Self-Care All-in-One For Dummies®
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Library of Congress Control Number: 2022934345
ISBN 978-1-119-87505-5 (pbk); ISBN 978-1-119-87506-2 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-119-87507-9 (ebk)
Life in the 21st century is hectic and stressful — which is why taking care of yourself is more important than ever. You can’t care for others if you don’t take care of yourself! Self-Care All-in-One For Dummies is here to help you build and consistently use healthy, uplifting, and fulfilling habits.
Self-Care All-in-One For Dummies provides guidance, tools, and resources for incorporating self-care practices into your busy everyday life. Here, you get tips on practicing mindfulness, building self-compassion and resilience, starting a fitness routine, eating clean, managing stress, and living a lower-tech life.
A quick note: Sidebars (shaded boxes of text) dig into the details of a given self-care technique or topic, but they aren’t crucial to understanding it. Feel free to read them or skip them. You can pass over the text accompanied by the Technical Stuff icon, too. The text marked with this icon gives some interesting but nonessential information about a particular self-care method.
One last thing: Within this book, you may note that some web addresses break across two lines of text. If you’re reading this book in print and want to visit one of these web pages, simply key in the web address exactly as it’s noted in the text, pretending as though the line break doesn’t exist. If you’re reading this as an e-book, you’ve got it easy — just click the web address to be taken directly to the web page.
Here are some assumptions about why you’re picking up this book:
Like all For Dummies books, this book features icons to help you navigate the information. Here’s what they mean.
In addition to the material in the print or e-book you’re reading right now, this product comes with some access-anywhere goodies on the web. Check out the free Cheat Sheet for information on mindfulness, self-compassion, resilience, fitness, clean eating, stress management, and reducing online activity. To get this Cheat Sheet, simply go to www.dummies.com
and search for “Self-Care All-in-One For Dummies Cheat Sheet” in the Search box.
You don’t have to read this book from cover to cover, but you can if you like! If you just want to find specific information on a type of self-care practice, take a look at the table of contents or the index, and then dive into the chapter or section that interests you.
For example, if you want the basics of mindfulness, go to Book 1. If you want to explore self-compassion and resilience, check out Books 2 and 3. If you prefer to find out more about fitness and clean eating, head to Books 4 and 5. Stress getting you down? Flip to Book 6. Or if you want the scoop on living a lower-tech life, Book 7 is the place to be.
No matter where you start, you’ll find the information you need to take better care of yourself every day. Good luck!
Book 1
Chapter 1
IN THIS CHAPTER
Defining mindfulness
Exploring mindfulness meditation
Discovering the benefits of mindfulness
Mindfulness means flexibly paying attention on purpose, in the present moment, infused with qualities such as kindness, curiosity, acceptance, and openness.
Through being mindful, you discover how to live in the present moment in an enjoyable way rather than worrying about the past or being concerned about the future. The past has already gone and can’t be changed. The future is yet to arrive and is completely unknown. The present moment, this very moment now, is ultimately the only moment you have. Mindfulness shows you how to live in this moment in a harmonious way. You find out how to make the present moment a more wonderful moment to be in — the only place in which you can create, decide, listen, think, smile, act, or live.
You can develop and deepen mindfulness through doing mindfulness meditation on a daily basis, from a few minutes to as long as you want. This chapter introduces you to mindfulness and mindfulness meditation and welcomes you aboard a fascinating journey.
Say that you want to practice mindfulness to help you cope with stress. At work, you think about your forthcoming presentation and begin to feel stressed and nervous. By becoming aware of this, you remember to focus your mindful attention to your own breathing rather than constantly worrying. Feeling your breath with a sense of warmth and gentleness helps slowly to calm you down.
Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn, who first developed mindfulness in a therapeutic setting, says: “Mindfulness can be cultivated by paying attention in a specific way, that is, in the present moment, and as non-reactively, non-judgmentally and openheartedly as possible.”
Non-reactively: Normally, when you experience something, you automatically react to that experience according to your past conditioning. For example, if you think, “I still haven’t finished my work,” you react with thoughts, words, and actions in some shape or form.
Mindfulness encourages you to respond to your experience rather than react to thoughts. A reaction is automatic and gives you no choice; a response is deliberate and considered action.
Mindfulness meditation is a particular type of meditation that’s been well researched and tested in clinical settings.
In mindfulness meditation, you typically focus on one, or a combination, of the following:
Mindfulness meditation comes in two distinct types:
You know how you get lost in thought? Most of the day, as you go about your daily activities, your mind is left to think whatever it wants. You’re operating on “automatic pilot” (explained more fully in Chapter 4 of Book 1). But some of your automatic thoughts may be unhelpful to you, or perhaps you’re so stuck in those thoughts that you don’t actually experience the world around you. For example, you go for a walk in the park to relax, but your mind is lost in thoughts about your next project. First, you’re not really living in the present moment, and second, you’re making yourself more stressed, anxious, or depressed if your thoughts are unhelpful.
Mindfulness isn’t focused on fixing problems. Mindfulness emphasizes acceptance first, and change may or may not come later. So if you suffer from anxiety, mindfulness shows you how to accept the feeling of anxiety rather than denying or fighting the feeling, and through this approach change naturally comes about. Consider this idea: “What you resist, persists. What you accept, transforms.”
This section explores the many ways in which mindfulness can help you.
When you have a physical illness, it can be a distressing time. Your condition may be painful or even life-threatening. Perhaps your illness means you’re no longer able to do the simple things in life you took for granted before, such as run up the stairs or look after yourself in an independent way. Illness can shake you to your very core. How can you cope with this? How can you build your inner strength to manage the changes that take place, without being overwhelmed and losing all hope?
High levels of stress, particularly over a long period of time, have been clearly shown to reduce the strength of your immune system. Perhaps you went down with the flu after a period of high stress. The scientific evidence strongly agrees. For example, research on care-givers who experience high levels of stress for long periods of time shows that they have a weaker immune system in response to diseases like the flu.
Mindfulness reduces stress, and for this reason is one way of managing illness. By reducing your stress you improve the effectiveness of your immune system, and this may help increase the rate of healing from the illness you suffer, especially if the illness is stress-related.
Mindfulness can be a very relaxing experience. As you discover how to rest with an awareness of your breathing or the sounds around you, you may begin to feel calmer.
However, the aim of mindfulness is not relaxation. Relaxation is one of the welcome by-products. In clinical studies comparing the benefits of mindfulness and relaxation, there’s often little beneficial effect in the relaxation exercises but significant benefits in practicing mindfulness. This shows how different they are.
Mindfulness is the development of awareness of your inner and outer experiences, whatever they are, with a sense of kindness, curiosity, and acceptance. You may experience very deep states of relaxation when practicing mindfulness, or you may not. If you don’t, this certainly doesn’t mean you’re practicing mindfulness incorrectly.
Why are relaxation and mindfulness so different? Mindfulness is about cultivating greater awareness of what’s going on within or around you. It’s a state of wakefulness. Whereas relaxation is associated with falling asleep, letting go, and reducing your level of awareness. Mindfulness is about moving toward challenging experiences to help you learn from difficult thoughts, feelings, urges, and sensations. Relaxation is often about moving away from such challenges — which means you can’t learn from them.
Table 1-1 shows the difference between relaxation and mindfulness exercises.
TABLE 1-1 Relaxation versus Mindfulness
Exercise |
Aim |
Method |
---|---|---|
Mindfulness |
To pay attention to your experience from moment to moment, as best you can, with kindness, curiosity, acceptance, and openness |
To observe your experience and shift your attention back to its focus if you drift into thought, without self-criticism if you can |
Relaxation |
To make muscles relaxed and to feel calm |
Various, such as tightening and letting go of muscles |
To be mindful, you usually need to do one thing at a time. When walking, you just walk. When listening, you just listen. When writing, you just write. By practicing formal and informal mindfulness meditation, you’re training your brain, with mindful attitudes such as kindness, curiosity, and acceptance.
So, if you’re writing a report, you focus on that activity as much as you can, without overly straining yourself. Each time your mind wanders off to another thought, you notice what you were thinking about (curiosity), and then without criticizing (remember you’re being kind to yourself), you guide your attention back to the writing. So, you finish your report sooner (less time spent thinking about other stuff) and the work is probably of better quality (because you gave the report your full attention). The more you can focus on what you’re doing, the more you can get done. So mindfulness can help you finish your work early — yippee!
Your work also becomes more enjoyable if you’re mindful, and when you’re enjoying something, you’re more creative and focused. If you’re training your mind to be curious about experience rather than bored, you can be curious about whatever you engage in.
Eventually, through experience, you begin to notice that work flows through you, rather than you doing the work. You find yourself feeding the children or making that presentation. You lose the sense of “me” doing this and become more relaxed and at ease. When this happens, the work is effortless, often of a very high quality, and thoroughly enjoyable — which sounds like a nice kind of focus, don’t you think? In psychology, this is called being in a state of flow, and it is strongly associated with greater wellbeing and happiness — yay! (More on going with the flow is in Chapter 4 of Book 1.)
Wisdom is regarded highly in Eastern and Western traditions. Socrates and Plato considered philosophy as literally the love of wisdom (philo-sophia). According to Eastern traditions, wisdom is your essential nature and leads to a deep happiness for yourself and to helping others to find that happiness within themselves too.
You can access greater wisdom. Mindfulness leads to wisdom, because you learn to handle your own thoughts and emotions skillfully. Just because you have a negative thought, you don’t believe the thought to be true. And when you experience tricky emotions such as sadness, anxiety, or frustration, you’re able to process them using mindfulness rather than being overwhelmed by them.
With your greater emotional balance, you’re able to listen deeply to others and create fulfilling, lasting relationships. With your clear mind, you’re able to make better decisions. With your open heart, you can be happier and healthier.
Mindfulness leads to wisdom because of your greater level of awareness. You become aware of how you relate to yourself, others, and the world around you. With this heightened awareness, you’re in a much better place to make informed choices. Rather than living automatically like a robot, you’re consciously awake and you take action based on reflection and what’s in the best interest of everyone, including yourself.
The Dalai Lama is an example of a wise person. He’s kind and compassionate, and thinks about the welfare of others. He seeks to reduce suffering and increase happiness in humanity as a whole. He isn’t egocentric, laughs a lot, and doesn’t seem overwhelmed with all his duties and the significant losses he’s experienced. People seem to thoroughly enjoy spending time with him. He certainly seems to live in a mindful way.
Think about who you consider to be wise people. What are their qualities? You may find them to be conscious and aware of their actions, rather than habitual and lost in their own thoughts — in other words, they’re mindful!
Mindfulness can lead to an interesting journey of personal discovery. The word person comes from the Latin word persona, originally meaning a character in a drama, or a mask. The word discovery means to discover or to uncover. So in this sense, personal discovery is about uncovering your mask.
As Shakespeare said: “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players.” Through mindfulness practice, you begin to see your roles, your persona or mask(s) as part of what it means to be you. You still do everything you did before: you can keep helping people or making money or whatever you like doing, but you know that this is only one way of seeing things, one dimension of your being.
You probably wear all sorts of different masks for different roles that you play. You may be a parent, daughter or son, partner, employee. Each of these roles asks you to fulfill certain obligations. You may not be aware that it’s possible to put all the masks down through mindfulness practice.
Some people become very attached to these positive experiences in meditation and try hard to repeat them, as if they’re “getting closer” to something. However, over time you come to realize that even these seemingly blissful experiences also come and go. Enjoy them when they come, and then let them go.
Through the practice of mindfulness, you may come to discover that you’re a witness to life’s experiences. Thoughts, emotions, and bodily sensations come and go in your mindfulness practice, and yet a part of you is just observing this all happening — awareness itself. This is something very simple that everyone can see and experience. In fact, being naturally yourself is so simple, you easily overlook it.
In research into the latest form of mindfulness therapy called Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), becoming aware of this sense of self that is beyond your thoughts, emotions, sensations, and urges is a key part of mindfulness. Through identifying with this “Observer Self” you become more psychologically flexible and resilient against the challenges of life.
According to Eastern philosophy, as this witness, you’re perfect, whole, and complete just as you are. You may not feel as if you’re perfect, because you identify with your thoughts, emotions, and body, which are changing over time. Ultimately you don’t need to do anything to attain this natural state, because you are this natural state all the time — right here and right now.
For these reasons, mindfulness is not about self-improvement. At the core of your being, you’re perfect just the way you are! Mindfulness exercises and meditations are just to help gently train your brain to be more focused and calm, and your heart to be warm and open. Mindfulness is not about changing you: It’s about realizing that you’re perfectly beautiful within, just the way you are.
Consider what Eckhart Tolle, author of A New Earth: Create a Better Life, says: “What a liberation to realize that the ‘voice in my head’ is not who I am. Who am I then? The one who sees that.”
Once you spend more time being the witness of your internal experiences, you’re less disturbed by the ups and downs of life. This understanding offers you a way to a happier life. It’s that little bit easier to go with the flow and see life as an adventure rather than just a series of struggles.