Lead with presence.
Patience. Purpose.
Mindfulness is the practice of attention.
Attention to life. Attention to your heart. Attention to the systems that sustain all life.
The word “mindfulness” originates from the Pali word sati and the Sanskrit word smirti. In the Buddhist tradition, to be “mindful” is to practice “Right Mindfulness.”
Right Mindfulness is one spoke on a wheel of practice that Buddhists call the The Noble Eightfold Path.
At the heart of that wheel is the dharma. Dharma means teaching. It also means the path we walk on.
The core teaching and path of mindfulness practice is to remember that all life is interconnected.
Right Mindfulness means to let go of excessive self-interest. It means to rest in the awareness that we can’t exist without one other. We can’t exist without clean air, clean water, and equitable treatment of all human beings.
Mindfulness means to drop our transient self-centred judgements of life. It means to stay present from moment-to-moment. To witness each moment as it appears now, not to hammer it into the shape that we wish it to be.
Through the practice of mindfulness, learn to:
Build emotional literacy.
Overcome bias and resolve conflict.
Manage relationships skillfully.
Navigate uncertainty.
Choose wisely.
Deepen your practice of mindful leadership
The RAIN of Self-Compassion
A Mindfulness Exercise for Belonging
How to Stay Relaxed and Productive Throughout the Work Day
Simple & effective mindfulness strategies, based in brain science, can help you get things done efficiently & effectively—without the worry and stress.
It’s easy to equate getting-things-done with non-stop-work. If you keep your nose to the grindstone, it may even feel virtuous. Or bionic, like you’re part high-tech machine that can handle anything for any length of time.
Instantaneously Mindful: Yawning, Breathing, Savouring
In a busy, and competitive world, it can be especially challenging to be kind to yourself. Try these simple strategies to stay mindful of and connected to your own well of compassion.