.1. More broadly, the four elements might function as a checklist for a psychotherapist to help a client in reviewing his or her practice, or for an educator to lead students in reviewing or aug- menting their own practices. To distinguish it from something less complete, my SHI colleagues and I propose that a system of practices that encompasses elements from all four categories should be desig- nated an integral contemplative practice system.

In the practice systems examined in this book, centering activities (#3) are perhaps most commonly missing, or underemphasized in real-world implementations. A useful resource to redress this neglect is offered by Bormann’s chapter (this volume). She highlights mantram/holy name repetition, a cross-culturally common practice that produces centering. When sought, variations of mantram repetition can be found in many faith traditions and practice systems, including several described in this volume.

For individuals who are interested or engaged in some form of spiri- tual practice—about 80 percent of U.S. adults, according to a recent national survey (p. 79)19—the following questions may prove practically beneficial:


1. Do I currently draw spiritual support, strength, and reinforcement through engaging in practices in each of the four categories listed earlier? That is, do I enjoy the spiritual support of an integral contemplative practice?

2. If not, can I expand my practice in ways that are personally appropriate and consistent with my tradition and beliefs?

 

3. How can I extend my practice in a way that is most harmonious and complementary to my existing practices?


Such questions may also be relevant to the growing roster of for-profit and nonprofit organizations seeking to systematically integrate spir- ituality into the workplace20,21 (see also Delbecq, this volume, whose executive seminars have addressed all four elements).

Even beyond its relevance to spiritual practice, of course, many ben- efits can flow from identifying commonalities across faith traditions. Recognizing similarities may facilitate intercultural understanding, foster improved communication between human service professionals and diverse clients, and contribute to better education and health care. This chapter has described similarities in daily spiritual practices. Similarities also exist at other levels, ranging from the institutional22 to the philosophical.23 Comparatively few earlier writers, such as Walsh24 and Easwaran,14 have examined similarities in practices. Yet daily practice is at the core of applying spirituality to address real- world problems. Our analyses suggest that diverse faith traditions have recommended similarly integrated systems of contemplative practice. I encourage readers to consider how these four categories may apply to their own practices, and that of their clients, students, fellow congregants, and organizations, as well as to the practice sys- tems described in the next eight chapters in this book.


REFERENCES


1. Hamdan (this volume) describes practices from Islamic Sunni tradi- tion; also within Islam is Shia tradition, as well as Islam’s mystical side, Sufism, a phenomenon “so broad [and with] appearance so protean that nobody can venture to describe it fully” (p. 3), according to Schimmel, A. (1975). Mystical dimensions of Islam. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

2. Goleman, D. (1988). The meditative mind: The varieties of meditative experience. New York: Tarcher.

3. Oman, D., Shapiro, S. L., Thoresen, C. E., Plante, T. G., & Flinders, T. (2008). Meditation lowers stress and supports forgiveness among college students: A randomized controlled trial. Journal of American College Health, 56, 569–578.

4. Oman, D., Shapiro, S. L., Thoresen, C. E., Flinders, T., Driskill, J. D., & Plante, T. G. (2007). Learning from spiritual models and meditation: A ran- domized evaluation of a college course. Pastoral Psychology, 55, 473–493.

 

5. Peterson, C., & Seligman, M. E. P. (2004). Character strengths and virtues: A handbook and classification. Washington, DC, and New York: American Psychological Association and Oxford University Press. “To say that particular virtues ... converge ... is not to argue that all their features line up perfectly, but rather that they have a coherent resemblance to one another, sharing more features than not” (p. 35).

6. Baumeister, R. F., & Exline, J. J. (1999). Virtue, personality, and social relations: Self-control as the moral muscle. Journal of Personality, 67, 1165–1194.

7. Lutz, A., Slagter, H. A., Rawlings, N. B., Francis, A. D., Greischar, L. L., & Davidson, R. J. (2009). Mental training enhances attentional stability: Neural and behavioral evidence. Journal of Neuroscience, 29, 13418–13427.

8. Oman, D., & Driskill, J. D. (2003). Holy name repetition as a spiritual exercise and therapeutic technique. Journal of Psychology and Christianity, 22, 5–19.

9. Baesler, E. J. (2001). The prayer of the holy name in Eastern and Western spiritual traditions: A theoretical, cross-cultural, and intercultural prayer dialogue. Journal of Ecumenical Studies, 38, 196–216.

10. The term “Centering Prayer” was adopted in the 1970s by three Trappist monks to describe a system of practices they had codified; and one of its earliest published uses was in Pennington, M. B. (1980). Centering prayer. Garden City, NY: Doubleday.

11. Oman, D., & Thoresen, C. E. (2003). Spiritual modeling: A key to spiritual and religious growth? International Journal for the Psychology of Reli- gion, 13, 149–165.

12. Oman, D., & Thoresen, C. E. (2007). How does one learn to be spiri- tual? The neglected role of spiritual modeling in health. In T. G. Plante &

C. E. Thoresen (Eds.), Spirit, science and health: How the spiritual mind fuels physical wellness (pp. 39–54). Westport, CT: Praeger.

13. Fiese, B. H., Tomcho, T. J., Douglas, M., Josephs, K., Poltrock, S., & Baker, T. (2002). A review of 50 years of research on naturally occurring fam- ily routines and rituals: Cause for celebration? Journal of Family Psychology, 16, 381–390.

14. Easwaran, E. (1978/2008). Passage meditation: Bringing the deep wisdom of the heart into daily life. Tomales, CA: Nilgiri Press (full text: http://www

.easwaran.org).

15. Robertson, L., Flinders, C., & Ruppenthal, B. (1986). The new laurel’s kitchen: A handbook for vegetarian cookery & nutrition. Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press.

16. Antonovsky, A. (1987). Unraveling the mystery of health: How people manage stress and stay well. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

17. Oman, D., Thoresen, C. E., Park, C. L., Shaver, P. R., Hood, R. W., & Plante, T. G. (2009). How does one become spiritual? The Spiritual Modeling Inventory of Life Environments (SMILE). Mental Health, Religion & Culture, 12, 427–456.

 

18. Wuthnow, R. (2005). America and the challenges of religious diversity. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

19. Gallup, G., & Lindsay, D. M. (1999). Surveying the religious landscape: Trends in U.S. beliefs. Harrisburg, PA: Morehouse.

20. Giacalone, R. A., & Jurkiewicz, C. L. (2003). Handbook of workplace spirituality and organizational performance. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.

21. Duerr, M. (2004). The contemplative organization. Journal of Organi- zational Change Management, 17, 43–61.

22. Smart, N. (1996). Dimensions of the sacred: An anatomy of the world’s beliefs. Berkeley: University of California Press.

23. Smith, H. (1976/1992). Forgotten truth: The common vision of the world’s religions. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco.

24. Walsh, R. N. (1999). Essential spirituality: The 7 central practices to awaken heart and mind. New York: Wiley.

25. Silberman, I. (2003). Spiritual role modeling: The teaching of meaning systems. International Journal for the Psychology of Religion, 13, 175–195.

 






CHAPTER 3


Contemplative Practices in Action 1] Introduction: Contemplative Practices in Action


 1] Introduction: Contemplative Practices in Action

Thomas G. Plante, Adi Raz, and Doug Oman



Several decades ago in his book The Meditative Mind,1 Daniel Goleman reviewed more than a dozen major Eastern and Western methods of contemplative practice, ranging from Christian hesychasm and Jewish Kaballah to  Transcendental  Meditation  and  Tibetan  Buddhism. He reported that two major approaches or strategies to meditation were incorporated: One recurrent approach was concentration, that is, focused attention on a single object, such as the breath, a mantram, or a prayer. The other recurrent approach was mindfulness (the detached observation of one’s thinking process). Sometimes concentration and mindfulness were used separately, and sometimes they were combined in various ways. Goleman argued that both mindfulness and concentra- tive meditation have been directed to a single objective, the retraining of attention, a skill that he believed “amplifies the effectiveness of any kind of activity” (p. 168). Goleman also reported that “the need for the meditator to retrain his attention, whether through concentration or mindfulness, is the single invariant ingredient in the recipe for altering consciousness of every meditation system” (p. 107). Nearly a century earlier, William James, one of the founders of modern psychology, had argued that “the faculty of voluntarily bringing back a wandering attention, over and over again, is the very root of judgment, character, and will.    An education which should improve this faculty would be

the education par excellence” (p. 424).2

 

2 Contemplative Practices in Action: Spirituality, Meditation, and Health


In modern health promotion, psychotherapy, and other human service interventions, these contemplative practices have largely been taken out of their religious and spiritual contexts and then secularized and repackaged.3,4 For example, the health and mental health care community has incorporated mindfulness meditation in recent years with numerous books, workshops, conferences, and trainings being offered. Yoga studios can be found in many strip malls, and meditation workshops are offered by human resource departments in many diverse companies.5

The currently popular mindfulness meditation approach stems from Zen Buddhism and Hindu yogic practices, and it is a common miscon- ception that only by borrowing from these Eastern traditions can one secure any benefits from contemplative practices. Many Christians and Jews, for example, who identify and engage with their religious tradi- tion, are often not aware of the long history of contemplative practices within their own faith tradition. As many in our culture have become more familiar and comfortable with the Eastern contemplative prac- tices, the Western practices have been largely ignored, even though they also often offer contemplative approaches that can provide effective stress management, well-being, and healing.6,7

All of the major religious and spiritual traditions have developed specific principles and techniques to help their members assimilate con- templative perspectives and behaviors aimed at fostering a fuller experi- ence of wisdom, wholeness, and enlightenment.1,7,8 Research studies have reported many physical and mental health benefits from regular contemplative practices, as well as confirming their stress management functions.4,5,9,10 Benson,11 for example, has documented that meditation helps to promote a “relaxation response.” He argues that when medita- tion is associated with one’s religious or spiritual convictions, it further enhances relaxation, leading to greater psychological and physical health benefits. Recent well-controlled research studies have further supported Benson’s arguments, reporting advantages for spiritually based medita- tion over otherwise nearly identical secular forms of meditation.12,13

There are a number of books available on contemplative practices. However, almost all focus on one particular religious or spiritual tradi- tion and most are practice oriented without solid research grounding. Usually, they highlight the Eastern traditions and overlook the Western ones. This is especially true among books that target the health and mental health care communities.6,7

The purpose of this book is to examine contemplative practices from a wide variety of both Eastern and Western religious and

 

Introduction: Contemplative Practices in Action 3


spiritual traditions and to examine their commonalities and unique approaches to improved well-being, health, healing, wholeness, and stress management. Chapters are written by experts in their fields, most of whom are affiliated with the Spirituality and Health Institute at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, California. Each chapter will discuss the state-of-the-art science, practice, and general applications of contemplative practices in the professional workplace, educational settings, pastoral care, and medical, psychological, or other health care environments. This book hopes to be inclusive in coverage of contemplative practices, and integrate science and practice in a bal- anced manner and from a variety of Eastern and Western sources.

This book will discuss several different contemplative approaches to stress management and achieving well-being. Some chapters highlight approaches from Western traditions while others highlight contempla- tive approaches from Eastern traditions. Others are integrative of both Western and Eastern traditions. Some are more closely connected to religious traditions and practices while others are not. Several chapters will highlight application to business and health care as well.

Oman (Chapter 2) has pointed out that four similar functions are performed in diverse ways by elements within many of the contempla- tive systems discussed in this book. Most approaches involve setting aside time for practices that reshape and train attention; most also include elements for centering oneself throughout the day, cultivating personal character strengths, and drawing inspiration and guidance from spiritual exemplars. Oman suggests using the phrase “integrated contemplative practice system” for systems of practice that encompass all four of these elements that are highlighted in this volume.

Sadly, it is impossible to include a discussion of every contemplative practice and practice system in one book. We cannot do justice to the numerous practice systems or isolated spiritual techniques that are not represented here. For example, the role of the rosary in the Roman Catholic tradition, shamanism, and the role of chanting in Hindu Bhakti traditions are just some of the many contemplative practices that are not presented here. Rather than presenting an exhaustive review of the contemplative practices among the various religious and spiritual traditions, our hope is to provide a helpful selection by leading figures in their respective fields to assist with stress manage- ment, healing, wholeness, and well-being. The contributors met for an all-day conference with university and health care community members during October 2009. This allowed all of the authors to lis- ten to and consult with each other as well as with diverse professionals

 

4 Contemplative Practices in Action: Spirituality, Meditation, and Health


in the local San Francisco Bay Area professional community in order to hopefully create a more thoughtful, seamless, and comprehensive book project. We hope that our efforts will encourage the reader to have a better understanding and appreciation of contemplative practices in action.


REFERENCES


1. Goleman, D. (1988). The meditative mind: The variety of meditative experience. Los Angeles: Tarcher.

2. James, W. (1890/1923). The principles of psychology. New York: Henry Holt.

3. Kabat-Zinn, J. (1990). Full catastrophe living. New York: Delacorte Press.

4. Kabat-Zinn, J. (2003). Mindfulness-based interventions in context: Past, present, and future. Clinical Psychology: Research and Practice, 10, 144–156.

5. Walsh, R., & Shapiro, S. L. (2006). The meeting of meditative disci- plines and Western psychology: A mutually enriching dialogue. American Psychologist, 61, 227–239.

6. Plante, T. G. (2008). What do the spiritual and religious traditions offer the practicing psychologist? Pastoral Psychology, 56, 429–444.

7. Plante, T. G. (2009). Spiritual practices in psychotherapy: Thirteen tools for enhancing psychological health. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.

8. Walsh, R. (1999). Essential spirituality: The seven central practices. New York: Wiley.

9. Borman, J. E., Gifford, A. L., Shively, M., Smith, T. L., Redwine, L., Kelly, A., et al. (2006). Effects of spiritual mantram repetition on HIV out- comes: A randomized controlled trial. Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 29, 359–376.

10. Brown, K. W., Ryan, R. M., & Cresswell, J. D. (2007). Mindfulness: Theoretical foundations and evidence for its salutary effects. Psychological Inquiry, 18, 211–237.

11. Benson, H. (1996). Timeless healing. New York: Scribner.

12. Wachholtz, A. B., & Pargament, K. I. (2005). Is spirituality a critical ingredient of meditation? Comparing the effects of spiritual meditation, sec- ular meditation, and relaxation on spiritual, psychological, cardiac, and pain outcomes. Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 28, 369–384.

13. Wachholtz, A. B., & Pargament, K. I. (2008). Migraines and meditation: Does spirituality matter? Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 31, 351–366.

 



PART ONE

INTEGRATED CONTEMPLATIVE PRACTICE SYSTEMS




PREFACE TO PART ONE


Part One, “Integrated Contemplative Practice Systems,” focuses on systems of practice from both East and West that are well defined and sufficiently limited in scope that they can be undertaken in their entirety by a single individual. First, Oman’s short introductory chap- ter offers a conceptual analysis and overview, unique in this volume, that describes four shared elements that are present in many of these practice systems. His chapter includes a table that shows the specific names used to describe these elements in each of the additional chap- ters in this section, as well as the names used in chapters in Part Two (“Contemplative Traditions”).

Each of the remaining four chapters in this part examines a single contemplative practice system. Attention is directed in turn at Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction ( Jazaieri and Shapiro), Passage Meditation (Flinders, Oman, Flinders, and Dreher), Centering Prayer (Ferguson), and repetition of a mantram or holy name (Bormann). Most of these practices can be undertaken within any major faith tra- dition, although Centering Prayer is essentially Christian. Bormann’s mantram/holy name repetition practices were extracted from the Passage Meditation system by its developer, and contain only two of

 

6 Contemplative Practices in Action: Spirituality, Meditation, and Health


the four elements described by Oman. But as Bormann points out, the mantram/holy name is noteworthy for its portability, power, and uni- versality. It highlights powerful but oft-forgotten practices that can be found within each major faith tradition, and which can complement these traditions’ better-known elements.

 

CHAPTER 2


2022/06/13

Meeting for Learning - send us responses to the following queries

Meeting for Learning - sejin.pak8@gmail.com - Gmail

Fiona Gardner
Attachments
Sat, May 21, 4:32 PM
to me, fionagardneraway@icloud.com

Dear Sejin,  thank you for your enquiry about Meeting for Learning.  I’ve attached the pamphlet that gives you the basic information.  It can also be helpful to talk to someone who has been – which Meeting are you in and I can suggest people, unless you have already done that of course!

We also ask people to send us responses to the following queries to help us make sure Meeting for Learning fits with what you are hoping for:

  1. How would you describe your spiritual journey so far?  
  2. What has been your involvement with Friends or with other spiritual development programs? 
  3. What is it about the Meeting for Learning that attracts you now?  
  4. What do you hope to gain from participating in this program?


Feel free to ask me anything else you would like to.

 

Peaceful wishes,

Fiona Gardner
----

Answering your intial queries for Meeting foe Learning:

1] How would you describe your spiritual journey so far?  

First, I would like to tell a little bit about my background. I am born in 1948, retired from a university teaching job in the social sciences and Asian studies. My ethnic background is Korean. I left South Korea in 1964 when my parents decided to migrate to Brasil. We remigrated to Canada. So, spent a lot of time adjusting to new cultures and languages. My first major in the university in Canada was Physics which was different from what my occupation ended up beig later. 

In my twenties, although I was studying very hard to become a physicist as I that was the sole goal in my life, I was not very happy for reasons that I did not understand. My parents were both university educated and seemed "reasonable" in child rearing, so I thought they had done their best in rearing me. But, am I not happy, I asked my self. I thought about suicide, or becoming a monk, at least not pursue a normal life that most people pursue. I concluded at the time that I could do no better than my parents in child rearing, so I would not want to have a child, which meant also not getting married. 

It was around this time that I got interested in exploring the reasons for my unhappyness, which turned out to be the beginning of what would later conceived as "a sort of spiritual quest". Although my major was physics and I studied it for seven years to PhD level, I was at the same time pursuing a sepate study of philosophy and religion on my own. 

Toward the latter part of my study in physics, something happened in my family related to the diaspora politics of the overseas Koreans, that I will not explain. This lead me to abandone my dream of becoming a physicist. I now wanted become a sociologist. I wanted to explore the question of the historical, social and political forces in Korea and in the overseas Korean communities, that impacted my family and myself. 

Changing the career plan from physics to sociology was of course not easy. I was not a native speaker of English, my training was in science, not in writing. Whether this change will be successful was very unclear, and it was a gamble. So I had to work very hard in a new field to get into a PhD program, and eventually to get into an academic career in the new field. What this meant to my "spiritual quest" that started in my twenties, was it was stalled there, not to continue and grow. 

When finally retired form my job, I wanted to go back to the "spiritual quest" of my twenties, and continue the process. I was around this time that I encountered Quakerism through a friend, whom I did not know was a Friend. I had a connection to this friend though a spiritual group callled the Emissaries of Divine Light to which my siblings were connected. I should also mention that my wife is a Christian, who goes to an ethnic Korean Presbitarian church. I do not go to this church because it has a conservative leaning even though my life is not religious conservative. I am not very socal, and I continued to feel lack of sense of community. I was already feeling lack of a sense of beloniging because of many international moving (from Soutj Korea, to Brazil, Canada, USA, Japan, back to Canada, then to Australia). 

I was hoping to find a spiritial community through a Quakerism and a Quaker community.  

I should add that in terms of religion and my background, I used to say I was not religious even though I have been exposed to Buddhism as a sort of family religion and Christianity as the major religion among the migrant Koreans. 

2] What has been your involvement with Friends or with other spiritual development programs? 

I began attending a Quaker meeting in Adelaidesix years ago. I attended very diligently for about four years, but stopped doing that for a combination of a medical condition of Bowel cancer and the Covid situation. For the first four years, I attended all Yearly meetings. And it tured out that the connection I established with a group of iter state friends became stronger than that with the people in my local meeting. 

The main reason for that was that I lead a group of friends to visit North Korea as a study group to establish a peaceful relationship with the people of that country. Preparing for the trip and our effort to develop a program to interact with North Korea lead to a lot of interaction among a group of 8 to 10 friends. I am not sure whether this group can be called a spiritual one in a typical sense, but may be in a loose sense. The idea of to trip to North Korea bascally started from my CONCERN about the issue of PEACE with North Korea.  Actually, this was related to family history and the reason I gave up my career in physics.

On the matter of my encounter with "spiritual development programs" other than the Quaker one, I already mentioned the Emissaries group to which most of my siblings were related to. I got involved to this group actively only in late 2000. I went through a series of spirituality workshop in three levels. I also attended a sort of Buddhist group workshop in the late 1990s. All of these workshops were about a week long. 




3] What is it about the Meeting for Learning that attracts you now?  

Four (or five ?) years ago, when I first applied to the Meeting for Learnng, it was a way for me to learn more about Quakerism. At the time, I was told that the program was not about teaching Quakerism, but for exploring participant' own spirituality. I took it as a discuragement for a new comer for a right reason, but also for a wrong one. I will not explain that, but my status did change because I had ample tie to study Quakerism as well as other spiritual traditions since my retirement. 

4] What do you hope to gain from participating in this program?

I had read some of previous participants' reflections on attending this program. I also studied Fiona's Backhouse lecture. So I have a reasonably good idea of the intention or goal of the program, as well as the diverse outcome for participants. 

My expectation is first to acquire the Quaker frame and language of spiritual journey which is somewhat similar, and somewhat different to those of other traditions. I want pf curse to take this opportunity to enernise my spiritual journey. I also have an expectation to meet people with similar interest, in this case, in the Quaker tradition. 

However, I am already concered about finding four people to regularly talk to with my spiritual concern.