Monday, March 11, 2013

Theory

I have a theory. It came from a conversation with a coworker. She said she noticed I lost weight and asked what I've been doing to lose it. I did notice I had a lot less belly fat. That was weird. I've never lost belly fat with my losing weight. Usually it stays on or is the last to go. Now it's gone sooner - and I haven't lost that much weight. It's like my belly fat is burning at the same rate the rest of my weight loss is going.

Then I thought that my diet & exercise haven't been that drastic, but I had been meditating, stress relieving and letting go - working out my stress instead of holding it in.

That got me thinking. I saw this documentary on hormones. Some people with chemical imbalances (runs in my family), when they get stressed, actually release a ton more of the stress chemical cortisol, so they have these unusual extreme reactions to stress. Thats sort of how depression & such kick in. I feel like sometimes i have extreme health reactions like i get sick or i really take it hard when i get stressed. Sometimes its just chemical. Cortisol puts the body into panic mode - making it store fat in your belly. Stress making you fat - giving you a belly.

Low stress, less cortisol, more hormonal balance, more normal weight loss with exercise & diet.

It's just a theory, but I think that my stress relief meditation and "letting go" mentally of stress has seriously helped me stop storing belly fat. It's like my body is learning to be healthy & stopped storing needlessly.

Anyway I'm going to keep everything up. With the time change its a lot harder waking up early but I'm giving it a go tomorrow AM. Keep up meditating, keep healthy eating & regular exercise - mainly walking for a long time.

It's not about losing weight, it's about being healthy. I would rather be fatter & healthier than thinner & not as healthy. Anyway, am hoping :) interesting theory I think. We shall see.

Create a Sacred Space in Your Heart

Another neat post, except for the plug at the end.

 
 

Sent to you by Kareena via Google Reader:

 
 

via zenhabits by Leo on 3/5/13

'Drink your tea slowly and reverently, as if it is the axis on which the world earth revolves – slowly, evenly, without rushing toward the future.' ~Thich Nhat Hanh

By Leo Babauta

Yesterday I had tea with a Daoist tea monk who said for tea to change you, you have to create a sacred space in your heart for the tea.

Imagine that space for a moment. How does it feel? What can reside in that sacred space? How different is it from mechanically drinking tea, without paying attention to it?

Now think about the difference between just drinking tea, as if you were drinking anything and not really paying attention … and drinking tea with that sacred space in your heart for that tea. It's profoundly different, and it changes everything.

You can do that for anything, not just tea. Anything that's important to you.

If you create a sacred space in your heart for something, it changes how you do it. It changes you, at the molecular level.

We crank through things these days — email, social networks, news, work tasks, calls, meetings, deadlines — and then the day is gone. This is a waste of a miracle, the day that we've been given.

Instead, create a sacred space for that which matters most:

  • meditation, yoga, tea
  • reading at bedtime with your child
  • having tea with your spouse
  • a daily walk
  • writing
  • your most important and creative work

Perhaps every moment should have a sacred space in our hearts, but we have to start somewhere. Pick something small but important, and create that space today.

Tea is drunk to forget the din of the world.' ~T'ien Yiheng

Mindful + Entrepreneur: A Seminar with Leo

In other news, I'm holding a 3-hour seminar here in San Francisco with my friend Jesse Jacobs (creator of the Ultimate Beginner's Guide to Tea):

Mindful + Entrepreneur Seminar The seminar will be held at Samovar Tea Lounge at the Yerba Buena Gardens in San Francisco on March 21, 2013. Join us!

n this 3-hour seminar you will:

  • taste great tea and chocolate: learn how to be an expert taster
  • talk with Jesse Jacobs, founder of Samovar Tea Lounge, and Leo Babauta, founder of the Zen Habits website
  • learn to focus mindfully
  • learn to savor life more
  • find calm throughout the work day
  • learn how–and why–to single-task
  • learn how to deal with distraction
  • try some simple meditation techniques
  • create focused task lists
  • become good at change and discomfort
  • learn how to create habits
  • discuss the fundamentals of building an online and retail business
  • learn about how Jesse created Samovar, and how I created Zen Habits
  • talk about our main sources of revenue
  • discuss some of the lessons we've learned in building their businesses
  • ask us your burning questions questions so you don't make the mistakes they made

The seminar will be broken into two sessions: mindfulness, and entrepreneurship. A selection of Samovar Tea Lounge's handcrafted teas and chocolates will be provided.

This intimate and unique seminar is limited to 25 participants.

Mindful + Entrepreneur Seminar


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Zen Mind in the Middle of Chaos & Stress

A neat post.

 
 

Sent to you by Kareena via Google Reader:

 
 

via zenhabits by Leo on 3/8/13

By Leo Babauta

What do you do when your job, or your personal life, is a constant source of busy-ness, rushing, nose-to-the-grindstone work, and stress?

Or what do you do if your life is simple and relatively stress-free, but something blows up and you are in the middle of chaos and high stress all of a sudden?

This is when we could use a dose of Zen Mind, or the Art of Letting Go.

What is this Zen Mind? To be honest, I'm still learning what that is, but what I've been practising is a constant letting go. Let's take an example:

I have a major deadline approaching. It is stressing me out, man! But what is the source of the stress? It's not the work, which is just a series of actions. It's not the deadline, which is just a time constraint. It's my reaction to those external events — my fear that I'm not going to make it, that I'll mess up, that I'll look stupid or incompetent. This fear that is causing my stress reaction is rooted in my wanting things to turn out a certain way … wanting to meet the deadline and get things perfect and look good.

What if I could let go of wanting things to turn out that way? This is a fantasy, an ideal, that I'm holding onto. It might turn out that way, sure, but it could turn out a dozen other ways, and the truth is I don't have complete control over how it'll turn out. All I can do is do the work, and the fantasy, the fear and the stress are only getting in the way. So if I can let go of this ideal, this fantasy, I can let go of the fear, and the stress.

This is the Zen Mind that I'm learning about. It's simply letting go, and in doing so, you attain a peace of mind no matter what chaos and seemingly stressful event are going on around you. Again, I'm not good at this yet, but I'm learning. I'll share what I know with you.

The Art of Letting Go

So these are the steps to letting go:

  1. Notice why you're stressed. What external event is stressing you? Why is it stressing you out? What fear do you have?
  2. Notice what you're holding onto. If your response is fear, it's because you're holding onto something. It's probably a fantasy/ideal, or wanting to control something, wanting something to turn out a certain way, wishing things would meet the expectations you have. If you're saying, "He should do this" or "It should be like this" then you're holding onto an ideal/expectation/outcome.
  3. Realize that it's not real. This fantasy, this expectation, this wishing you could control things … it's just made up in your head. To be fair, we all do it. But it's not a real thing — and it can be let go of.
  4. See that it's hurting you. This thing you've made up is causing you stress, which is shortening your life, and making what short life you have less enjoyable. It's causing pain in your life. Realize this.
  5. Let go. If something you've made up is causing pain, why hold onto it? It's not worth it. By letting go, you release the pain, and are just left with you and the work you need to do.

Zen Mind in the Middle of Chaos

So you work long hours and are stressed out. It's work you love, perhaps, but still hard work, and still lots of stressors. Maybe you get to take some good breaks during the day, maybe you take weekends off, maybe you get some great vacations.

But the fact remains: no matter what kind of breaks and vacations you take, much of your life is spent doing the hard work, and stressed out. You need to be able to simultaneously work and be on vacation. This is the practice of Zen Mind that we're talking about — letting go and being able to breathe and smile in the middle of a stressful workday.

It's only stressful, of course, because of stuff we're making up in our heads. So if we can create a constant practice of awareness and letting go, we constantly let go of the stress.

Your boss dumps a new project on you with a close deadline. Yikes! You're instantly stressed. Notice, and let go. Breathe. Feel the stress floating away as you let go of an ideal and an expectation. You are now free, and you can just do the first task — after all, that's all you can ever do.

Your coworker or client is mad at you, and yelling at you. This is highly stressful. Until you realize that they are probably yelling for some problem that's not really about you — they are stressed out, they are having a bad day, they have problems dealing with stress. And you are holding onto the expectation that everyone around you should behave perfectly, which of course is an absurd fantasy. You let go of that, and reach out in your heart to this fellow human being who isn't happy. How can you make things better for this person, with an open heart?

Your son is stressing you out because he's not doing what he should be doing. You're mad! Why can't he just do what you ask? Of course, this is a fantasy. Your kids (or friends, or spouse) are not going to live up to these expectations you have of how they should behave — these expectations aren't anything real, just fantasies. You can't control their behavior — wanting to do so just stresses you out. So let go of that expectation and the desire to control, and the stress goes away. Instead, open your heart, and be open to who they are.

OK, so that's all easier said than done. In the real world, it takes a lot of practice. We often forget about this process when things hit the fan. That's OK. Life is a constant practice. Keep practicing, and let go of wanting to be perfect at it. Just in the attempt, you're already perfect.


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Camping!

Husband and I went camping for the very first time ever together! It was at my mother in law's backyard, but still - the ultimate adventure!

Husband & I requested camping gear for our wedding 3 years ago, as we planned on camping up and down California. We got some great stuff, but never went. I'm planning for my birthday and I wanted to go camping finally. Since we're super rusty on camping, decided to try everything out and figure out if we're the camping types.

I definitely am. Husband, still deciding. Lol. I don't mind roughing if, being a little stinky and uncomfortable, and not having all my creature comforts. I think it gives me a challenge and makes me more creative.

The everyday ease of life is removed, and we are faced with prioritizing bare essentials - food, shelter, warmth, etc. Sort of helps you appreciate the running water & comfort of your kitchen, bathroom and bedroom. Lighting is another huge difference. It gets dark and cold, so fires, flashlights and warmth become priority. No tv or internet. It's like going back to the basics.

Then there's nature. I loved breathing the fresh night air as I was snug in my sleeping bag. We took the "roof" off our tent & I could lie down, look up and see the night sky and like 3 stars living in LA. You can hear birds & creatures. You saw green and wild around you.

It's uncomfortable and unusual, in a really good and healthy way. It takes a ton of planning and as we found out the safe way with mom 20 feet away, we still need to get a ton of stuff to be totally prepared. It was more to get comfortable with our gear and figure out if its something we want to do. For me, this weekend confirmed that I really want to go camping.

Camping puts you literally outside your box, and I think that's why I love it.