"We should work like the rain. The rain just falls one rain drop after another. It doesn't ask: Am I making a nice sound down below? Will the plants be glad to see me? Millions and billions of raindrops, only falling." -- Jakusho Kwong (1935 - ), American Zen Buddhist Monk
Consider This:
Paradoxically, when you're obsessed with results, you're less effective at producing them. This is because your head isn't in the present moment. It's off in the future - worrying about the result. It's like a basketball player trying to win a game by staring at the scoreboard. It doesn't work. Focus on playing the game and the score will take care of itself.
One of my clients uses a creative exercise to get into the present moment when he finds he's obsessing about results. He closes his eyes and visualizes taking an excellent golf shot. He explained it like this, "My best shots always come when I approach the ball slowly and intentionally. I look down the fairway to where I want to hit the ball and I align myself. Then I take my mind away from the target and focus on the swing. And I've found through the years that if I don't take my mind away from the target, my swing suffers. It's the same in my business."
Try This:
1. Think of something you like to do.
2. Close your eyes and imagine yourself doing it at your best.
3. Begin to understand why you are/were so good at it - what were you thinking? Feeling? Doing? Notice how present you were.
4. Reconnect with what it feels like to get lost in that moment (and work like the rain). It's your blueprint for success.
Question: How do you bring yourself back to the present moment?
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Recent Comments | 2 Total
April 5, 2006 at 5:28am by NM
This is the same as Csikszentmihalyi's concept of "flow". His book of the same name is a nice read. Look it up on Amazon.
April 5, 2006 at 4:29pm by Claire
How do you bring yourself back to the present moment?
What works for me is to focus on the physical. I feel air going into my nose as I breathe, I feel my butt in the chair, I hear birds outside the window. I pay attention to what is happening right now.
Thinking is usually about the past or the future, so it takes you out of the present. Mindfulness is something you can practice and get good at. Don't think of it as trying to "get lost in the moment;" that implies that you have to wait for the muse to strike you. As I understand it, mindfulness is about *continually* bringing yourself back to the present moment. You can't just do it once and you're done.