Stress Reduction with Mindfulness Meditation and Movement in Little Village
05 Monday Dec 2011
Posted in Meditation, Stress reduction, Tai Chi, Uncategorized
05 Monday Dec 2011
Posted in Meditation, Stress reduction, Tai Chi, Uncategorized
24 Saturday Sep 2011
Posted in Uncategorized
29 Monday Aug 2011
Posted in Uncategorized
23 Monday May 2011
Posted in Impermanence, Uncategorized
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by morning, they’ll be gone in the wind and under the rain.
That’s cool. That’s just how it is.
Our job?
Enjoy it while it’s here and accept it as it changes.
20 Friday May 2011
Posted in Impermanence, Uncategorized
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02 Wednesday Feb 2011
Posted in Mindfulness, Uncategorized
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craving, food, mindfulness, over-eating, practice, suffering
Dharma teaches us that craving creates a lot of suffering. When we work at eliminating or reducing our cravings, the amount we suffer is reduced too. This isn’t easy to do of course. A head cold gave him a little lesson.
So, recently Sifu Matt had a wicked head cold and couldn’t smell a thing. It was lunch time and he went to his favorite Chinatown restaurant, the Chi Cafe.
Normally, the minute he walks in, he smells so many delicious aromas it can be hard to choose what to eat because the mind is led around the cravings created by the nose making contact with all that great food. This day, however, nada. He couldn’t smell anything.
The waiter came and gave him the menu and he looked at every page. In his head thinking, “what do I want?” over and over again. After quite a few minutes, he gave up. “Just bring me some Chinese Broccoli and Garlic Sauce please.” This is one of his all time favorite dishes.
The food comes and he eats but not very much. The waiter asks him if something is wrong. “You don’t eat very much. Everything okay?”
“Everything is fine. Just not very hungry today.”
The rest of the meal is boxed up to come home.
And it suddenly dawned on him what had happened.
“Normally, I’d eat the whole plate of food. I realized that because I couldn’t smell and couldn’t taste, I wasn’t very hungry. I ate enough to fill my belly and that was that. We eat more most of the time because of how good things smell. And how good things taste. So we eat too much, too often. When I couldn’t smell or taste, those sense doors were closed on the nose and on the mouth’s ability to taste, and so suddenly my craving went completely away!”
If only we could do that with everything we make contact with and not have to wait for a head cold to show us the way. It takes a lot of determination to see things just as they are without getting attached and letting cravings run our minds so hard, that we make decisions and take actions without considering, do I really need to eat all this, buy this car, worry about my manicure, over-work, run after that man/woman, spend too much money/energy and so on.
Thankfully, we have meditation to help get us there. And a head cold now and then doesn’t hurt either when we need a bit of a Zen stick to help wake us up.
31 Monday Jan 2011
Posted in Meditation, Uncategorized
Tags
body, body and mind, breath, Buddhism, Chan, Chicago, Compassion, dharma, enlightenment, happiness, karma, loving kindness, meditation, meditation center, Metta, mind and body, mindfulness, practice, retreat, sitting meditation, stress-management, stress-reduction, wisdom
This article appeared online back in March and my bad for not finding it sooner. One thing about meditation, is it doesn’t make me feel much like surfing the web a lot. But it’s important to see what people are up to in your own field… SO…
1. Hooray to all the well-known who are bringing attention to wonderful things like meditation practice.
2. On the other hand, Danger Will Robinson! Caution anyhow. Sometimes, those good intentions lead to a over-reduction of practices to simplicity in-extremis.
Of course, if we make stress-reduction practices seem too difficult no one will want to do them. Still, it behooves us to describe things with a bit depth and offer additional direction that will truly help guide those seeking more than the quick fix-of-the-week and then onto something else.
I’m just saying. Here is the article as I found it online. The link above will take you directly Oprah’s website which is full of info on every subject under the sun.
Find a quiet, comfortable spot where you won’t be interrupted. Sit in your favorite chair, on a porch swing, on a rock by a river. Lie back in a warm bath, if you’d like, or on a blanket on the grass. If your eyes are open, focus softly on whatever is a few feet in front of you, your gaze, if you’re sitting, slightly down. The idea is to just be still for a few minutes. Be with yourself.
Try to concentrate on your breath—breathing in and breathing out (nothing special, don’t change the way you breathe). You might even want to say those words to yourself at first: “Breathing in, breathing out.” After a while, let the words go. When you find your mind wandering, notice the thoughts—don’t judge them—and let them go. Do this by coming back to your breath.
That’s meditation—simply being there with yourself for a few minutes every day, getting to know your own mind.
Under the article, there’s a place for readers to respond. Awesome, right?
Here is what one reader said, that prompted me to write this blog entry, that you are now reading:
Can it be that simple? I am secretly depressed and have been for years, can I really help myself be meditating in this way for a few minutes a day? I’ve tried it before. Perhaps I didn’t try for long enough…
I decided, uncharacteristically to write back. I just felt that this reader was sounding like they were out there, feeling kinda bad, because like, “I tried it and if it’s that simple how come I don’t feel better yet,” or something like that. I don’t want to put words into the mouth (or pen) of reader Harris 497.
Harris497, The answer to your question, “can it be that simple?” is both yes and no. As a meditation teacher, I’d say that yes, in the beginning, when you first have the seed of an idea to try sitting meditation, it is that easy. Sit down, focus on the breath and when thoughts come along, don’t hold on to them, don’t judge any aspect of your experience and let everything go. Just sit. Just breath. And just be aware that you are sitting there breathing.
On the other hand, as a set of instructions for really developing a daily meditation practice that can seriously help you reduce your suffering, it won’t get you very far.
I don’t know where you live so I can’t make any direct recommendations but in general I suggest this: find a good meditation teacher where ever you do live. If you’re in the Chicago area I could make suggestions. A good guide is an important part of having long term success for establishing real peace of mind.
There are lots of teachers out there. Find one. Some wonderful and some, not so much. Be careful. Choose mindfully and don’t get taken in by any hype. Make a selection that feels right to you.
If you’d like to discuss this, I can be reached through my site and I’m happy to offer what I can. http://www.calmchicago.org We’re located in Chicago in Chinatown. I know of teachers, who know other teachers, around the country, so if you are not local, maybe I Can help you make some connections. Wishing you all the best in your quest.
PS. Let’s look at this one line for a sec…
That’s meditation—simply being there with yourself for a few minutes every day, getting to know your own mind.
Especially this last bit, “getting to know your own mind.” Getting to know your own mind means, we learn how the mind works and we do this by long careful practice of observing the tiny, micron slices of experience, of action that are the processes through which or by which the mind operates. And that, while not rocket science, in that anyone can learn to do it, is not something that simply happens with a few minutes of even daily sitting and breathing. It takes determination, patience and guidance and that’s just for starters. It’s an amazing, life changing journey that can be a huge benefit to yourself and to all around you and I wish everyone would do it. It’s changed my life! And I see how it benefits others and makes all of life more peaceful, it does take time and attention. And kindness, compassion to ourselves. One of the great amazing things is, that as we go through the process, the whole world becomes more peaceful. How awesome is that?!
23 Sunday Jan 2011
Posted in Uncategorized
23 Sunday Jan 2011
Posted in Uncategorized
Tags
body and mind, Chicago, Compassion, facebook, happiness, karma, loving kindness, meditation, meditation center, Metta, mind and body, mindfulness, multi-tasking, multitasking, practice, qigong, retreat, sitting meditation, stress-management, stress-reduction, tai chi, taiji, twitter, website, wisdom, world tai chi day, world tai chi day calm chicago, world tai chi day chicago, Yang tai chi, Yang Taiji
I just realized that the one page I started this blog with is no longer a tenable option. Looking for posts on what interests you is like looking through a mountain of paper. I’m thinking – not so much!
So, with the new year, it’s time to learn more about how to construct a more user-friendly blog. I hope this helps. Please let me know what you think. I’d love to get your input so the blog can be more useful.
thanks, wishing peace and happiness to everyone,
hillary
16 Sunday Jan 2011
Posted in About our center, Tai Chi, Uncategorized
Tags
Beijing short form, Chicago, enlightenment, happiness, karma, loving kindness, meditation, meditation center, Metta, mindfulness, Peace, stress-management, tai chi, taiji, world tai chi day, world tai chi day calm chicago, world tai chi day chicago, Yang 24, Yang 24-form, Yang tai chi, Yang Taiji, Yang taiji 24-form
It’s official!
Calm Chicago will celebrate World Tai Chi Day April 30, at 10 a.m. in Chinatown Square, Chicago.

Join us!
FREE classes!
Wednesdays 6a.m. 2155 S China Place
Other free classes coming soon!
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