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4 contributions to Inner Wilderness
Meditation
So last week I talked about journaling, this week I want to talk about Meditation. Meditation is a practice that I believe, along with Journaling, are two of the most powerful, foundational and essential practices for a life of TRUE health, ease and prosperity. While there are many different forms and variations of meditation, from still to moving, open to focused, they all have their benefit and their place in the toolbox. While many people meditate, those who have a true consistent and disciplined meditation practice is far fewer. While there is innumerable research articles on the benefits, I care less about 'science' and 'research' and more about how do we feel and what do we notice and experience when we meditate? From an simple processing standpoint, with the amount of data and information that every human is exposed to every day, if we aren't setting aside even a simple 5 or 10 min of intentional stillness and silence, our computing capacity is going to be bogged down just like a computer with 10 different programs and 30 different tabs open. Erick Godsey a podcaster and thought leader, has been focusing a lot of his work recently on the affects and impacts of modern technology on our ability to focus, and he cites numerous sources as to how damaging modern technology is on our ability to focus, comprehend and complete tasks. He proposes the idea that we train our brain and our attention like a professional athlete would train his body. And that meditation is the primary training exercise to become a mental athlete. And that to do so would be one of the most beneficial and supportive endeavors to achieve. As I personally come to grips the observance and intimacy with my own attention and how often it gets pulled away from my desired intention, I have come to see a greater and greater correlation to the intentionality and focus of my attention and the quality of my experience. Which is why I believe that true, deep healing requires incredible attentional capacity. To be able to hold ones focus and attention on their pain, their dysfunction, their dis-ease, their resistance, their story, as well as the beauty, the love, the magic and the abundance of this experience- all requires attentional capacity and all is required for true health and healing.
0 likes • Dec '24
Meditation continues to be exciting, immensely beneficial, and challenging. As it should be, and accepting that fact has been an interesting place to explore. Whenever I finish a meditation, even as little as 5-10 minutes, I always feel grateful I had the chance to do it My consistency can be lacking at times but feel like i meditate at least 1-2x/day for 5-10 minutes each time. I appreciated the comparison at the mention of how Erick Godsey views modern technology as affecting our ability to focus on how we go to the gym for physical fitness and trial. I find myself with many options and pursuits to help my current situation, but I get distracted by the sheer abundance, and the overwhelm that inevitably kicks in. The constant "showing up" at the gym is accurate for me. 1) My attentional capacity is not where I would like it to be. It takes me a little bit to get into a good flow of concentration when I sit down to read a book, or engage with something productive or tied to my purpose work. Somedays are much easier than others so it is something I am continuing to work on 2) If I was honest and couldn't choose a 7, which I think is a pretty "safe" standard score to choose :) I would go with a 6. area for improvement! 3) I start my weekdays between 530am-630am at the gym, I begin my time there in the sauna for 15 minutes or so. I try to do a guided meditation via Bluetooth earphones. I also have tried to listen to a mindful audiobook which I deem a form of meditation but may not be ideal if viewing it a purely isolated intent for meditation. Listening to Eckhart Tolle "Power of Now" at 6am alone in a sauna is very peaceful, or perhaps Mastery by Robert Greene. i then meditate in early afternoon, often time another guided meditation with an app like Waking Up. Walking meditation has been excellent but it is rare that I do say in silence. I have a handful of shadow work meditations I sometimes go to if I feel called to it. I do have to say that I dont meditate as often as I'd like to at night. Most nights are set to cooking, dinner, cleaning, and then very likely too much netflix or other less engaging activities. probably lends to my attentional capacity lack. something I intend to work on going forward!
Journaling Practice
Alright y'all lets talk JOURNALING. I have only a few requirements for the 1:1 clients I work with but two of those requirements is that they have to have a meditation practice and journaling practice. It's inevitable that they won't always be done EVERY day. AND I can't think of two tools as powerful and as fundamental as these two. If someone isn't spending 5 min a day breathing with themselves and writing down their thoughts and inner dialogue, it's hard to make much progress at anything else. Journaling in particular is an amazing way to audit our internal process. Every second we are CONSCIOUSLY processing 100-400 bits per sec (give or take) (unconsciously we're processing 11 Million bits/sec). Over the course of the day we end up consciously processing over 4MB of data. What's happening to all that data though? Who is sorting it and how? If you're living uncosnciously that means that your unconscious programming is filing that all away, and for most people that's a largely unaudited processing system that's mostly dysfunctional and rooted in inadequacy and scarcity. How the hell do we start intentionally and consciously sorting through all that data? Journaling and meditating. With that said I'm planning to create a journaling course to help people get more out of their journal sessions faster, but in the meantime I want to hear from you all. What's your journaling practice/process look like. Drop it in the comments and let's get the conversation going!
1 like • Dec '24
This is amazing. I'm excited to see more conversations about this practice/concept. I have been in and out of journaling for the last couple of years, but I was more consistent the previous six months. I am also a bit all over the place in terms of function, schedule, and intention. I essentially have several journals to organize specific categories and topics I'd like to journal about/on. - One may be considered my "primary" - its mindset, personal reflection, and shadow work. I also have some notes on exercises I may do when listening to self-mastery/growth pieces of content, whether it is podcast, video, audiobook, or the like - I have a creative writing journal where I am trying to flex that creative muscle and create a work of fiction. Lots of world-building, premises, profiles on potential characters, plot development, more so a brainstorming guide - trip journal - when holding medicine space on my own or the rare occurrence where a very close friend joins me if I feel called to write something down whether it is a dream, inspiration, reflection, note to future me, insight, question, or answer I have it at the ready to write in. I dont use it as often. I'd love to use it more in that space, but I often feel overwhelmed by the physical action of writing when in that physical and mental frame. Maybe I can utilize it more when I'm on my way "down"? This will be tested out later :) - Dream journal - I love the practice of writing down my dreams. I have been entirely new to the practice since I discovered the book Insomniac Dreams, profiling the author Vladimir Nabokov's experiment on whether his dreams were somehow manifesting certain themes, emotions, and images in his waking life. Or if they were recollections of his past self. I haven't finished the book, but while I have some issues with its structure and Nabokov himself does not write it, it's still fascinating. I almost instantly forget my dreams upon waking up despite now being a frequent dreamer. I make that distinction because for years, when I had an unhealthy relationship with cannabis, I'd never dream, or if I did, upon waking, I wasn't aware that I dreamed at all. Something I am thankful for about my more controlled use and view of cannabis in addition to the other benefits I have seen when restricting its use. But I digress... - Daily Stoic Journal - I have fallen off this practice I started months ago. Typing all this out reminds me that I'd love to return to it. However, essentially, Ryan Holiday's daily stoic book, for those not familiar with it, has an excerpt from a popular piece of stoic philosophy each day of the year, with a reflection or brief analysis by Ryan Holiday about the quote. Each month is tied to a specific theme, and the daily pages support the given theme. I write the stoic passage into the journal and add my 2 cents afterward. When i was consistent it was a nice brief practice. I'll be returning to it tomorrow ;)
0 likes • Dec '24
@Corbin Sellers ahh yes I love the field notes! i need some myself!
Check In
Alright y'all I'm gonna send out the Bat Signal and see who's tuned in to this channel. Time to get honest and check our pulse. If you read this post please like it so I can see who's getting/reading these. If you would comment/reply with your answers to the following questions: 1. Do you believe the Inner Wilderness concept/channel/community IS or CAN BE a supportive and transformative force in your Life? 2. If so, how specifically can I/We support you in creating the Life your Soul desires? 3. What are you currently exploring and integrating in your Inner Wilderness? What are you working on, internally and/or externally? 4. What do you want to see/read/learn/experience from me or this community? In terms of a course, a class, a call, a circle etc? Thanks for being here and participating. I believe this community and platform- if I were to compare it to Bitcoin- is like when Bitcoin was $1.50. It's my desire though that this be a crowd-sourced, peer/community led group that I'm just helping keep on the tracks. So
2 likes • Dec '24
1) I do believe the community is and can be a supportive and transformative force. I think its important for people both new and experienced in self-development/mastery to not do it alone on an island, the insights and learning potential for doing the work within a community container can only help grow my understanding. The whole "find your tribe" concept is paramount here 2) I think live calls and interaction is beneficial and I do see those on the calendar for December so will hope to join sunday 7am! tonight I will be cooking and may not be super available for the deep work session. that does sound incredible tho, bookmarked for next Tuesday! 3) I am currently focusing on my daily imperfect action, no matter what I need to focus on staying consistent with some step that helps me towards my goals of finding work ideally within this space or at least a company that aligns with my own values and passion 4) I think a lot of the content id like to explore in addition to what is currently is available is just on the other side of my interaction level or score. level 3 looks like it unlocks a lot incredible content so ill work my way up ;)
How often are you noticing your breath?
Checking in on your breathing isn’t just for when you meditate - bringing the awareness into your everyday moments like driving in your car. Having conversations with people, listening to presentations/talks, even when you’re on your phone or computer these are all excellent times to bring your attention back to your breath as it is the foundation of your experience. If you’re breathing short and shallow and or through the mouth, chances are your body is more activated than it would be if you slowed it down through your nose. Expert advice, notice if there’s a pattern when your breath gets shallow. What activities or times tend to shift your breathing patterns? Lmk in the comments how often you check in with your breath and what you notice throughout the day with it.
0 likes • Dec '24
I think I've noticed a change in my normal state at social events. especially around the holiday with all the social energy and interactions that when I'm in conversations if I can take a 30 seconds to remind myself to take 3 great breaths while the other person is talking that it helps ground and relax me. My social introversion at work but be conscious of the breath is something to monitor, its a muscle that needs work and support.
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Darren Orloff
1
2points to level up
@darren-orloff-4618
"By replacing fear of the unknown with curiosity, we open ourselves up to an infinite stream of possibility." Alan Watts

Active 6d ago
Joined Oct 23, 2024
California
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