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The Mindfulness Initiative

(Mobile Friendly)

\

Jonathan C. Smith, PhDRoosevelt University

© Jonathan C. Smith, PhD

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AN EXPLOSION OF INTEREST IN MINDFULNESS

You can see it in the popular press . . .

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Even supermarket magazines on mindfulness

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EXPLOSION OF HYPE ONBENEFITS OF MINDFULNESS

Surf the web . . .

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SERIOUS RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS(Number of scientific publications on mindfulness

since 1920. Note explosion of interest in 2010, 2015, following brain studies on meditators.)

Number of Pubs

400039003800270036003500340033003200310030002900280027002600250024002300 x220021002000190018001700160015001400130012001100100090080070060050040030020010050

1920 1925 1930 1935 1940 1945 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015

© Jonathan C. Smith, PhD

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REVOLUTIONARY BRAIN RESEARCH

Mindfulness has a real impact on the brain. (Google for details)

General networks: Executive Network, Default Network, and Salience Network. Specific areas and structures: Left Prefrontal Cortex, the Cingulate, the Amygdala, and the Insula. Brain wave activity: generalized EEG Alpha activity, and localized Alpha dampening activity associated with pain and depression reduction. Gamma bursts.

From: Yi-Yuang, Tang, Holzel, B. K., Posner, M. I. (2015) The neuroscience of mindfulness meditation. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 16, 213-225

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RECOGNIZED BENEFITS

Psychological effects recognized by the American Psychological Association (which will grant

psychologists CE credits for learning):

GENERAL BENEFITS

1. Focus2. Reduced rumination3. Reduced stress4. Working memory / Mind wandering5. Metacognitive ability / Introspective ability6. Less emotional reactivity7. Cognitive flexibility8. Relationship satisfaction9. Health benefits

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BENEFITS FOR THERAPISTS

1. Increased Empathy2. Increased Compassion — nonjudging and nonreacting

3. Improved Counseling Skills ---

Mindfulness is incorporated in third wave cognitive behavior therapy programs such as Dialectical Behavior Therapy and Act and Commitment Therapy.

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THE ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITYMINDFULNESS INITIATIVE

(Formerly the “Stress Institute”)

Goals1. Basic and applied research on mindfulness from a broad and inclusive non-Buddhist perspective2. Classroom and online training for students wishing to incorporate mindfulness into cognitive and problem-solving stress management. Core texts:

What it is not.1. Not Buddhism2. Not training in specific therapeutic strategies3. Not intensive personal intensive training

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DEFINITION OF MINDFULNESS

FOCUSSustain attention on a restricted

stimulus

ACCEPT

Accept without pursuit (elaborative thought) or judgment of

distraction and mind wandering.

Mindfulness is Sustained simple, easy focus without unnecessary thought.

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OUR APPOACH,OTHER APPROACHES

Most mindfulness-based therapies like Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) elaborate upon the acceptance component. Actually, this is the easiest task, perhaps achieved through tutoring, education, and homework assignments.

Developing the skill of simple, sustained, easy focus is more difficult. People find it frustrating and drop out of programs. Probably takes more than a month of daily practice. Maybe much more. We don’t know.

We focus on both elements, with an emphasis on training the skill of sustaining focus and exploring: deeper relaxation, positive affective experience, proto-transcendent experiences, and transcendent experiences. (Later)

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OUR TRAINING MODEL IN A NUTSHELL

1. We start, and always return to a core set of standard mindfulness exercises, the “Eye of Mindfulness.” This is our “Home Base.”

2. We explore a broad range of complementary exercises that have mindfulness as the central component, the “Galaxy of Mindfulness Companion Exercises.” The serve as warmup and followup exercises that prepare for mindfulness and extend and apply the effects of mindfulness beyond the core practice session

3. Our goal is to explore, experiment, and develop personalized programs.

4. We use the M-Tracker, a simple post- exercise checklist, to sensitize trainees to effects and help compare and combine strategies.

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TRADITIONAL / CASUAL TERMINOLOGY

Traditional and popular presentations differentiate two global types of meditation or “mindfulness” (often blurring the distinction between the two). Concentrative meditation selects a simple restricted target stimulus like a special sound or word (a mantra). Examples include Transcendental Meditation and Christian Centering Prayer. Additional examples can be found in virtually every religion and outside of religion in secular contexts. Traditional “mindfulness” includes exercises that have no restricted target focus, but instead involve directing attention to all stimuli that come and go, even distractions.

Today, experts no longer use these terms, and refer to Focused Attention (FA) meditation and Open Monitoring (OM) meditation. This new terminology is standard among serious students. It is central to our conceptualization, the “Eye of Mindfulness.”

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THE EYE OF MINDFULNESS

Four Central ExercisesTaught in virtually all mindfulness programs

1. FA (Focused Attention) MeditationFAs (somatic focus, body and breath)FAc (cognitive focus, mantra)All involve restricting attention to a single simple stimulus

2. OM (Open Monitoring) MeditationRestricted Mindfulness (like on sounds)Pure MindfulnessInvolves opening attention to all stimuli

3. Breath Scanning4. Body Scanning

Virtually all schools of “mindfulness” blend these.The current popular metaphor among scholars is a camera lens. Meditation is like a lens. Meditation can have a narrow or wide focus or “aperture” (FA, OM). Or a roaming focus, moving from one target to another (breath, body scanning).

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These 4 form my “Eye of Mindfulness”

CLICK HERE FOR EYE OF MINDFULNESS INTRODUCTORY EXERCISE

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THE GALAXY OF COMPANION “WARMUP/FOLLOWUP” EXERCISES

Popular warmup and followup exercises that:

1. Have a mindfulness component2. Make mindfulness easier with additional “support activities”

Example: Hatha yoga is: Stretching focus (mindfulness) supported and enhanced by continuously interesting and relaxing stretches.

3. All are mindfulness “warmup” or “followup” exercises that prepare for practice and extend the benefits of practice beyond the practice session.

4. We divide companion exercises into two groups: physical, and cognitive/emotional. Physical exercises (yoga, muscle relaxation, breathing, autogenics) prepare the body for mindful focus and acceptance, reduce body-based distraction, and offer an opportunity

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to expand mindfulness into physical experience.

Cognitive/emotional exercises (deepening imagery, contemplation, loving-kindness, gratitude exercises, journaling and secular interactive “prayer” enable the development and exploration person-focused nondogmatic beliefs, values, and commitments that form the context of mindfulness practice. They enable one to answer such questions as “why” and “where am I going?” They provide richness, depth, and meaning to physical and simple focusing exercises that can when practiced in isolation devolve into mechanical health chores.

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THE MINDFULNESS GALAXY

Central core of “Eye of Mindfulness” plusBody-Based and

Emotion-Based Cognitive Approaches

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MINDFULNESS CYCLING

Our approach is based on experimentation and exploration, grounded in core “eye of mindfulness” practice. Specifically, we teach mindfulness cycling. Here one begins by learning and selecting a preferred mindfulness exercise from the eye of mindfulness options (scanning, FA meditation, OM meditation). This becomes one’s core “home base” exercise. Throughout training the practitioner ventures forth and explores a complementary approach from the galaxy of complementary approaches. However, one systematically returns to their core eye of mindfulness exercise, the home base of practice. Through cycling, one tries again and again a wide range of complementary approaches, learning what each has to offer, and continuing practice with those that prove to be

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useful. One always returns to home base, the eye of mindfulness. Cycling provides the trainee with a rich repertoire of warmup and followup strategies to enhance mindfulness.

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CORE TRAINING TOOL:The M-Tracker (take after practicing an exercise)

WHAT DID YOU FEEL OR EXPERIENCE IN THIS SESSION? CHECK CIRCLES USING THIS KEY (SKIP ITEMS YOU DID NOT FEEL OR EXPERIENCE)

Felt this SLIGHTLY Felt this MODERATELY Felt this VERY MUCH Felt this EXTREMELY (most ever)

SKIP ITEMS YOU DID NOT FEEL OR EXPERIENCE

1. I felt FAR AWAY FROM MY CARES and the TROUBLES AROUND ME. 2. My MUSCLES felt RELAXED, loose, limp, warm and heavy. 3. My BREATHING was RELAXED, slow, even, and easy. 4. I felt AT EASE, AT PEACE, refreshed. 5. I was experiencing pleasant MIND WANDERING. 6. I felt lost in FANTASY and DAYDREAMING.

7. I felt FOCUSED 8. Things seemed CLEAR, vivid, intense. 9. I felt CENTERED, absorbed, grounded.

10. Things felt UNEXPECTED, new, different, interesting. 11. I felt a sense of GOING DEEPER. 12. I felt things are changing, OPENING UP, being revealed.

13. My mind was QUIET, still, few thoughts. 14. I felt ACCEPTING of what I can’t have or change. 15. It felt EASY to stay on task. What was doing felt EFFORTLESS. 16. I’ was NOT EXPERIENCING MUCH MIND WANDERING. I stayed focused 17. I was NOT BOTHERED by possible disturbances. They weren’t important.

18. I felt like a QUIET OBSERVER like I was standing aside and watching uninvolved. 19. I simply WATCHED WHAT CAME AND WENT, not reacting or getting stirred up.

20. I felt HAPPY, OPTIMISTIC, TRUSTING. 21. I felt LOVING, CARING. 22. I felt THANKFUL, GRATEFUL.

23. I felt a sense of MEANING, PURPOSE, DIRECTION. 24. I felt a sense of something GREATER OR LARGER THAN ME.

SPECIAL ITEMS (RARE STATES AND FEELINGS NOT OFTEN REPORTED)

Did you have a profound, personal meaningful spiritual or “mystical” experience – that is, a moment of sudden spiritual awakening or insight, like those below? Please rate the following. SKIP ITEMS YOU DID NOT FEEL OR EXPERIENCE

25. I felt a DEEP UNDERSTANDING of the mysteries of the universe. 26. I was struck with AWE / WONDER, DEEP MYSTERY beyond my understanding. 27. I felt REVERENT, SELFLESS, PRAYERFUL. 28. I felt TIMELESS, BOUNDLESS, INFINITE, AT ONE. 29. My experience was so profound it COULD NOT BE PUT INTO WORDS.

© Jonathan C. Smith, PhD

HOW WE USE THE M-TRACKER

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1. Complete it after every exercise2. Sensitizes one to hidden effects3. Slowly trains one to articulate different aspects of mindfulness (providing a lexicon of mindfulness. . . like students in music or cooking gradually learn to differentiate types of music or cuisine by learning the lexicon of music or cuisine)4. Helps one identify what approaches work best and which can be combined.

The M-Tracker: Based on 3 Decades of Research on over 6000 reports from individuals exploring a wide range of practices.13 publications, 20 books. (More later . . . )

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SPECIFIC TRAINING OBJECTIVES

1. Always return to pure mindfulness, the Eye of Mindfulness. All paths lead to mindfulness. The final goal is simple awareness of the world as it is.

2.Reduce frustration, boredom, and dropout by making training continually interesting and rewarding, individualizing exercises from the Eye of Mindfulness and Mindfulness Galaxy menu of strategy.

3.Maintain curiosity and interest through diversity and exploration (“curiosity” is a core mindfulness emotion).

4.Teach skill components of mindfulness through different complementary “galaxy” exercises

5.Different parts of the Eye of Mindfulness work for different people. Different complementary approaches work for different people. Explore, Individualize, and combine. Use complementary exercises as warmups and followups.

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6.Articulate personal beliefs, values, and commitments that form the basis of mindfulness.

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COURSES

The Department of Psychology offers two mindfulness courses: Psychology 203 (Coping with Stress) and Psychology 373/473 (Relaxation and Mindfulness).

PSYC 203 Coping with Stress is primary a self-help course that integrates mindfulness with active coping techniques (assertiveness, problem-solving, anger management, negotiation, procrastination training, time management) and cognitive behavioral techniques for dealing with negative thinking. The mindfulness cycling approach is applied. After a coping strategy is applied, students return to practice mindfulness or a companion exercise (yoga, breathing, progressive muscle relaxation, autogenics, imagery, loving kindness meditation). Not a substitute for counseling or therapy. Coping with Stress is popular among non psychology majors and those just starting college. It follows the text, Stress, Coping, and the Eye of Mindfulness.

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PSYC 373/473 Relaxation and Mindfulness presents the latest in mindfulness theory and research and includes the Eye of Mindfulness and the full array of companion disciplines. It follows the text, Mindfulness Reinvented and the M-Tracker Method. This course is popular among advanced undergraduates in psychology and MA students in clinical, counseling, and industrial psychology. MA and Doctoral students can take Relaxation and Mindfulness (Psyc 473) as an elective.

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RESEARCH INITIATIVE

1. Development of M-Tracker. Reliability and Validity.

2. Different effects of different core Eye of Mindfulness Approaches, complementary exercises, and combinations.

3. Prevalence of M-Tracker states in everyday life.

4. Ways of enhancing compliance and interest in training

5. Ways of enhancing generalization of M- Tracker states in everyday life.

Currently, researchers from over a half dozen countries from around the world are using the M-Tracker to investigate meditation, mindfulness, and relaxation.

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EIGHT FACETS OF MINDFULNESSTHE M-TRACKER

Mindfulness consists of 8 dimensions of experience, identified by our research on over 6000 practitioners of diverse approaches and new neurological approaches. These dimensions are embodied in the M-Tracker.

Smith, J. C. (2016) Mindfulness Reinvented and the M-Tracker Method (Second Edition). Create Space

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8 Facets of Mindfulness in theM-Tracker (Core Dimensions highlighted)

DIMENSION 1. BASIC RELAXATION

1. I felt FAR AWAY FROM MY CARES and the TROUBLES AROUND ME.2. My MUSCLES felt RELAXED, loose, limp, warm and heavy.3. My BREATHING was RELAXED, slow, even, and easy.4. I felt AT EASE, AT PEACE, refreshed.5. I was experiencing pleasant MIND WANDERING.6. I felt lost in FANTASY and DAYDREAMING.

DIMENSION 2. MINDFUL FOCUS

7. I felt FOCUSED 8. Things seemed CLEAR, vivid, intense.9. I felt CENTERED, absorbed, grounded.

DIMENSION 3. MINDFUL OPENING

10. Things felt UNEXPECTED, new, different, interesting.11. I felt a sense of GOING DEEPER. 12. I felt things are changing, OPENING UP, being revealed.

DIMENSION 4. MINDFUL ACCEPTANCE AND QUIET (“DEREIFICATION”)

13. My mind was QUIET, still, few thoughts.14. I felt ACCEPTING of what I can’t have or change.15. It felt EASY to stay on task. What was doing felt EFFORTLESS.16. I’ was NOT EXPERIENCING MUCH MIND WANDERING. I stayed focused17. I was NOT BOTHERED by possible disturbances. They weren’t important.

DIMENSION 5. MINDFUL “META-AWARENESS”

18. I felt like a QUIET OBSERVER like I was standing aside and watching uninvolved.19. I simply WATCHED WHAT CAME AND WENT, not reacting or getting stirred up.

DIMENSION 6. MINDFUL POSITIVE EMOTION

20. I felt HAPPY, OPTIMISTIC, TRUSTING.21. I felt LOVING, CARING.22. I felt THANKFUL, GRATEFUL.

DIMENSION 7. MINDFUL PROTO-TRANSCENDENT EXPERIENCES

23. I felt a sense of MEANING, PURPOSE, DIRECTION.24. I felt a sense of something GREATER OR LARGER THAN ME.

DIMENSION 8. MINDFUL TRANSCENDENT EXPERIENCES

25. I felt a DEEP UNDERSTANDING of the mysteries of the universe. 26. I was struck with AWE / WONDER, DEEP MYSTERY beyond my understanding. 27. I felt REVERENT, SELFLESS, PRAYERFUL. 28. I felt TIMELESS, BOUNDLESS, INFINITE, AT ONE. 29. My experience was so profound it COULD NOT BE PUT INTO WORDS.

© Jonathan C. Smith, PhD

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M-Tracker Mini (for workshop demonstrations)

TO WHAT EXTENT DID YOU FEEL OR EXPERIENCEEACH OF THE FOLLOWING IN THIS SESSION?

CHECK SQUARES USING THIS KEY

NOT AT ALL Felt this SLIGHTLY Felt this MODERATELY Felt this VERY MUCH Felt this EXTREMELY (most ever)

1. I felt FAR AWAY FROM MY CARES and the TROUBLES AROUND ME. 2. My MUSCLES felt RELAXED, loose, limp, warm and heavy. 3. My BREATHING was RELAXED, slow, even, and easy. 4. I felt AT EASE, AT PEACE, refreshed. 5. I felt FOCUSED 6. Things seemed CLEAR, vivid, intense. 7. I felt CENTERED, absorbed, grounded. 8. My mind was QUIET, still, few thoughts. 9. I felt ACCEPTING of what I can’t have or change. 10. I felt HAPPY, OPTIMISTIC, TRUSTING. 11. I had deeper feelings (AWE/WONDER, REVERENT/PRAYERFUL)

© 2016, Jonathan C. Smith, PhD blogs.roosevelt.edu/jsmith

M-TRACKER RESEARCH

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We invite students and scholars to use the M-Tracker and our cycling method in research (M-Tracker information is available in the core text, Mindfulness Reinvented and the M-Tracker Method: Second Edition).

One warning. Researchers are often tempted to subject the M-Tracker to factor analysis in an attempt to simplify variables. This is risky. It is particularly ill-advised to attempt validation by giving the instrument to students in a classroom setting. This will yield an uninformative and undifferentiated factor solution, especially if respondents are not seasoned practitioners. Analogously, it would be meaningless to factor analyze the lexicon of descriptors of various types of oriental cuisine to individuals who’s culinary experience is limited to hamburgers. Note that each item on the M-Tracker reflects either a factor identified in previous research or a dimension clearly suggested by practice manuals or brain imaging studies.

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MATERIAL FOR THIS PRESENTATION IS FROM OUR CORE REFERENCE:

Mindfulness Reinvented and the M-Tracker Method: Second EditionJonathan C. Smith PhD

282 pagesISBN-13: 978-1519618313ISBN-10: 151961831X This revolutionary new approach to an ancient discipline uses to mindfulness to integrate a full spectrum of widely used relaxation, meditation, and relaxation exercises. A professional text for teachers and scholars. Appropriate for those new to mindfulness or individuals desiring to revive their practice. Includes core mindfulness exercises, premindfulness booster exercises, and exercises for extending mindfulness into life. Also included are transcripts for making audio recordings, tests, and checklists for assessing progress. Complementary companion exercises include:mindful yoga, mindful breathing, mindful progressive muscle relaxation, mindful autogenics, and mindful deepening imagery. Included: The M-Tracker 7 Inventory, a new and validated tool for teaching and assessing training.

To purchase direct: https://www.createspace.com/5907751Available on amazon.com