There's a lot of panic in the air right now. When that happens I find myself getting carried away by my anxieties, and when that happens, I love to come back to this very simple walking meditation.
All you need is an anchor. ANY anchor - it could be, every time you hear birds. Or every time you hear a cell phone. Or every time you see a blue car. Or every time you reach the top of a staircase. Pick one for the day. And every time you encounter that anchor, take a brief pause. Breathe in, breathe out. Feel your feet on the ground. Take note of where your mind has been. And then keep on keepin' on. I love this because it keeps me grounded THROUGHOUT the day, instead of checking in during my morning mindfulness routine, and then slowly falling apart as the day goes on. Try it! See how it goes. And tell me what you experienced in the comments below. Subscribe to our Enso YouTube channel to get our weekly Mindfulness for Makers videos. Warmly, Caitlin & the Ensemble #MindfulnessforMakers #MondayMindfulness #MindfulMonday #MadewithMindfulness #MindfulTheater
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What do you do when your mind is going a million miles a minute at auditions?
In this week's #MindfulMonday, I share a very quick, subtle practice that you can use to let go of the chatter in your head, and re-focus on the task at hand. This practice uses a sensory anchor to ground you back to the present. You might remember from previous #MindfulMonday's that an anchor is anything that brings you back to the present, and a sensory anchor like this one uses touch as that grounding agent. I love using this at auditions because I often find that just taking deep breaths at auditions doesn't always center me in the way that I would like. Something about the physical sensation between my fingers works really well for me when my mind is in an energized, more stressful state. I also love this because of how subtle it is. I don't have to jump into Downward Dog right before I head on stage -- I can simply move my fingers and quickly bring myself back to the present, before I head out and nail that audition. :) Do you have any burning questions about roadblocks in your creativity? Let me know in the comments below, and I might feature that topic in a future video. Subscribe to #MindfulMonday here. #MindfulMonday is coming a day late because I’ve been under the weather. Ugh...So I thought this was a really good opportunity to explore a practice that would help me make better mental habits when it comes to my physical well-being.
Have you ignored your body’s warning signs to slow down? Maybe you wake up lethargic and achy but brush it off — you can’t not go to work after all. I am SUPER familiar with this conditioning to “push through” aches and pains and scratchy throats. The show must go on, right? I’m not here to tell you not to do the show. Sometimes, you have to! But I’m interested in reframing this conversation that happens with my body when I notice I might not be feeling well. Instead of “shut up, I’m fine”, I’d like to move towards “Hey, I see you’re not feeling great. We gotta get through this task but let’s make time to rest very soon.” Imagine you were talking to a little kid. You wouldn’t tell them to get over it and muscle through their illness, right? You’d wrap them up in a blanket and make them soup. Make yourself some soup. You can still go to that meeting if you have to — but goddamn it, you will eat some soup first. Speaking of — gotta go get me some soup! Want more #MindfulMonday? Subscribe to our YouTube channel to be notified when a new video comes out. For today’s #MindfulMonday, here’s a short mindful movement exercise you can practice sitting at a coffee shop, on the bus, or as part of your audition/rehearsal warmup.
Take three deep breaths. Then gently massage the palm of your left hand. As you do, I invite you to think about the ways that your hand has supported you today. Silently send your hand some gratitude for this part of your body. As you massage or send some warmth to other parts of your boulder, repeat this gratitude practice. This short exercise has helped me develop a more loving relationship with my body. I also love using this to “wake up” my body before rehearsals and auditions. Did you give it a go? Let me know below! 💜 Caitlin #mondaymindfulness #mindfulmovement #mindfulnessformakers #breathe #enso What do you do when the thoughts in your head are overwhelmingly unkind?
In today's #MondayMindfulness, Caitlin shares a mindful self-talk practice that you can use to create an arsenal of loving responses, when unkind thoughts creep in. In doing so, you are actually creating new neural pathways in your brain, and the more you practice this new habitual response to negative thoughts, the easier it will become to respond with compassion. (check out the science: https://youtu.be/ELpfYCZa87g) Don't let "Steve" drive your thoughts. Steve can sit in the backseat, but you're driving the car. ;) Subscribe to our YouTube channel to see all our #MindfulMonday videos: www.youtube.com/channel/UCRvUv8M0DJ1pfqE7fGQYPyA?sub_confirmation=1 Have a lovely Mindful Monday! <3 Caitlin When they say “focus on your breath,” have you ever groaned in frustration? In boredom?
Make a sensory mindfulness practice! Instead of using your breath as your anchor, try using the smell of a favorite candle, the sound of birds chirping, or the warmth of a hot cup of tea against your hands as an anchor. The key is to use these anchors consistently. Maybe you light a candle and take a breath as part of your heading-to-work routine. Over time, you’ll create a sense memory that associates that smell or sound or feeling with the reminder to check in with yourself. To take a moment, and notice what’s arising in the present moment. Have you ever tried one of these? Or maybe you have another anchor you love using? Tell me in the comments below! Have a lovely #MindfulMonday. #mondaymindfulness #sensory #meditate #mindfulnesstips #mindfulnessformakers #breathe #enso #bewell #beherenow #presence Do your thoughts feel like a room full of ping-pong balls today?
Mine does. Eeek! Try this quick breathing exercise to ground you back into the present moment. You can practice this seated, walking, on the bus, on your way to work -- anywhere that's safe for you to take a moment for internal reflection. Did you try it? Let me know how it felt in the comments below! Happy #MindfulMonday. ~Caitlin As a performing arts kid, the holidays were a time when my entire extended family would travel to my grandmother’s house, I would be asked on the spot to sing something, or perform something for everyone. One year, I had just finished playing Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, and my cousin had just finished playing Tybalt. We were gathered in the living room eating hors d'oeuvres before Christmas dinner, and my grandmother excitedly exclaimed: “Do the show! Do it!”
As a teenager it was embarrassing and annoying. With retrospect, and I can see that all this was coming from a place of love and admiration. And I appreciate that. But unlike most professions, there is a perception that artists can, and should, “whip out” their art whenever the public feels like it. “You’re a comedian?” says the stranger on the street. “Tell me a joke!” You don’t hear folks asking software engineers to write them some code on the sidewalk. But it’s socially acceptable to demand artists to perform their craft at the whim of passerby. My view on this has softened as I’ve gotten older, and I can see now that in my situation, I just had a grandma who was really, really proud of her grandkids and just wanted to cheer for us all the time. Love you, Nana. But holiday stress is still real. Whatever your relationship to the holidays, whether it’s your favorite time of year or your least, you’ve definitely experienced some amount of stress as it approaches. How do you navigate it? Start with an anchor. An anchor is anything that connects you to the present moment. It could be your breath, or the sensation of rubbing your fingers together, or the feel of your feet on the ground. It can be an outside force too -- maybe you decide that every time walk up or down stairs, you’ll pause a moment and check in with yourself. Anchors work best when you practice them regularly. You can do this by having a regular mindfulness practice, or you can leave yourself reminders to use your anchor throughout your day. I’ve been known to put post-it’s on my bathroom mirror, on my steering wheel, and in my fridge, that just say: “Breathe.” Take a moment to imagine your upcoming holiday plans, from beginning to end. Try to be realistic about what you expect. Take note of any moments that you’re worried about, or situations that might cause stress. Imagine yourself coming back, gently, to your anchor in that moment. Mom’s yelling again about the bread rolls? Breathe in, breathe out. Sister’s bringing up that old argument from ten years ago? Feel your feet on the floor. Relax your muscles. Try not to attach to the words coming at you. Hear them, notice what emotions are arising in you, see what’s arising in them. Make a mental note to take care of these emotions later -- maybe a bath, or a long walk. And then -- redirect. It could be as simple as “Hey, I hear you, but I’m not in a place to talk about that right now. Can you help me get the pie out of the oven?” Or maybe you need to leave the room -- “Hey, give me a moment, I just need to get some air.” Deciding to act, rather than react, starts with an anchor. The anchor creates space between whatever has just happened, and your reaction. It gives you time to think about how you would like to respond. Let me know if you give this exercise a try! Or, if you’ve done something else to stay present during the holidays. I hope very much that you find moments of peace, warmth, and love this holiday season. Warmly, Caitlin In the midst of chaos, stillness. It is unthinkable that in the middle of moving, preparing for a show and working that I found myself sitting in stillness for a four-hour retreat. Taking this time would have been (and still is) unthinkable a few months ago. When my schedule gets packed, the first thing to go is my mindfulness routine, let alone four hours on a Sunday when I could be working on Enso, or unpacking boxes, or cleaning our old apartment. Or at least, I had every intention of it being four hours long. (we’ll get to that in a bit) There are things I sacrificed to take the time for this retreat -- I was also meant to see a friend in their show that afternoon, and that discomfort was very alive in me as I began. But the fact that I can and did make this choice, to cut out the time, was revolutionary for me. To set up this time I asked my husband to leave me undisturbed and he wonderfully found things to do completely outside the house, so I had the entirety of our new home to myself. Most of the rooms were littered with boxes so I cleared out a little space in the basement and on the outside patio, wrote out my schedule, and jumped in. I started in my favorite part of the new house, on the deck, facing our giant Catalpa tree. I stood on my yoga mat and asked my body how it would like to move. As I write this, I am judging how I’m recording this retreat. The thought arising is -- “You shouldn’t be writing this like you know everything. Like you’ve done everything right. Figure out what hasn’t gone well.” So that’s fun. Hello, Perpetual/Perfect Student! My Perpetual Student can’t ever be good at anything, and God forbid she should ever express herself in such a way as to suggest that she actually knows things. I love her, but she’s not helping right now. Come back later when I have time to address you. I moved through some yoga positions. My mind was ping ponging with lists. I tried to focus on sensations as I moved -- the light, the warmth, my shaking muscles, my breath. The thought of -- “I better wrap this up so that Jordan can come home. You are keeping him out of the house” -- kept arising. When it did, I would repeat, “He’s okay. I’m okay.” This allowed me to return to the present for a short while but this was a thought that returned throughout my retreat. I like asking my body how it would like to move, but it’s very hard to let go of The Planner. She was also very present as I moved through my planned retreat. When my timer went off, I tried to practice walking meditation as I turned it off and walked downstairs to the basement, where I had set up my meditation cushion. I even tried closing my eyes as I walked down the stairs, feeling my feet and the texture of the floor. Everything is new in this house so getting to experience it in this way was fun and exciting. It felt like I was introducing myself to the space. I still very much feel that this is not our house yet and that we are guests here. I sat down to meditate. I started with a 10-count breath exercise, in which each exhale is counted, and you try to reach 10 without your mind drifting from the sensation of your breath. I was pulled away several times by The Planner. I journaled, and shifted to practicing Unconditional Loving Reassurances. This is a practice in which you create unconditionally loving phrases to say to yourself when your mind generates unhelpful/hurtful/anxious thoughts. I was not looking forward to this. I felt this resistance to having to come up with responses to the stuff in my head because it’s not always effective. Or it’s temporarily effective for a very particular circumstance. I wasn’t sure that I would actually come up with anything. But I laid down, and rested my hands on my heart and abdomen, and brought back the two prominent voices that had been showing up throughout the retreat -- the Planner and the Perpetual Student. I tried to ask myself, what would you say to someone else’s Planner/Perpetual Student? I came up with: To the Planner: You are adequate to whatever experience happens next. Happiness rests in presence, where you are. To the Perpetual Student: You know enough to know that you don’t know everything. You are strong. You are kind. You are have something worth hearing. I went upstairs for a Mindful Dessert. I had this whole plan where I was going to do a meal but with moving, we basically didn’t have any food in the house, just a homemade pie from a friend as a housewarming gift. So, that’s what I ate. (thanks Alana!!) I enjoyed the initial experience but by the end I could feel the sugar really riling me up and making my thoughts bounce around again. I’d never noticed that effect from sugar before, so distinctly! Mindfully eating dessert meant that this part of my retreat, which was supposed to be 45 minutes, lasted about 10 or 15. And I had been moving through other parts of the retreat faster than intended -- I think because at the back of my mind was still the fact that it was getting late and I felt like I was keeping Jordan out of the house. I couldn’t remember exactly how to do the Body Scan exercise I learned from Peace in Schools, so I tried following body sensations as they arose -- there's an itch, tingling in my leg, pain in my thigh, etc... but it was hard to use my body sensations as an anchor. I felt like the sensations were all over and bouncing around. So I did some stretching and releasing and that helped settle my mind. I also noticed that the things my mind was drifting to during the Body Scan were different. I wasn’t drifting to my to-do list anymore, I was daydreaming. The kind I get when I’m really relaxed. I definitely did not expect to reach that state of “settled” during this retreat. Creating the mindful art was the part I had been looking forward to the most. I had our big Catalpa tree in our backyard in my head. There were a few moments when I noticed some shoulds floating in and out of my head -- it should look like this, etc. I tried to breathe when I caught those thoughts. Next time, I think I’d like to give myself permission to really go abstract, to focus on the sensation of the chalk on the paper. And maybe set up a towel and water to clean my hands afterward. ;) I soon realized that this was not going to be a four-hour retreat, because I was nearing the end of my retreat schedule. The full retreat ended up being about 2.5 hours. My Perpetual/Perfect Student was really unhappy with this. I felt like I wasn’t doing the full assignment. And just as that thought entered my head, I heard the garage door open and Jordan had come home. I wrote in my journal: “Just heard the garage door open which means Jordan is home. So maybe this is okay. Maybe I’ll see if I can take a walk? Or maybe it’s just okay that this is what it is. I made time where there wasn’t. That in and of itself is valuable.” So, I let it be. I went out and checked in with Jordan -- he was fine with me continuing my retreat but I could see that he also needed help at the apartment. So I decided to let it go and go help. I like to hold on tightly to things. My ideas, my expectations, my dreams, my plans. But it was really empowering to have created a plan, to be presented with a new alternative, and to decide that I was going to go that direction. I could have stayed home and extended my retreat. But ultimately, if mindfulness, and personal retreats, and self-care, isn’t ultimately intended to help other people when they need it, what’s the point? I created time and space for me. It wasn’t as much as I originally intended. But I got SO MUCH out of that time. And because of that, I felt able to help Jordan. I kinda think that’s the point. This is quite long -- if you’ve made it this far, KUDOS, and THANK YOU. Let me know in the comments below if you have any questions or qualms about creating a retreat of your own. With love, Caitlin ORIGINAL RETREAT SCHEDULE:
Night Before: Set up the space. 9:00a - Paint an Enso 9:05a - 9:30a: Mindful Yoga 9:30a - 10:50a: Sitting Meditation - Breath, LovingKindness meditation, Tong Len 10:50a - 11:15: Mindful journaling - what am I present to? 11:15a - 11:30a: Practice Self-Compassion: Unconditional, loving reassurances 11:30a - 12:15p: Mindful Eating - Lunch 12:15p - 12:30: Body Scan 12:30 - 12:45p: Mindful Art - Create with chalk pastels on a big, big sheet of paper 12:45p - 1:00p: Journalling final reflections 1:00p - 1:05p: Paint an Enso ACTUAL RETREAT SCHEDULE: 5:00p - Paint an Enso using my sumi-e board 5:05p - Mindful Yoga 5:25p - Sitting Meditation 5:45p - Mindful Journaling 6:05p - Practicing Self-Compassion 6:20p - Mindful Eating 6:35p - Body Scan 6:50p - Mindful Art 7:05p - Journal Reflections 7:20p - Paint an Enso using my sumi-e board 7:25p - Help Jordan. You ever experience this? Maybe you texted someone and they haven’t texted you back yet. Your brain starts cookin’ up some story about how they must be angry with you — and in reviewing the last time you saw each other, now you’re seeing all those memories through this they-must-hate-me lens. By the end of the day you’re convinced that your friendship is over and now you’re just waiting for the big blow-out. And also, certainly this is the end of the world and the end of all good things forever and always. And then, a text: “hey what’s up?” Our brains are built to tell stories. We’re really good at it. But sometimes we make stories before any real, true thing has happened yet. And we buy into them. It’s a protection instinct. Brace for the blow. I do this ALL. THE. TIME. What I’ve been trying the last few weeks is to ask myself, when Anxiety arrives: “What stories am I telling myself about this moment?” What are the true, unbiased things that have happened? I texted her. She hasn't texted me back. Period. The story I'm telling myself is that the reason she hasn't texted me back is because I did something to make her angry with me. But she hasn't told me she's angry with me. There's no reality in this story. So, the next question is: Why do I get hooked by this story? Everyone gets "hooked" by different stories. I get hooked by "imposter syndrome" stories. I get hooked by stories about whether my friends like me. Those stories might not hook you -- but maybe a story about how you're supposed to look, for example, is the one that hooks you. The reason one story might hook me, but not hook you, is totally dependent on my experiences, and how I've responded to them in the past. That friend I'm waiting for a text from? She's never told me she doesn't like me, and in fact, quite the opposite -- but it's something I've told myself in moments of doubt, repeatedly, out of fear from past experiences where I was hurt by someone I trusted and loved. The more I repeat this pattern of Doubt --> Fear --> I did something wrong --> She doesn't like me, I'm literally carving and recarving a neural pathway in my brain. It gets easier and easier for my brain to jump from Doubt to She doesn't like me. And it becomes a hook that takes me out of reality and the present moment, and into this story that I've been crafting for years. The story might end up being true and it might end up being false. But 9 times out of 10 it’s a story about something that hasn’t actually happened. And if I can just stay present, it allows me to worry less about the future, and just tackle hard things as they come, instead of always be in “oh-shit-oh-shit” mode. I can literally create a new neural pathway in my brain: Doubt --> Fear --> I did something wrong --> HOLD UP, girl. That's a Story. I can train my brain to acknowledge stories as they arise, and see them for exactly that: Just a story. Does this land for you? Let me know in the comments below. Warmly, Caitlin P.S. Here's a video on neural plasticity demonstrating the ability of the brain to adapt and change with mindfulness: |