Don't let the foibles of our vocabulary prevent you from respecting the beliefs of others as long as they respect yours.

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@jamesvanpraagh
Don't let the foibles of our vocabulary prevent you from respecting the beliefs of others as long as they respect yours.
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"I looked over at Katrin and told her that I felt that there was too much greed in the air...(I knew it was an odd thing to say even as I said it, not realizing that it would make complete sense later on)..."
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REPOST: How Meditation Can Improve Your Career
Stuck in a career rut? Maybe all you need is a 15-minute mindfulness meditation as this article recommends:
Image Source: yahoo.com
You know the basics to climbing the career ladder: Take initiative, work late, and don’t complain. But scientists have stumbled upon another powerful way to get ahead at the office: Meditation.
According to a recent study published in the journal Psychological Science, people make more decisive and rational business decisions after just a 15-minute meditation session. Those who practice mindfulness also receive higher performance ratings and are less likely to quit. What’s more, even if you’re not Zen, it could help you to have a boss who is, as the study found employees tend to perform better when their managers are meditators.
The need to get spiritual has not been lost on many major companies:Orbitz recently introduced a meditation and prayer center to its Chicago location after noticing employees sneaking into stairwells for peace and quiet. And HBO, Proctor and Gamble, and Deutsche Bankare among corporations offering meditation programs to employees.
For those unfamiliar with the centuries-old practice, meditation has moved way beyond the hippy-dippy. Its devotees include politicians, Fortune 500 execs, Silicon Valley entrepreneurs, and athletes: In 2013, when the football team the Seattle Seahawks won the Super Bowl, its coach pointed to daily meditation as one reason. The medical community has also acknowledged meditation as a legitimate healing tool, with the Mayo Clinic calling it “mind-body complementary medicine” that’s a proven method for stress relief.
Sounds relaxing. But how can meditation help when you’re hunched over spreadsheets or stuck on a conference call?
“The basic principals of meditation — discipline, focus, deep breathing — can absolutely improve your job performance because you’ll make smarter decisions when you’re centered,” Suze Yalof Schwartz, founder of the studio Unplug Meditation in Los Angeles, tells Yahoo Health.
Meditation includes three basic steps: First, close your eyes and pick something to fixate on — your breath, a word, a mental image. Then, after a few minutes, release that thought, letting it slip away in order to clear your mind. If a distraction pops up (“Did I send that email?” “Is my best friend being weird?”), don’t banish it — instead, acknowledge it’s there, then place it aside. Finally, allow yourself to think. “When your mind is quiet, the answers will come,” Yalof Schwartz says.
Here are three more ways meditation can help you succeed at work:
You’ll become more confident: You can’t ask for a promotion or speak up in meetings without feeling self-assured. Meditation boosts self-worth because it requires tapping into your deepest thoughts and developing a personal and profound relationship with yourself. And according to the Dalai Lama, self-connection through meditation helps you accept your flaws, making any criticism seem unimportant.
You’ll become more focused: Email, Instant Message and phone calls often clutter the day, each demanding our attention with equal urgency. But pausing to center your thoughts and focus on one thing at a time makes you more efficient. Research from Stanford Universitysubstantiates that, finding that chronic multi-taskers perform poorly because they use their brains less effectively. “Meditation helps you prioritize your day — is that email really so important?” notes Yalof Schwartz.
You’ll become calmer: Work is a major source of anxiety, according to the American Institute of Stress, with heavy workloads and annoying coworkers logging in as two of the major complaints. But meditation is associated with lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol, which your adrenal glands pump out in droves when you’re frustrated. Become less reactionary through meditation and you’ll appear more polished and poised.
James Van Praagh is a meditation guru and psychic who travels around the world conducting conferences and workshops on self-development, mediumship, and intuition. Click here for more of his upcoming events, meditation resources, and mediumship tools.
"The more we make an effort to keep our thoughts positive, the more pleasurable our journey in life will be." ~James Van Praagh
Once a week, James will take the time to upload personally-recorded videos featuring answers to questions selected from his friends, fans and followers right here at AskJVP.com!
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In this unique and enlightening meditation program the words of James Van Praagh and the inspiring music of Steven Halpern assist you in recognizing the blocks in your life that can hold you back from your highest spiritual potential.
This 8-week online course is designed specifically to teach you how to better understand the art of meditation. Unlike other online courses that sometimes entail chapters of reading and/or listening to lectures, this is a highly interactive course that requires practical application and practice.
REPOST: Mind Your Health: Using Mindfulness to Heal Your Body
The world is seeing greater evidence of the connection between the mind and the body. This article underlines this link by reiterating instances of physical healing achieved via mindfulness and regular meditation exercises.
Image Source: psychcentral.com
Scientist and meditation teacher Jon Kabat-Zinn includes in his pages of “Full Catastrophe Living” a horrifying story that speaks powerfully about the mind-body connection.
When renowned cardiologist Bernard Lown was in training to become a physician, he had in his clinic a patient, “Mrs. S.,” who had a narrowing of one of the valves on the right side of her heart, the tricuspid valve. She was in mild congestive heart failure; however, she functioned well enough to maintain her job as a librarian and do household chores.
She would come to the weekly cardiac clinic run by Dr. S. A. Levine, a well-respected professor of cardiology at the Harvard Medical School and at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, to receive digitalis and injections of a mercurial diuretic. One week Dr. Levine greeted Mrs. S. warmly, as he usually did — the two had an affable relationship — and then he turned to the entourage of visiting physicians and said, “This woman has TS.” With those words he abruptly left.
Dr. Lown describes what happened after that:
No sooner was Dr. Levine out of the door than Mrs. S.’s demeanor abruptly changed. She appeared anxious and frightened and was now breathing rapidly, clearly hyperventilating. Her skin was drenched with perspiration, and her pulse accelerated to more than 150 a minute. In reexamining her, I found it astonishing that the lungs, which a few minutes earlier had been quite clear, now had moist crackles… I questioned Mrs. S. as to the reasons for her sudden upset. Her response was that Dr. Levine had said that she had TS, which she knew meant “terminal situation.” I was initially amused at this misinterpretation of the medical acronym for “tricuspid stenosis.” My amusement, however, rapidly yielded to apprehension, as my words failed to reassure and as her congestion continued to worsen. Shortly thereafter she was in massive pulmonary edema. Heroic measures did not reverse the frothing congestion. I tried to reach Dr. Levine, but he was nowhere to be located. Later that same day she died from intractable heart failure.
The story is as tragic as it is inspiring: If this woman’s thoughts could induce congestive heart failure, then they also hold incredible healing powers.
In his book, Kabat-Zinn discusses a hundred or so scientific studies that suggest that our thoughts, emotions, and life experiences can very definitely influence our health. The practice of mindfulness, in particular — moment-to-moment awareness and cultivating an attitude of non-striving and non-doing — can bolster our immune system, determine which genes in our chromosomes are turned on, lower blood pressure, regulate emotions under stress, reduce pain, increase our stamina, and make us much more fun to be around.
For example, researchers at the University of Wisconsin looked at the effects of an eight-week mindfulness-based stress reduction course (MBSR) founded by Kabat-Zinn 35 years ago. The course was delivered in a corporate setting during working hours with healthy, but stressed-out employees.
The researchers found that brain scans of those that participated in the course showed activity suggesting they were handling negative emotions like anxiety and frustration more effectively (or more emotionally intelligently) than the group that was on the waiting list for the course. There was right-sided to left-sided movement within the prefrontal cerebral cortex that is involved in the expression of emotions.
The study also found that the people who completed the eight-week training in mindfulness showed a significantly stronger antibody response in their immune system after given a flu vaccine (at the end of the eight weeks of training) than did those who were on the waiting list.
Another study conducted at UCLA and Carnegie Mellon University showed that participating in an MBSR program reduced expression of genes related to inflammation, measured in immune cells sampled from blood draws. The mindfulness training also lowered C-reactive proteins in participants, which is an indication of inflammation — a core element of many diseases.
Given that on any given day, I am battling symptoms of one or more of five health conditions — bipolar disorder, Raynaud’s phenomenon, thyroid disease, pituitary tumor, and aortic-valve regurgitation — I thought I should enroll in Kabat-Zinn’s eight-week course offered at our local hospital (taught by a trained MBSR instructor). So every Friday I show up for Getting-Life-Under-Control school, where I’m taught coping skills geared for those of us with colorful childhoods and blessed with fragile mental-health genes, or for anyone who wants to look as calm as the Dalai Lama.
The twelve of us in this course are taught things like how to transform an automatic or habitual stress reaction to a mindfulness-mediated stress response, how to disengage from the emotional, alarm reaction of our automatic nervous system and be able to see with a perspective that breeds calm. The class consists of many sessions of formal meditation, where we choose an anchor for our thoughts — our breath, or sound, or an emotion — and return to that anchor over and over, learning to gently let go of any thought or thought pattern outside the present moment, such as judging, planning, or analyzing.
My illnesses haven’t disappeared. I am far from being cured. However, I’m beginning to heal. Kabat-Zinn makes that important distinction in his book.
He acknowledges that “there are few outright cures for chronic diseases or for stress-related disorders,” however, “it is possible for us to heal ourselves — to learn to live with and work with conditions that present themselves in the present moment. Healing implies the possibility that we can relate differently to illness, disability, even death, as we learn to see with eyes of wholeness.”
At the very least, I think I am communicating with my body well enough these days that if a doctor told me I had TS and walked away, I would blame his rudeness on an empty stomach, say something impolite, and then go on to think about something else.
Noted spiritual guide and coach James van Praagh believes that meditation can be extremely powerful in restoring physical health by ridding the body of past hurts and negative energies. For more on spirituality and the inner life, check out this blog.
During the 3-hour event you will enjoy:
Discovering the process of mediumship;
A guided healing and enlightened group meditation; and
Random messages given to audience members from guides, family and friends in spirit.