This episode is brought to you by Amazon. Sometimes the most painful part of getting sick is the getting better part. Waiting on hold for an appointment, sitting in crowded waiting rooms, standing in line at the pharmacy, that's painful. Amazon One Medical and Amazon Pharmacy remove those painful parts of getting better with things like 24-7 virtual visits and prescriptions delivered to your door. Thanks to Amazon Pharmacy and Amazon One Medical, healthcare just got less painful.
How do we teach mindfulness and meditation to people whose hearts are feeling closed or if the energy in the room is feeling a little bit dark or down? How do we help people to be present in the midst of these energies? How can we be impactful in a way that's caring but also effective? A lot of new mindfulness and meditation teachers have this challenge with how to meet these energies of closed hearts and down energies.
especially in our world today where there's a lot of things going on in our world that can lead to stress, overwhelm, depression, trauma, addiction. How do we meet these energies in a way that's going to be helpful? I've been helping thousands of new mindfulness and meditation teachers face this challenge.
through our mindfulness teacher certification program. I'm a former Buddhist monk of two years. I'm a mindfulness teacher for the program Born at Google, and I've been working with a lot of therapists, counselors, yoga teachers, coaches around the world for the last 10 years. And this question is coming up more and more. In fact, I wanna show you a video of an interaction that I had with someone last week.
someone who wants to teach mindfulness and meditation but had this concern that I'm talking about now. And I wanna share this video with you to help you to be able to teach meditation and mindfulness in a way that's not going to be resistant to what people bring.
to not be judgmental of however people are feeling, but rather to embrace the energies that they're bringing and to help them to navigate those energies in a way that's going to be sensitive to the possibility of trauma and to the sensitivity of however they're feeling in that moment so that we're not harsh or pushing our agenda.
So I hope that you get a lot of value from this video that I wanna play for you. I'd love to hear what you think and how you navigate these challenges of helping people be present in the midst of their pain and suffering.
So be honored to support you on your path in the future. If you'd like some further support or training or certifications, we have links down below.
When you need mealtime inspiration, it's worth shopping Fries for thousands of appetizing ingredients that inspire countless mouth-watering meals. And no matter what tasty choice you make, you'll enjoy our everyday low prices. Plus, extra ways to save, like digital coupons worth over $600 each week and up to $1 off per gallon at the pump with points. So you can get big flavors and big savings. Fries, fresh for everyone. Fuel restrictions apply.
And I hope you like this video. Thank you. Have you ever been in a room with a group that you've really felt the energy of a closed heart where you had to pivot what you were doing to address that energy in the room? All the time. The pivot is not one of resistance, but rather compassion.
We're all so busy. We're trying to do our best in a busy world. Most people are living with a lot of fear to different degrees. Like most of our hearts are at least partially closed a little bit. Most of us are not completely free of judgment. At the end of a meditation session or a mindfulness workshop or a wonderful, you know, mindful gathering, our
hearts are more open than they were usually but you know in a space of five plus people someone's heart's going to be quite closed usually if not most people's in the beginning may not be filled with hate or rage but may not be fully open either past my tendency has been to guide practices where we sense into the body and the breath and
There's, for me, kind of a bias towards self-compassion, which for me, there's kind of this underlying assumption that most people are suffering in some way during the practice. And so that's why I bring out, you know, self-compassion practice. It's becoming more and more clear to me too, over the last few years, I myself was maybe suffering a little bit more than I thought.
and I was kind of meeting myself with self-compassion during the practice, during the guidance. And now I feel like I'm sort of in a place in my life where I'm, say, suffering less. And so now there's a bit more of a lightness and a joy and an ease. And so it'll be interesting to see how that influences our guided meditations here and elsewhere in terms of
cultivating other heart qualities or meeting moment with gratitude, forgiveness, joy, love, et cetera. Yeah, maybe this is a long-winded way of saying that, yeah, a lot of hearts are closed during practice to different degrees. And so as guides, as teachers, may we meet that with compassion, not to force it to be different, but to...
Honor.
the closed heart, it's usually a way of coping. They meet that with presence, with say curiosity as to what a closed heart feels like to allow it to be closed and just kind of stay with it like a really good friend. It's okay. And I'll just kind of sit with you for a while. Closed heart, a very gentle tenderness. And usually that's a recipe for healing. Maybe always a recipe for healing.