Today's post is written by Clare McLusky who provides us with an introduction to her experience with cancer and to the popular practice of Mindfulness.
Clare has a Masters degree in Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy from University of Oxford and teaches Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy to people living with cancer. Clare is also a qualified Occupational Therapist, Yes to Life Helpline volunteer and one of the founding members and facilitators of Oxford Sangha, practicing in the tradition of Thich Nhat Hanh.
Clare has a Masters degree in Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy from University of Oxford and teaches Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy to people living with cancer. Clare is also a qualified Occupational Therapist, Yes to Life Helpline volunteer and one of the founding members and facilitators of Oxford Sangha, practicing in the tradition of Thich Nhat Hanh.
It’s
been a fascinating journey so far and my perspective on life has
changed. I hope to share thoughts and insights that have arisen
during difficult times when I have reflected on and examined my
experience through journaling, reading many inspiring and wonderful
books, the help of some great teachers and meditation. More than
anything else I hope that this series of posts will inspire you to follow your
passions and encourage you to practice mindfulness not with the goal
of a cure and everlasting happiness but because if we pay attention,
in a certain way, each moment can be a perfect moment and when we are
at ease with ourselves then there is the possibility of healing.
You
might well be asking yourself what qualifications I have for this. A
diagnosis of throat cancer almost exactly 8 years ago brought me to
this present moment, sitting here writing a blog on mindfulness for
Yes to Life.
I feel a sense of joy and happiness and sadness pass through me as I write this and I am afraid to say a little tinkling of pride in myself! I am very grateful to all my family and friends who supported me and for 3 things that happened at that time. Whilst I was anxiously waiting for a diagnosis, Dr Rosy Daniel’s book 'The Cancer Directory' practically fell off a shelf at me and really provided everything I needed to know when confronted with this bombshell.
Secondly, a nurse in radiotherapy talked to me about the benefits of meditation. Finally, a dip into The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying helped me to understand that I had a choice about how I thought and felt. It was such simple advice but had a profound effect on me. It went something like this: - when you have a pain, allow it to be just a pain.
Following surgery and radio therapy when I had a pain in my throat my mind would be straight off on one “oh no, it’s back, the cancer’s back, it’s spread …….I’m going to die”. These thoughts would circulate and escalate and I would become more tense and surprise, surprise the pain would get worse and start spreading up to my face and my eye would start twitching and that was it I had myself in the grave!
After I read this snippet, when the pain came I would say to myself “it’s just a pain” and I would keep my attention on my thoughts to make sure they didn’t carry me off to some dismal place. I found that the pain no longer spread and would disappear fairly quickly if I allowed it to be, without adding a load of stress and tension with my thinking. Voila, pretty straightforward you say...
I feel a sense of joy and happiness and sadness pass through me as I write this and I am afraid to say a little tinkling of pride in myself! I am very grateful to all my family and friends who supported me and for 3 things that happened at that time. Whilst I was anxiously waiting for a diagnosis, Dr Rosy Daniel’s book 'The Cancer Directory' practically fell off a shelf at me and really provided everything I needed to know when confronted with this bombshell.
Secondly, a nurse in radiotherapy talked to me about the benefits of meditation. Finally, a dip into The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying helped me to understand that I had a choice about how I thought and felt. It was such simple advice but had a profound effect on me. It went something like this: - when you have a pain, allow it to be just a pain.
Following surgery and radio therapy when I had a pain in my throat my mind would be straight off on one “oh no, it’s back, the cancer’s back, it’s spread …….I’m going to die”. These thoughts would circulate and escalate and I would become more tense and surprise, surprise the pain would get worse and start spreading up to my face and my eye would start twitching and that was it I had myself in the grave!
After I read this snippet, when the pain came I would say to myself “it’s just a pain” and I would keep my attention on my thoughts to make sure they didn’t carry me off to some dismal place. I found that the pain no longer spread and would disappear fairly quickly if I allowed it to be, without adding a load of stress and tension with my thinking. Voila, pretty straightforward you say...
ABOUT MINDFULNESS
Mindfulness
is an ancient Buddhist practice that is becoming increasingly popular
in the West, thanks to the work of Jon Kabat-Zinn in the US and
Professor Mark Williams here in the UK who have adapted the teachings
of mindfulness to secular settings.
Mindfulness
is a particular way of paying attention to ourselves and what is
happening in our daily lives. It is intentional and helps create the
space to consciously choose how we respond to the stresses and the
challenges of life that can be very empowering and particularly
welcoming after a diagnosis of cancer when things feel very much
beyond our control. Being aware of our moment-by-moment experience
and bringing an attitude of non-judgemental, kindly awareness toward
whatever is present, whether fear, sadness or anger, allows us to see
clearly the connection between the different elements of experience –
bodily sensations, feelings and thoughts. This allows us break old
habits such as avoidance, negative rumination or catastrophic
thinking.
Mindfulness
is very difficult to describe in words. It is a simple skill that we
can learn that has profound effects. Try it now: -
Notice
how your body feels, sitting here reading this blog. Notice the
weight of your body sitting on the chair, the sensations of your feet
on the floor, the touch and feel of your clothes, feelings of warmth
or cold. Notice whether you are holding any tension in the body
maybe in the shoulders, the face. Now notice that you are breathing.
How does your breath feel in the body? Resist the urge to change or
control your breath, allow the body to breathe itself, simply
noticing any sensations as the breath moves in and out of the body.
When
you are ready bring your awareness to your thoughts – are they calm
or racy, maybe noting the focus (worrying, planning) and then notice
how you are feeling right now (peaceful, anxious, joyful, sad) and
breathe with whatever you find. The breath is always there as an
anchor to a deeper experience of yourself.
Allow
yourself a few moments to sit in stillness, being with the sensations
of the breath in the body and remember, that as Jon-Kabat-Zinn says,
“If you are breathing, there is more right with you than wrong with you”.
THE BLOG
“If you are breathing, there is more right with you than wrong with you”.
THE BLOG
Don’t
just do something – sit.
I
saw or heard this book title the other day and it really resonated
with me. I am at a point where I frequently find myself needing
to up my mindfulness practice, by which I really mean the formal
practice of sitting meditation. All my routines go out of the window
during the school holidays. Without my regular practice I notice
myself ‘tightening’ and becoming more reactive and judgemental.
So I am right now slowly establishing my practice again. What’s
interesting to notice is that this time I am not giving myself a hard
time for not having kept it up. I am gently shepherding myself back
to the cushion with kindness.
The
challenge is resisting all the things that need doing after school
drop off – the usual daily house stuff, the dogs, work but on top
of that builders are about to start, I have a deadline for a blog and
I really need to get a website up and running and a course off the
ground! I walk back through the door and it is so easy to start
tidying up, having a coffee, planning, and generally getting caught
up in the day’s activities. If I make it up to the attic space
where I have my meditation cushion ready, I am all too easily tempted
to have a quick check of my e-mails – whoomf – a great chunk of
time gone.
So,
I am gradually getting back into the discipline of meditation before
anything else and at the weekends enjoying a cup of tea in bed and
then hopping on the cushion before breakfast.
My
son is a fantastic gauge of my meditation practice. When I am caught
up in ‘reacting’ angrily he immediately wakes me up to my
behaviour and makes me laugh at myself when he says “time for your
meditation mum”. I often wish that meditation didn’t sound so
like medication.
We’re
so good at avoiding being with experience, particularly painful
feelings like fear, by doing something, keeping busy, eating,
blanking out, watching TV. Sometimes all it needs is a slight sense
of uneasiness. I feel this in the pit of my stomach and it is all
too easy to reach for something in an attempt to blot it out, rather
than choosing to stop for a few moments, feel the sensations of the
body, breathe with them and maybe gain some insight.
Our feelings and thoughts are so influenced by each other and pausing for a few moments gives us the opportunity to observe our habitual patterns of thought and behaviour. The basic practice of mindfulness is to stop everything we are doing and just look at what is happening. I still find myself choosing what feels like the easier option in the moment – reaching for a glass of wine! However, at least now I am aware I am doing that.
Our feelings and thoughts are so influenced by each other and pausing for a few moments gives us the opportunity to observe our habitual patterns of thought and behaviour. The basic practice of mindfulness is to stop everything we are doing and just look at what is happening. I still find myself choosing what feels like the easier option in the moment – reaching for a glass of wine! However, at least now I am aware I am doing that.
You
Reading This, Be Ready
Starting
here, what do you want to remember?
How
sunlight creeps along a shining floor?
What
scent of old wood hovers, what softened
sound
from outside fills the air?
Will
you ever bring a better gift for the world
than
the breathing respect that you carry
wherever
you go right now? Are you waiting
for
time to show you some better thoughts?
When
you turn around, starting here, lift this
new
glimpse that you found; carry into evening
all
that you want from this day. This interval you spent
reading
or hearing this, keep it for life.
What
can anyone give you greater than now,
starting
here, right in this room, when you turn around?
-
William Stafford
To read more of Clare's Mind Choice series please click here.
To find out more about Clare's work, please visit her website.
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