Share on Pinterest

Mindfulness: Lifestyle Practice

Reading Time: 3 minutes
The next Whole Life Challenge starts in:
SIGN UP TODAY

This week, practice mindfulness for 10 minutes each day

Every day, you will earn your points for participating in a practice of mindfulness each day:

  • Mindfulness can come in the form of meditation, prayer, or journaling
  • Any form of meditation or prayer counts
  • Any form of journaling counts, even if you develop “writers block” and have a hard time actually putting pen to paper for the full 10 minutes
  • Any combination of the above two is also acceptable. If you choose to meditate or reflect for a short period and then journal about it for the remainder of the 10 minutes, you can do that as well.

Mindfulness, reflection, meditation, contemplation. Pausing for a moment to look. To look back, to look at right now, to look forward. Sometimes it’s just stopping to smell the roses.

We all spend a lot of time crashing through our lives: the simple stuff, the hard stuff, even the great stuff. We celebrate our accomplishments for a moment before we’re off onto the next big thing. Even more often, we do things just to get them done rather than to be doing them. Your life is nothing but what you are doing right now. It will never be what’s next.

If you’re not mindful, your mind can rush ahead before you’ve even had a chance to appreciate what is here and now. And you’ve earned the here and now. Meditation, stopping to calm your mind for a moment, can give you practice in being present. Sometimes it’s a practice of closing the books.

New Call-to-action

Think about all the times you spend hauling the past around with you. Things you think you blew, things you believe you deserve to be punished for, things you won’t let go of, even things you continue to pat yourself on the back for. All of it keeps you from living right here, right now.

Reflecting on the past, with an eye on what’s happened, how it happened, and how you’ll do things going forward, can give you a lot of movement towards releasing it. You may find you need to make amends, forgive yourself, or even ask someone to acknowledge you for a job well done. Closing the books on the past requires an accounting. Casting a mindful eye backwards can give you what you need.

Sometimes it’s setting an intention for the future.

The future is the great unknown. You can never really know what is coming. Why? Because it’s not coming yet. Your future is being created moment by moment. If you’re not doing it, something else is. If you’re not careful, your past will create your future. Then you’re left with a Groundhog’s Day kind of existence, where you “mysteriously” keep getting the same thing you’ve always gotten.

If you can pause for a moment and actually create an intention for your future, you will do a heck of a lot towards starting to shape it. If you can consistently point yourself in the direction you want to go, you’ll start to find your opportunities and actions lining up with the future you want to live in.

Whatever mindfulness is, getting off the hamster wheel for a moment long enough to take a breath is valuable. It will give you some control over who are you here and now and who you will become in the future. Everything springs from right now. Mindfulness is the practice of harnessing the “right now” and using it for a purpose, rather than being used by it.

Michael Stanwyck on FacebookMichael Stanwyck on InstagramMichael Stanwyck on Twitter
Michael Stanwyck
Michael Stanwyck is the co-founder of The Whole Life Challenge, an idea that developed during his seven years as a coach and gym manager at CrossFit Los Angeles.

He graduated from UCLA with a BA in philosophy as well as a degree from the Southern California School of Culinary Arts, and feels food is one of the most important parts of a life - it can nourish, heal, and bring people together.

Michael believes health and well-being are as much a state of mind as they are a state of the body, and when it comes to fitness, food, and life in general, he thinks slow is much better than fast (most of the time). Stopping regularly to examine things is the surest way to put down roots and grow.

He knows he will never be done with his own work, and believes the best thing you can do for your well-being starts with loving and working from what you’ve got right now.