Maharishi Mahesh Yogi & 12 ways to access soul
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi introduced the world to transcendental meditation techniques. You may choose to explore them. Fundamentally, you my ask, why meditate? What does it do? Consider these 12 ways to access deeper parts of yourself;
1) Nurture mindfulness. As you acknowledge how you think, you learn the power of pausing in your life, wherever you are.
2) Strengthen attentiveness. As you become more aware of what you think and feel, you begin to uncover hidden reasons.
3) Promote detachment. As you identify strong emotions, you lower the intensity and minimizes their hold over you.
4) Settle the mind. As you address reasons for feelings, you consciously learn to calm down and respond differently.
5) Lower stress. As you grow more conscious of your mood, you shift and change how you channel your energy flow.
6) Develop greater acceptance. As you attune to the nature and flow of energy, you move to accept your perceived pain or other circumstances as they are.
6) Become less judgmental. As you deliberately accept more, you project less criticism and quash impulses to judge.
7) Cultivate senses. As you quiet the inner judge, you open yourself to senses and abilities you had quietly disregarded.
8) Expand faculties. As you open your senses, you awaken faculties had been dormant alongside.
9) Reframe well-being. As you access senses and faculties you had forgotten, you reframe well-being around those experiences of simplicity, patience and love.
10) Build harmony. As you reframe well-being, you build new levels of harmony in relationships and life perspectives.
11) Extend world peace. As you extend the reach of harmony within and without, you actively contribute to world peace.
12) Access answers. As you contribute to more widespread serenity, you begin to realize that everything you need already exists and comes into the physical from where it is right now.
Reader Comments (16)
What would you say about a person who is "blocked" from entering that door... blocked from embracing that meditative space? I know it's a choice, yet there are times when I simply can't embrace that space. It's a curious thing.
Thank you,
Giovanna Garcia
Imperfect Action is better than No Action
In 1984 however I was dared to go through a Vipassana camp and I accepted the challenge and got hooked. I have attended many camps and was getting ready for the long retreats to start the process of my becoming a teacher when fate decided otherwise and I had to stop attending camps. I however continue to meditate regularly and can honestly say that, it is that, that has helped me get on with my quite turbulent life.
I think there is a reason to everything. Even for very unreasonable things. Instead of spending my energy on judging i try to learn the reason, the root cause. It helps predicting next time when similar pattern shows.
And...thanks for coming by my blog, it was so nice to hear from you!
have been journalling over the last week and seen the positive effects from this. I was even able to get up early this morning and do yoga. Feels great! Thanks again.