Archive for The Idea

The Psychiatrists’ Mindapples

All pretty quiet here in the Mindapples Orchard after our exertions at the Big Treat and all our various festival activities. We’ve been at the Secret Garden Party, Camp Bestival, The Big Chill and the Playgroup Festival, as well as at Edexcel and the BBC, and now we’re having a little rest.

Meanwhile, I’d like to share a lovely e-mail I received recently from Dr Keith Gaynor, a clinical psychologist at the excellent Institute of Psychiatry who specialises in theraputic treatments for schizophrenia. They’ve gathered a list of activities that they enjoy, and which also have clinical evidence to support their efficacy in improving mental wellbeing.

“I sent your email round the office (Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry). We got a load of responses and I’ve collated the top five.

1. Do one totally absorbing activity (approx 30 mins)
2. Do something silly/funny
3. Do something nice for someone else
4. Smile
5. Remember it’s just a thought, it’s not real

Hope it’s useful”

It’s signed by Dr. Keith Gaynor, who sent it to me, and nine other doctors. Thank you Keith and all the staff who participated. We’ve been talking since then about how we can bring some of this scientific knowledge into the Mindapples community, to help us all find more things that we can all do that are good for our minds.

Enjoy the rest of the summer everybody!

Posted by Andy

I sent your email round the office (Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry). We got a load of responses and I’ve collated the top five.

 

1. Do one totally absorbing activity (approx 30 mins)

2. Do something silly/funny

3. Do something nice for someone else

4. Smile

5. Remember it’s just a thought it’s not real

 

 

Hope it’s useful

Dr. Keith Gaynor

Dr. Sarah Casey

Ms. Anita Marsden

Ms. Anna Sandel

Dr. Nicola Archer

Mr. Tom Ward

Dr. Elissa Myers

Dr. Claire Hepworth

Mr S Khodyar

Ms. E Warnock

Leave a comment »

The Big Treat in action

For the past three days, the AMAZING Mindapples Gardeners have been producing our first public event, The Big Treat, in central London. We’ve had massage, salads, juices, meditation, digital detox clinics, tango lessons, kung fu and even expressive dance, all in a pop-up health farm that truly surprised and delighted hundreds of unsuspecting people.

Here’s a video of me talking at the launch of the Big Treat (thanks David Wilcox for the interview). You can see some of the incredible work that went into it, including the Mindapples Tree, mindapple cards, a gallery full of REAL TURF (what a lot of work that was) and lots of happy people drinking Mindapples Martinis – exclusively designed for us by Crussh and Courvoisier.

We feel really privileged to have been able to put on such a high-profile and popular event, which wouldn’t have been possible without the support of Courvoisier, the Future 500 and their Revolutionary Spirit festival, and also the wonderful guys at Crussh, SavvyCook, Digital Health Service, Positive Touch and many other great brands.

And most of all, a huge thanks to Hege, who has been masterminding the whole thing and really taken Mindapples to a new level here, and especially to all the Mindapples Gardeners, who have worked tirelessly to lay turf, build the tree, make and staff the hugging wall, welcome our guests, hand out flyers and generally stand around looking glamorous for the Mindapples cause. And all without receiving a penny.

On behalf of Mindapples, I salute you all. You all DEFINITELY deserve a treat.

Posted by Andy

Comments (2) »

The missing middle of modern meditation

I have a lot of conversations about meditation.  And over the last few years, as the mainstream interest in meditation has grown and I’ve met more and more people wanting to learn the practice and the theory of meditation – and in particular mindfulness-based meditation –  the supply to satisfy the demand of that interest has not been able to keep up.

It’s too hippy for me.  This is the most common complaint that I hear from people who have either attended introductory meditation classes or have flirted around the religious end of the spectrum that is meditation provision.  Mindfulness-based meditation has Buddhist origins and so it is for very good reasons that much of its presentation is wrapped up in the language and culture of the various Buddhist traditions.  This isn’t necessarily a bad thing but religious trappings can stick in the throat of those of us brought up on militant secularism and so can be so cringe-worthy that people who are genuinely moved to realise the benefits meditation can allow can be put off for life – thinking that all meditation looks like the particular form they encountered.

It’s too clinical for me.  As I’ve talked about here before, while the first wave of meditation to hit the West was religious, the second wave was clinical.  By pioneering the application of mindfulness-based techniques to the treatment of clinical mental health issues, there has been a successful and exciting translation of meditative wisdom into clinical practice.  The legacy of this fine work is that, in contrast to the one pole where meditation is seen within a religious context, we now have the other where it is seen within a formal clinical or therapeutic context.

The missing middle. However the majority of the people whom I meet and speak to tend to fall within these two pole…what I call the missing middle.  They are interested in the transformative potential of meditation, from stress-reduction to spiritual inquiry, but they want it expressed in language they understand.  This missing middle is where this third wave of meditation will come into its own – defining a meditation that is not religious, not clinical but that unites the benefits of both those approaches and it literate to the realities of our times.

It’s here already.  But please don’t get me wrong…it it not that there aren’t people teaching meditation in this new and exciting space already, it is just that this is still very much an emerging area and so there is the potential for a lot more innovative approaches.  So when people ask me to point them to what I consider the best of the material currently available, I normally suggest one of the following:

  • Jon Kabat-Zinn is the pioneer of clinical mindfulness approaches but he also has produced some very accessible resources.  Wherever You Go, There You Are is his most successful book and he also has produced an excellent audio course
  • Headspace is a brand new initiative which frames meditation as an essential tool for the busyness of modern life.  Although their London-based day sessions are a touch pricey at £249 a pop, they provide some excellent online intro materials and guidance
  • Be Mindful has made a Google map of mindfulness courses in the UK and while the teaching styles and quality may vary, it’s a good resource for finding courses near you
  • What’s known as the insight meditation tradition is good for people who are attracted to Buddhism and meditation but want it in a secular form.  The UK is home to an active London organisation as well as a highly-regarded residential centre in Devon
  • Perhaps the most exciting example of a contemporary yet spiritual meditation collective is the ID project in New York
  • And finally, if you don’t mind some old monks telling you what’s what, when it comes to the best books, two of the best around are Mindfulness in Plain English by Bhane Gunaratana and The Miracle of Mindfulness by the poet, political activist and all-round Zen legend Thich Nhat Hanh.

But this is only the beginning.  And what it all points to is an exciting period of evolution of how meditation is understood in our society.

This is a guest post by Rohan Gunatillake. Rohan is the founder of the Here&Now Project, a new initiative which raises awareness of the full potential of modern meditation as well as imagining new approaches for its expression.

Comments (1) »

4 days left to support us!

Hello Mindapplers,

We have lots of interesting projects coming up this summer to help raise the awareness of Mindapples and the 5-a-day campaign. Here’s a few juicy highlights…

First things first, we’ve entered the Barclays Take One Small Step competition. Please support us so we can grow more and more!

All you need to do is click firmly on the thumbs up symbol (it only takes two secs) and leave us a lovely message (and then forward to your friends of course ;o)

Support us now!

Soon, we will have a new Facebook application so you can share your Mindapples with your friends and help us spread the good word even further.

And this summer the Mindapples team, a post box and a tree will be running excitedly around the Secret Garden Party asking festival revellers to share their 5-a-day. We might pop up at a Big Chill and Camp Bestival too. Hopefully see you there!

Happy Mindappling x

Posted by Marilena

Leave a comment »

A brief history of mindfulness

Hang out around mental health circles either side of the Atlantic at the moment and soon enough you’ll hear someone talking about mindfulness. And here in the UK, the status of mindfulness as official flavour of the psychotherapist’s month was secured this year when the Mental Health Foundation launched its Be Mindful project.

With its well-presented website, it is mainly a campagn to encourage the NHS to make mindfulness-based courses more widely available, especially given the effectiveness of their clinical application to endemic conditions such as depression, anxiety and chronic pain. But what I find surprising about Be Mindful – apart from its refreshing aesthetic – is that nowhere in the materials does it say what mindfulness actually is. We’ll get to that in a moment.

The M word. But before we enter the murky world of definitions, let me tell you a quick story. Quite some time ago, a young(ish) man, thanks to an extraodinary amount of curiosity and dedication, came to deeply understood something really quite radical about what it is to be human and the role the mind has to play in the way we experience life. His name was Siddhārtha Gautama, also known as the Buddha. In the centuries and millenia that followed his life, that strangest of things – a institutionalised religion (in this case Buddhism) – emerged and evolved into various forms across Asia.

Fast forward to the 1970s and a bunch of young (am I allowed to say hippies?) travelled to India, Burma and Thailand and trained with some rather skillful Buddhist meditation masters and in turn got rather good at this meditation thing themselves. Eventually their visas ran out so returning to the USA and Europe they somehow found the means to start to teach and share the more Westerner-friendly subset of the Buddhist tools and techniques – badged as vipassana or insight meditation. And what they themselves had learnt were in turn also just a subset of the tools and techniques avialable in the enormously richness of the Buddhist traditions.

Then, in the final part of this brief trilogy, one day in the early 80′s a chap asked the simple question: given that the human mind is independent of denominations, do we have to limit the teaching of these powerful and transformative mental practices to Buddhists only? His name was Jon Kabat-Zinn who as well as being an insight meditation student was a clinical researcher in mental health and he went on to become the pioneering figure in the translation of insight meditation into a clinical setting for the treatment of mental health and chronic illness. And the courses and provisions that are growing in prevalance originate from his design.

Ok that’s all very nice, but what is it? Mindfulness is the core element of Buddhist meditation. Indeed the major meditation instructions from the original canon of the Buddha’s teaching is called “the talk on the ways in which to apply mindfulness”. And as someone who has practised mindfulness meditation for some years now, it is both exciting and amusing to see it with such a high profile. I know first hand how transformative it can be in dissolving negative mental patterns, increasing happiness and encouraging profound wellbeing. So to see it grow in application and utility is a cause of great joy. But with that comes the concern that mindfulness meditation becomes yoga-fied… popularised to such a degree that not only is the richness of the tradition lost (e.g. yoga as just fancy stretching) but also those that pertain to be teachers have only a very limited understanding of the full potential of practice.

Come on now, just tell me what it is! Kabat-Zinn’s definition is that mindfulness means paying attention in a particular way: on purpose, in the present moment, and non-judgmentally. This is really quite good in that it defines mindfulness as not being a thing in itself but a way of relating to experience, and also an intentional process. If I may be so bold as to offer my own definition, it would be that mindfulness is a natural quality of mind which arises when we relax our struggle with experience, neither pushing or pulling life as it presents itself but instead allowing and even embracing it. And as we intentionally develop this quality, it can lead us to deeper and deeper levels of peace and wellbeing. And without doubt, it is most effectively developed through a regular meditation practice.

Meditation is a word which means all things to all men and it too was curiously (almost) absent from the Be Mindful website. This might indicate that the word still carries with it a lack of seriousness in clinical circles, still associated with the 60s/70s counter-culture that first brought it to the Western attention. It however is an error to confuse the wrapping paper for the gift. Until now the majority of people doing the trying and testing wore love beads and dreadlocks. But today they instead have stethoscopes around their necks, own MRI machines and brandish feedback forms. The sooner we recognise meditation for what it is the better. It is a suite of tried and tested systems for the development of mental qualities that lead to happiness (and even beyond). Hallelujah.

This is a guest post by Rohan Gunatillake. Rohan writes about contemporary Buddhism at 21awake and is currenly developing the Hear&Now Project, a design-led set of tools for urban meditation.

Comments (10) »

The Mindfulist

Each day The Mindfulist posts a new topic to meditate or think on – to slow you down and help you focus.

The best time to practice mindfulness is right now. Take a deep breath.

Posted by Lauren

Comments (4) »

Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish.

At his Stanford University commencement speech in 2005, Steve Jobs, CEO and co-founder of Apple and Pixar, tells a heart-warming tale of some of pivotal moments in his life. Told in three stories – the first about ‘connecting the dots’, second on ‘love and loss’ and the third about death, Steve urges us to pursue our dreams and see the opportunities in life’s setbacks. Steve Jobs was not someone I thought I would resonate with until I heard this story, so thought I’d share it with the mindapplers!

“I’m convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that I loved what I did. You’ve got to find what you love. And that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle. As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it. And, like any great relationship, it just gets better and better as the years roll on. So keep looking until you find it. Don’t settle.”

Thanks to Angela Morelli for the link.

Posted by Kate

Comments (1) »

Communicating ‘Mindfulness’

With Mindapples kicking off 2010 with plenty of team discussions about visualising and designing this seemed appropriate! Photography agency LPA, The Mental Health Foundation and Clear Channel Outdoor are calling creatives to generate ideas for a poster campaign to help build awareness with the general public of Mindfulness, (a form of meditation that is, the organisers say, clinically proven to reduce stress).

The brief is “to take Mindfulness into the mainstream and demonstrate mindfulness meditation as a technique to cope with the stress of modern life, outside the usual new age, alternative or religious context”.

The full brief and further information are available at lisapritchard.com. Submission deadline is March 18. Full story via Creative Review. So, what would you put on the big blank billboard?

Posted by Kate

Comments (1) »

Are resolutions good for you?

It’s that time of year when people start making New Year’s Resolutions. But according to psychologists, most of the time we just end up being unhappy at our failure to do them. We make promises that we don’t keep, which makes us feel bad, and so we do things to feel better. Like comfort eat. And drink too much. And all the other things we probably resolved not to do in the first place.

Here at Mindapples we like to take a more positive approach: we ask people what they’re doing already, and encourage everyone to do more of the things that work for them. We can all think of dozens of things we *should* be doing, but unless we’ve done it, how do we really know it’s right for us? Personally, I’m not interested in promises: I want to know what already works for you, so I can do it too.

So this year, I’m encouraging everyone to resolve to do more of the things you know work for you, and celebrate that we’re all doing better than we sometimes think. Naturally, I’d like one of your resolutions to be doing your five mindapples to look after your mind. But there are probably lots of other things you’d like to do more of in 2010, like playing with your kids, or doing WiiFit yoga, or having your friends round.

So, for 2010, I resolve to do the following things:

  • Play more music
  • Have more conversations with people about Mindapples and other projects that get me excited
  • Spend more time walking in the natural world, particularly climbing things and looking at nice views
  • Learn a bit more Spanish
  • See more of the people I love

And if I don’t do any of those, I resolve to be fine about it, because there was probably a good reason.

Happy New Year from all of us here at Mindapples

Winter apples: image by rabasz from flickr.com

Andy xx

Comments (7) »

Life support. The must haves

This is a month long project of must haves (life support) on a day to day basis for 30 days. The theme is based around the little things that Jeniee Greene “can’t” live without or get her through the day, today, yesterday, whichever day.

My favourite is laughter:

“This one is just too easy. I love to laugh, make people laugh, I love to joke, hear jokes, I even laugh sometimes just hearing people laugh, that contagious laughter, it’s amazing. There is no feeling like it. Laughing is a great stress reliever, apparently increases pain tolerance, and support the immune system. So here’s to having a laugh or two today”

What is your favourite?

Posted by Lauren

Leave a comment »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.