<p>“In her new book <i>Make Every Move a Meditation: Mindful Movement for Mental Health, Well-Being, and Insight</i>, Nita Sweeney argues that pickleball or a Zumba class can be turned into a powerful meditative practice whose benefits spill into other areas of life. Focusing the mind on a single thought, object or sensation during exercise can help bring clarity and peace of mind, she says. 'For running, I often use my left foot,’ she says. She encourages people to use ‘a teensy bit of willpower’ to keep focusing on a single object when they exercise and bring their mind back when it wanders.”<br />—Ellen Gamerman, <i>The Wall Street Journal</i></p>

<p>“I don't practice mindfulness to get better at sitting still in quiet rooms. I practice to inhabit my life more fully. <i>Make Every Move a Meditation</i> encourages you to develop liberating attentional skills with your eyes open and your body moving. In it, Nita Sweeney shares practical strategies she's field-tested over the years, and how they've equipped her to respond more effectively to a range of obstacles. She'll inspire you to expand your exploration of mindful awareness and to sneak it into more areas of your life.”<br />—Daron Larson, mindfulness speaker, teacher, and coach, TEDxColumbus Talk: ”Don't Try to Be Mindful”</p>

<p>“Awakening awareness in the body is the portal to resting in an open-hearted and dynamic presence. <i>Make Every Move a Meditation </i>is an accessible and powerful guide for taking our practice off the cushion and connecting deeply with the creativity, wisdom and aliveness that is our very essence.”<br />—Tara Brach, author of <i>Trusting the Gold</i></p>


<p>“Let me say it simply. Someone should have written this book a long time ago. Thanks, Nita. Systematically exercising consciousness while you systematically exercise the body in which it dwells...that's a major lifehack. It's a way to work smart that's ideal for busy, modern people committed to a sound mind in a sound body.”<br />—Shinzen Young, meditation teacher, neuroscience research consultant, founder of Unified Mindfulness, author of <i>Meditation in the Zone</i> and <i>The Science of Enlightenment</i></p>

<p>“Humans evolved to survive predators, and to find food, shelter, and mates. Those activities required noticing and responding to the subtlest unfoldings of nature. Now lost in a speed-and-greed world, we need to be reminded of who we are and why we are here. Nita Sweeney’s <i>Make Every Move a Meditation</i> provides us exactly that, a deeply-considered, well-organized, and beautifully-presented guidebook back to self-actualization, flourishing, happiness, and meaning. An important work for every seeker.”<br />—Yun Rou, Daoist monk, Tai Chi master, and author of <i>The Monk of Park Avenue</i></p>

<p>“You exercise but don't have time to meditate? Or meditate but don't have time to exercise? Or maybe you would like to meditate but can't sit still. This book has the solution: do both at once! Drawing from decades of experience in formal meditation settings, as well as many years as a long-distance runner, Nita Sweeney presents invaluable guidance toward bringing meditation into movement and making movement your practice. Highly recommended for anyone who moves, or sits still: in other words, everyone!”<br />—Sean Tetsudo Murphy, Sensei, Zen teacher in the White Plum American Zen lineage, and author of <i>One Bird, One Stone: 108 Contemporary Zen Stories</i></p>

<p>“I love to walk and I’m a 45-year veteran of meditation, but I have never combined the two. Thanks to this book, that’s about to change. I’ve been sharing meditation with others for the better part of two decades and teaching professionally for over ten years. Many times, students have asked me how to do moving meditations, and I’ve never had a good answer. Now I do. My answer is, ‘Buy Nita Sweeney’s book, <i>Make Every Move a Meditation</i>.’ ”<br />—Kim Colegrove, author of <i>Mindfulness for Warriors</i>, and owner of Pause First Academy</p>

<p>“I’ve been a regular runner and occasional meditator for years, but it never occurred to me to combine my meditation practice with my running routine. The two disciplines complement each other brilliantly. After reading Nita Sweeney’s <i>Make Every Move a Meditation</i>, I look forward to many miles of meditative movement in the years to come."<br />—Denny Krahe, running coach, author of <i>Be Ready on Race Day</i>, and host of the <i>Diz Runs</i> podcast</p>

<p>“<i>Make Every Move A Meditation</i> is a gift for anyone seeking to incorporate meditation and mindfulness into their daily life. The author writes from her many years of personal practice and encourages us with advice that is clear, practical and warm-hearted. Nita Sweeney not only talks the talk but walks the walk (and runs the run!), offering the fruits of her experience to guide others along the path.”<br />—Tania Casselle, MA Transpersonal Psychotherapy, award-winning writer, contemplative writing retreat leader, and senior faculty for Sage Institute for Creativity and Consciousness</p>

<p>“Sweeney does writing practice, a form of therapy that she compares to meditation with a pen. ‘It’s a little like journaling except you do it in a specific time period, keeping your hand moving and without stopping to think. You grab sensory details, looking around and writing about what you see. It grounds you in reality, as opposed to being up in your head.’ But the biggest emotional lift for Sweeney has been running. It’s not just the mood-boosting brain chemicals that physical activity generates, she says. ‘There’s a sense of community because I sometimes run with a group. I also do races, and there’s a training plan, so there’s structure. And there’s a sense of achievement that you get from achieving your goals—I said I was going to run three miles, and I did that.’ Sweeney insists that the exercise really works: ‘Depression hates a moving target.’ ”<br />—Barbara Stepko, AARP.org</p>

<p>“There are thousands of books written on mindfulness and mediation, but this one is unique, designed (1) for those who need what mindfulness offers, but for whom sitting still is never ideal; and (2) for those seeking spiritual practices to help with mental health issues. We recommend this book for those looking for new ways of being present in life and who want to do so with play and enthusiasm.”<br />—<i>Spirituality and Practice</i></p>

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“There are thousands of books written on mindfulness and mediation, but this one is unique, designed (1) for those who need what mindfulness offers, but for whom sitting still is never ideal and (2) for those seeking spiritual practices to help with mental health issues. Some readers will know author Nita Sweeney for her 2019 book, <i>Depression Hates a Moving Target</i>, in which she talked about jogging with her dog as a way of battling depression and anxiety. This book continues those themes, focusing on mindfulness, in particular, activity in general, and the benefits of combining them. Sweeney begins by describing what mindfulness is and how to do it, explaining, ‘Meditative skills keep me going when willpower fails.’ In fact, ‘Infusing the thoughts and body sensations that arise on a run with focused attention and a calm attitude makes running less difficult and more interesting.’ After running, there are several dozen other examples in the book of how to combine being active and practicing mindfulness meditation, from ice skating to tennis and golf. The book is punctuated with helpful summaries, questions and answers, and recaps. One example, ‘seeing color’ includes working out while noticing color. These may seem ordinary, because they are ordinary; but they are excellent, helpfully specific, examples of a successful mediation practice designed for someone who needs to keep moving.”<br />—Jon M. Sweeney in Spirituality & Practice</p>

Discover the Benefits of Exercise as Meditation“Let me say it simply. Someone should have written this book a long time ago.” —Shinzen Young, meditation teacher, neuroscience research consultant, founder of Unified Mindfulness, author of Meditation in the Zone and The Science of EnlightenmentAward-winning Finalist in the “Health: Diet & Exercise” category of the 2022 International Book Awards #1 New Release in Sports Health & Safety, Other Eastern Religions & Sacred Texts, Cycling, Sports Psychology, Walking, Theravada Buddhism, and MeditationTransform movement and meditation into the powerful practice of mindful movementExercise can be meditation. What do you think of when you hear the word meditation? A quiet room filled with monks? An Instagram influencer? What about moving meditation? Yoga? Tai Chi? For too long, meditation in books has focused on specific periods of meditation, rather than mediation through fitness or daily activities. What if lifting weights, dancing with your love, or walking across a room counted? What if you could use exercise as meditation? What if you could make every move a meditation?Let's combine the two. In Make Every Move a Meditation, award-winning author, meditation leader, and mental health advocate Nita Sweeney shows us fitness can be mindfulness. She teaches us how to bring meditation and mindfulness into any activity by incorporating centuries-old techniques. Studies show that both exercise and meditation reduce anxiety, stabilize blood pressure, improve mood and cognition, and lead to a deeper self-relationship and wisdom. Movement is medicine, and meditation is medicine.Inside you’ll learn to:Turn exercise into a meditation toolMake any activity a mindful practiceEnjoy the benefits of meditation while getting fitIf you like meditation books and best sellers such as Think Like a Monk, Practicing Mindfulness, or Breath, you’ll love Make Every Move a Meditation.
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In Make Every Move a Meditation, award-winning author, meditation leader, and mental health advocate Nita Sweeney shows readers that fitness can be mindfulness. 
ContentsIntroductionChapter 1: Why Bother?Chapter 2: How to Meditate While You MoveChapter 3: Why I BotherChapter 4: Splendid Body—Sense GatesChapter 5: Tricky Mind—Working with ThoughtsChapter 6 Advanced Awareness TechniquesChapter 7: Tangles of EmotionChapter 8: How to Grow Through Pain (and Joy)Chapter 9: Cultivating Mind StatesChapter 10: Struggling? Check the HindrancesChapter 11: Variations on a ThemeChapter 12: Whose Idea Was This?Chapter 13: More About Forms of MovementChapter 14: Make It YoursChapter 15: Taking It on the RoadChapter 16: Who’s Meditating?Chapter 17: Why Therapists Have Therapists and Teachers Have TeachersChapter 18: You Might Already Be Doing ItChapter 19: Find Your FellowshipChapter 20: Illness, Injury, and “Bad” WorkoutsChapter 21: PerformanceChapter 22: See You on the “Path”An Invitation and a RequestResourcesAcknowledgmentsAbout the AuthorIndexReferences
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Nita has a proven marketing track record which includes landing promotional opportunities. While she pursues media placements, as her reputation as a wellness author has grown, people now reach out to her. For example, Mindful Working recently contacted her to write for them. Her many contacts in the meditation, movement, writing, and wellness community combined with her passion for these topics make her a recognized wellness authority and an excellent podcast and interview guest. Nita’s launch action plan for EVERY MOVE includes: Speaking/Classes/Workshops: Nita plans to offer more than 25 in person and virtual events beginning in August 2021 and leading up to the release. These will include bookstore readings, movement meditation workshops, sporting event expos, continuing education programs on wellness in various fields, keynote speeches, and more. The Book Loft of German Village has agreed to host the launch reading at their store.Social Media Launch Campaign: Nita’s impressions on social media average between 500,00 and 750,000 each month. She regularly posts popular live videos of “movement meditation” tips and has a Youtube channel for these. In advance of the launch, she will create a strategic social media plan.Street Team: Nita will create a “street team” of her newsletter subscribers and Facebook Group members to help with early reviews and social media buzz.Podcast Tour: Already a regular podcast guest, Nita will speak on 25 podcasts in the months leading up to the release.“Nita’s News:” Nita will also continue to court the thousands of subscribers on her email lists. Using reader magnets and social media ads, Nita continues to grow her email lists and will push this more heavily as release date approaches.Blogging: Nita includes meditation and movement as part of the wellness-related content on her blog. She will include even more content related to EVERY MOVE as the launch approaches.Blog Tour: Nita is creating a “blog tour” to promote the book leading up to the release.Guest Blogging: Nita will pursue more writing opportunities in media related to EVERY MOVE for other relevant outlets.Co-authoring: Nita will seek out experts in various movement modalities to interview on her blog and to co-author articles in expert publications.Endorsements and Reviews---Nita has begun to gather endorsements and ARC reviews from the following individuals:Sensei Sean Murphy, author, NEA grant recipient, and Zen MasterTania Casselle, award-winning author and spiritual teacherBecca Anderson, authorTara Brach, Ph.D., author and founder of the Insight Meditation Community of Washington, D.C.Richard Davis, Ph.D., neurofeedback expert and founder of Comprehensive Services, Inc.Mirabai Starr, author of Wild Mercy and spiritual teacherDaron Larson, meditation teacher, podcast host, and founder of Attentional FitnessLaura Staley, author and Feng Shui consultantEric Zimmer, author and podcast host of The One You Feed Julia Cameron, best-selling author of The Artist’s WayVen. Shinzen Young, author of The Science of EnlightenmentTrudy Goodman Kornfield, Ph.D., founding teacher of Insight LAMaria Shriver, author and former First Lady of Californiaand many more Nita will seek editorial reviews of the book from publications including:Mindful MagazineTricycle MagazineLion's Roar MagazineBuddha Weekly Online MagazineBuddhism Now MagazinebpMagazineWomen’s HealthPsychology TodayFirst for WomenWoman’s WorldHealthPreventionShapeSpirituality & HealthEdenRunner’s WorldOutside MagazineWomen’s RunningYoga JournalMovement MagazineDance MagazineDance TeacherWhole LivingHealthAsana Journal
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Chapter 1Why Bother? If you’re like most people, including me, you exercise for a variety of reasons. You’re depressed so you exercise to cheer up, or you’re anxious and want to calm down. Maybe you hope to relax or zone out. Perhaps you seek bliss and joy, an escape from your troubles. Or you want to feel strong. Then again, you might just want to look fabulous in your swimsuit. No shame in that. The beach beckons.Plus, you’re already busy. There’s the partner and the kids and the dog. You need to mow the lawn. That work project is (still) due, and those groceries aren’t going to shop for themselves.So why add what sounds like another task? Your mind gets a workout every day, all day long. Isn’t exercise a time to give it a rest? Why pile what seems like another layer on top of your current exercise routine?After all, meditation of any sort takes time, energy, grit, determination, and discipline. As contemporary Buddhist Monk Bhante Gunaratana (Bhante G.) says in Mindfulness in Plain English, “Meditation takes gumption.”[1] Why on Earth would you want to infuse your movement with something that requires effort and dedication?There are a host of reasons.You’re probably already aware of the many ways movement improves your life. Meditation enhances that. Studies on people who meditate show the physical, emotional, and cognitive benefits ranging from improved athletic performance to growing new brain cells.[2] Combine the two for a supercharged growth recipe.But there’s an even more compelling reason to add meditation to your movement routine.Freedom.Beneath any desire you may have to relax, zone out, or toughen up, and under that wish to look and feel physically and mentally better, lies the urge for freedom.Freedom from what?Freedom from suffering.And that—freedom from suffering—is the main reason I bother. Mindfulness MeditationHundreds of definitions exist for the word “meditation.” The type of meditation I practice follows a tradition dating back thousands of years: Vipassana, insight, often translated “to see clearly.” The technique is called “mindfulness.”Jon Kabat-Zinn, creator of the Stress Reduction Clinic and Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care, and Society at the University of Massachusetts Medical School offers an elegant definition:“Mindfulness means paying attention in a particular way, on purpose, in the present moment, nonjudgmentally, as if your life depended on it.”—Jon Kabat-Zinn[3]Rather than escape from experiences, mindfulness meditation teaches us to be fully present with them. Instead of escaping from our lives, we escape into them.I learned to meditate while I was moving, and you can too.Why this form of meditation and not others?My experience, the experience of countless others, and scientific studies confirm[4] that these practices—ones that teach you how to keep your head where your feet are—offer freedom from suffering.If you already have a movement form you enjoy, learning to meditate while you move can refresh, deepen, and renew that movement while opening new doorways of discovery. If you already meditate regularly, attend retreats, or even have a teacher, this book can freshen your practice by adding a new dimension: meditation in motion. If you’ve fallen away from any practice, the suggestions in these pages might bring you back to a joy you once knew.If you do not have a movement practice, I can help you find one you love and show you how to infuse that with meditative awareness and a calmness of mind to create something beyond exercise—a practice of transformation.How does meditation create this transformation?Meditation teaches you how to be in the present moment. That’s the point.Why the present moment?The present moment is the only reality, the only thing actually happening. The future has not yet occurred. The past is over. Only in this moment do we have the opportunity to find peace, offer forgiveness, change and grow. Now is the only moment over which we have any control: right here, right now.Aren’t we right here all the time? What’s the difference?The difference is what you do with your mind.Let’s say you are ice skating. It’s crisp, but you’re layered. As you glide around the rink, the motion warms your body. This is the perfect opportunity for movement meditation.As you skate, you notice pleasant body sensations: the sway of your body, the sound of each blade against the ice, the heat generated by your moving limbs. Positive thoughts may also arise: I am graceful, dancing, alive.You hone your attention on the thoughts and body sensations of skating. Those thoughts and body sensations bring you right into the moment, fully absorbed. Instead of daydreaming or comparing yourself to the skater at the other end of the rink, your meditation skills keep your mind where your body is. You become curious about how it feels to skate, experiencing your body sensations all the way through, learning from what you find. You don’t struggle with your mind. You become the motion, opening to it and relaxing around it. While your thoughts may wander to what’s for lunch or that big work project, you gently bring your attention back to the present, to your moving body.All of this is right here. Right now.A couple of important things are at work here.First, you’ll experience the mind-body connection, as the separation between your mind and your body begins to disappear.Second, you’ll experience pleasure both from the focus you are developing and from the movements. Because you enjoy these, you continue to meditate and move and feel better physically and emotionally.Third, that pleasure also helps you overcome any resistance or negativity you may have, at first around movement and eventually around other daily things as well.Fourth, as the negativity begins to drop away, you’ll be less reactive to and gentler with yourself and others. You’ll build more equanimity, a curiosity and calm openness of mind, and a non-reactive attitude, allowing you to befriend the thoughts and sensations that arise. These benefits lead to improved mood and energy.Finally, it can lead to insight into how pushing and pulling on reality causes suffering, not just yours, but everyone else’s as well. As you skate or run or dance or jump or pitch or hit or throw, you’ll see the habits of mind, heart, and body that cause us all such agony.The skills and insight gained through practice serve us everywhere for the rest of our lives. Once we taste this wisdom, the world opens. We truly see a child’s smile, taste our food, and smell the flowers more than just figuratively. Actions as simple as sensing which foot goes through the door first, feeling your hand grip the racquet, or noticing one breath all the way through can train the mind.Once you get that, it can change your life in the same positive, helpful way it changed mine.[1] Ven. Henepola Gunaratana, Mindfulness in Plain English (Boston: Wisdom Publications, 1993), 7[2] Patrick Zeis “30 Evidence-Based Benefits of Meditation” https://www.balancedachievement.com/areas-of-life/benefits-of-meditation/[3] Jon Kabat-Zinn, Wherever you go, there you are: Mindfulness meditation in everyday life. (New York: Hyperion) 4.[4] Zeis “30 Evidence-Based Benefits of Meditation.”
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781642509892
Publisert
2022-10-13
Utgiver
Vendor
Mango Media
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
140 mm
Dybde
13 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
240

Forfatter

Biographical note

Nita Sweeney is the award-winning wellness author of the running and mental health memoir, Depression Hates a Moving Target: How Running with My Dog Brought Me Back from the Brink and co-creator of the writing journal, You Should Be Writing: A Journal of Inspiration & Instruction to Keep Your Pen Moving. A certified meditation leader, mental health advocate, ultramarathoner, and former assistant to writing practice originator Natalie Goldberg, Nita founded the groups “Mind, Mood, and Movement” to support well-being through meditation, exercise, and writing practice, and “The Writer’s Mind,” to share using writing practice to produce publishable work. Nita also publishes the writing resource newsletter, “Write Now Columbus.” Nita lives in central Ohio with her husband, Ed, and their yellow Labrador retriever, Scarlet. Head to her website to download your free copy of Nita’s eBook Three Ways to Heal Your Mind.