Posted by Lilian on December 8, 2010
Photo by Nuttakit from FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Give big this year. By big, I don’t mean you need to spend a lot of money at the mall, or gather multiple gifts for everyone on your list. I mean that you can enhance your gift giving tradition by enlarging your view of the gift—by choosing something that nurtures your loved ones and our global community at the same time.
Posted by Lilian on November 23, 2010
Photo by Bill Longshaw from FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Thanksgiving is a holiday of reflection, community and great food! Seize this opportunity to share mindful eating with loved ones and reinforce your mindful habits.
Posted by Lilian on November 18, 2010
Q: How can we deepen our practice?
A: Deepening our practice means having a genuine practice, practicing not in form only. When your practice is genuine, it will bring joy, peace, and stability to yourself and to the people around you.
Posted by Lilian on November 15, 2010
Congratulations to the winners of the Savor & Share Recipe Contest. Their recipes are delicious examples of how healthful, vegan meals need not sacrifice taste or time.
Keeping health, ease and taste in mind, our distinguished contest judges, Mollie Katzen, Martha Rose Shulman, Dr. Melanie Lane, and Judith Kingsbury chose their favorite dishes from our community’s top picks.
Posted by Lilian on November 11, 2010
This passage is from Savor: Mindful Eating. Mindful Life.
Posted by Lilian on November 10, 2010
Work environments are not always easy places to remember and engage in our mindful practice. It is important to act mindfully in this space though, as it will bring more peace, happiness AND productivity. When we act mindfully, we form better relationships with our co-workers, respect our body’s need for movement, listen to signs of hunger and fatigue and ultimately we are better at our jobs.
Here are some tools that encourage mindfulness in the work place:
Posted by Lilian on November 4, 2010
Posted by Lilian on October 29, 2010
Q: I’ve been practicing compassionate listening but it is very difficult to listen to people who rant and rave. How long is it necessary to practice compassionate listening?
Posted by Lilian on October 20, 2010
Cooking can be one of the most peaceful, mindful and loving of acts. But often we are stressed when preparing food. We’re racing the clock. We’re hungry – perhaps too hungry, uncomfortably so. or past the point of hunger when preparing food. This can turn a beautiful act into a chore. And the unpleasant feelings we cultivate in the kitchen may manifest in our creations.
Posted by Lilian on October 17, 2010
When you pay attention to your in breath and out breath, you abandon the future and go back to the present moment. This is the practice of mindfulness.
When you eat, if you eat mindfully, that's mindful eating.
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