Meditation & Mindfulness
Workshop
“Live the actual moment.
Only this actual moment is life.”
Thích Nhất Hạnh
Workshop Details
Time – 1-3 hours approx
Vegetarian Lunch – Yes
Location – East Sussex
£50 – £150
or
See dates and availability in our
calendar
These 1:1 sessions can be he held virtually (via zoom) in the company of your own home or in a peaceful setting in the Sussex Countryside.
Tan will take you through a series of gentle guided meditations where will learn how to be more present by gently paying attention to the breath, focussing on the here and now and in turn settling and grounding yourself and letting go of racing thoughts.
This simple practice will not only help manage stress and anxiety but offer a pathway to greater insight and self-healing.
Mindfulness Meditation is a mental training that helps reduce stress, support habit changes, and can greatly improve sleep quality.
Gratitude.
From Routine to Ritual
After a month in lock-down and in such an introspective, thought provoking time, I thought
it would be a good idea to record and share some thoughts and ideas that have surfaced.
Having more time to spare, my daily meditations and yoga practise have taken on a more
profound meaning, becoming less of a daily constitution but more intrinsically imbedded.
During my time in India, living a more conscious-led existence, a wise guru (one of many
encountered), once told me to treat every daily action as a ritual, from getting out of bed to
brushing ones teeth, to preparing food etc, even walking, eating and driving needs to be
approached with conscious consideration and mindfulness. In fact, Thich Nhat Hanh, the
Buddhist monk and godfather of ‘mindfulness’ says, “When we are mindful, deeply in touch
with the present moment, our understanding of what is going on deepens, and we begin to
be filled with acceptance, joy, peace and love.”
So, during this current lock-down, when I wake up in the mornings and I’m more and more
aware that without the usual tsunami of responsibilities, pressures and expectations of
normal daily life, the air feels lighter and therefore the space around me, more abundant.
I’m more than aware that I’m one of the lucky ones; I live in the countryside, with access to
a garden and green areas to walk; my working hours have been limited to a few on-line
sessions and so- far I’m not running out of toilet roll. That’s not to say I haven’t felt acute
pangs of guilt, especially after talking to friends who are currently working on the ‘front-line’
dealing with the worst of the crisis, but through moments of calm, I’ve been able to breath
and replace those choice cuts of guilt with gratitude, a much more productive substitute
and a far more positive one.
So, today its gratitude that I’m attempting to focus on when I practise my daily mindful
meditations, e.g. gratitude for the mobility in my body when I do my yoga stretches in the
morning, gratitude for the strength in my muscles as I move through choice asanas, even if
they creek and ache, and gratitude for the skin that envelopes me as I shower, dry and
moisturise my body. This bit can be hard as like many of us, self -depreciating women, I can
judge and obsess over my body’s imperfections which I must remind myself is the ego
speaking and not the truth.
I find that touching or stroking things (in the safety of your own home) and making a
blessing as you do so, is a helpful tool to focus on what’s in front of you and usually taken
for granted. In fact, at the end of every yoga class/session I always end with a closing prayer
followed by a self- blessing, touching head, arms, torso, legs and feet before bowing to both
the ‘god within’ then the universe, symbolised by our yoga mats.
So when I greet my home in the morning I try to continue this practise (much to the
amusement and confusion of my partner) by blessing everything I come into contact, with
love and gratitude, e.g. my trusty electric toothbrush as it cleans my teeth, the banister, the
soft carpet under my feet, the view from the window, the kettle as it boils water for my tea,
the toaster as it browns my bread, my chickens as I feed them their grains, and collect any
eggs (that’s an easy one), the clear sky, my garden, every mouthful of my breakfast, every
sip of tea and even my toilet and the toilet paper.
Most of these activities are part of our daily routine, yet when they are done with a little
more consideration and thought, they can be transformed into to something far more
meaningful and therefore more profound.
It’s all about practising gratitude and appreciation, by honouring what we have through
ritual and consideration then all the ego- led trappings such as aspiration, greed, avarice and
even the fear of missing out, lose all their power.
“Gratitude turns what we have into enough.” – Anonymous
Ultimately I’m most grateful for the time given to me during this lock-down period, soon the
world will be back on its axis, spinning to the familiar rhythms of work, entertainment,
travel, commerce and capitalism, and I’m treasuring every day as a precious gift, a way of
noticing things, time to acknowledge and enjoy.
Deepak Chopra, another learned guru, that I haven’t had the pleasure of meeting, talks of
practicing gratitude in his 21 day Abundance Meditation programme. He suggests that
throughout our day we look for, and find, as many things as possible to be grateful for, then
to make an endless list as we go about our day, and let that list include all aspects of life,
from the physical, mental, emotional to the spiritual. He asks us to be attentive and
observant of the small things and big things, the obvious or mysterious…. And as we notice
all this abundance around us, breathe it all in and allow our being to be filled with joy and
gratitude.”
“Gratitude is a divine attitude in wisdom traditions. It takes you out from the ego-self and
takes you into the higher self. That higher state of consciousness initiates self-repair, self-
regulation, and healing.” Deepak Chopra
A Journey through India
In 2016 I decided to take a career and life- break embarked on a journey through India (a mid-life gap year) the purpose, to study yoga and become a yoga teacher but also, cliché of all cliché’s, to “find myself”. It was a journey that surpasses all expectations. Firstly, I studied at the Kryshnamacharia Mandarin in Chenai. Kryshnamacharia known as the father of modern yoga where I learned many valuable life skills especially those embedded into traditional cultures and daily rituals such as praying, breath-work, chanting and meditation, the fundamental roots, of which I learned, were integral to the flow and practise of yoga and indeed life itself, and one of the most enlightening lessons I’ve ever had.
Since returning to the western world and imparting these practises in my own classes, people have often asked me the what the difference is between meditation and mindfulness. Both exercises can be similarly defined as something known as present moment awareness, where when concentrating on the present moment, objectively, and intentionally, one can reach a more peaceful and serene state of awareness. For me meditation and mindfulness are as one.