When I started learning mindfulness meditation I had no idea how deeply it would transform my life.One morning, when I had been meditating for several years and was almost at the end of my psychiatry training, I was sitting in meditation when a phrase appeared in my mind, flashing like a neon light: ‘Mindful in May’. The phrase grew into an idea to create an online global month of mindfulness each year during May, where people could be taught about mindfulness by leading experts from around the world and dedicate the month to making a positive difference by raising funds for global poverty. It was an idea that integrated three of my passions: mindfulness, social impact and community building through technology. I haven’t looked back. You’ve said that mindfulness has been a crucial part of your survival toolkit as a working parent. How has your mindfulness practice impacted your family and work life, and can you give us an example? Mindfulness is a vehicle to greater emotional intelligence. Having greater emotional intelligence makes us more self-aware and better able to manage our emotions. As we get better at these skills we get much better at relationships. This changes everything within the family context.
Parenting requires bucketloads of patience, self-awareness, self-compassion, forgiveness, creativity, courage, resilience, and presence. Meditation builds all of these qualities. It’s a perfect companion and vehicle to becoming the best parent you can be.I’ll never forget the response from my partner after coming home from my first silent meditation retreat where you sit for days on end, in silence and meditate for up to 10 hours a day. He said to me, “I don’t know what happened over there but I’m very happy for you to go every year on one of these birthday retreats!” Of course the benefits you get from going on a silent meditation retreat do wear off pretty quickly, but there is also cumulative wisdom and understanding you maintain and build upon with each retreat you attend. You’re passionate about supporting individuals and organisations to develop inner tools to flourish through mindfulness. What transformations do you see in the people you work with, particularly parents with a lot on their plate? Mindfulness offers us a way to see more clearly and be more aware of what’s happening within us and around us in the world. With this greater self-awareness and present moment attention so much can change. People I’ve worked with describe the programs as helping them become better at:
- Being aware of their emotions and responding to emotions rather than reacting.
- Having better access to what they really want in their lives and then taking action to make that happen.
- Recognising thoughts and letting them go rather than getting stuck in obsessive planning or worrying.
- Managing their stress.
- Being in relationships with others with less conflict.
- Communicating more effectively with greater awareness of why they’re feeling what they’re feeling.
- Staying focused at work and less prone to multitasking.
- Falling asleep at night as they have a tool to help the mind settle.
- Making decisions that are aligned with what they truly value.
- Taking healthy risks in life as they have an inner resource that can help them through uncertain times.
- An increase in positive emotions.
- Reduction in perceived stress.
- An increase in self-compassion.
- Greater focus in daily life.
Just like getting physically fit, you need to commit to the practice to experience the results of a mind that is functioning at its best.How do you set work-life boundaries and make time for the things you love? It’s a constant tightrope act. Mindfulness meditation ensures that I’m connected to myself and tuned in to that sense of overwhelm that can arise. With that awareness I’m able to re-adjust and get back on track. But I like to see the year as having seasons. For me there are times in the year that I’m very busy and times when I have extra time for leisure. I think it’s inevitable that when you step into parenthood, there is a lot less time for you. I prioritise friendship and community - I’m usually the one in my friendship circle who creates the monthly girls dinners and brings people together. I’ve found COVID has been a real challenge to creating some of the community events I love to organise, a few of them got cancelled earlier this year. But you work with what you’ve got! You curated a recipe book to inspire mindful eating. Does your family have a mealtime ritual and favourite meal to nourish your body? Yes, we do a gratitude practice on our Friday night family Shabbat dinners. My five-year-old daughter leads it by ringing the meditation bell. We all listen to the sound then go around the table and share what we are grateful for. There are too many meals we love! I’m a big foodie so it's too hard to choose one. I’m re-reading... Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art by James Nestor - a mind blowing book that anyone who breathes should read. I’m inspired by… my closest friends. They are an incredible bunch of women that amaze me all the time. If you want to take mindfulness further but are unsure where to start, register for our global campaign, Mindful in May, before May 1st, or get a copy of my one month mindfulness meditation guidebook, The Happiness Plan, which I wrote for exactly this kind of situation.