Slowing down
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Slowing Doooown / Savoring Stillness
- Lingering, savoring
- Value of community and wellbeing
- While the culture may not be as efficient, it can be slower
- You need less and you want less
- How do I become an anchor in stillness without retrofitting?
- There are moments where you have to be very productive
- Geographical differences
- Have I done enough? How do I feel?
- The things people can’t see
- Interacting with healthcare systems may conflict with timeliness of moment
- Finding lightweight ways to get into meditating
- Have to “flop” and “sweat the stuff out”
- Being driven by dopamine vs. serotonin
- Looking at your email = dopamine hit
- Longer-term lets you pause
- Our bodies are systems and we can build your capacity and resilience
- Having things to look forward to and appreciating the little changes around you
- Self-care gets morphed into capitalism (example: manicures)
- Shift to domestic care: people don’t have to prove anything
- Difficult to do until you imagine someone else
- Think of how you deserve that care
- Having the “suck it up” baked into being
- Taking the day to just feel emotions (example: feeling sad)
- Walking from the bed to the couch: feeling like it’s enough?
- Realizing strength in being alone
- Assessing energy levels and honoring them
- Desire to be done with tasks very fast leads to not taking rest
- Discomfort in breaking established cycles
- Offering retirement transitions
- Pressure of feeling failure based on societal and/or cultural norms
- Even if you are infinite, it still wouldn’t be enough hours to get everything done in 24 hours
- Modeling sustainable activism for a younger generation
- Things are human with everyone all of the time
- Realizing how we show up for each other
- Navigating small talk through humor
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Things we find rejuvenating:
- Sitting side-by-side
- Different energy levels (introverts and extroverts)
- Recess for adults
- Rational Dharma (book)
- Focus: how do you have the contemplative practice of calming your body down in an urban setting?
- Having things to look forward to (example: a bath)
- Lymphatic self-massage (get back in touch with your body)
- Spirituality: listening to ancestors (connections we might have locked away)
- Savoring chocolate
- Make it a competition with yourself to engage your senses (slow tasting)
- Inside Out (movie)
- Between Two Kingdoms
- Being in the kingdom of the sick or the kingdom of the living
- Placing consciousness into other objects
- Time for contemplation
- EFT (Tapping)
- Spiritual music or high vibrational music
- The Joy of Missing Out
- Looking at nature and seeing how it works / being in nature
- Finding hobbies to enjoy
- Positive deviance: paying attention to people who are doing okay versus vast majority of people
- Create a challenge: putting your phone away while traveling in order to interact with others
- What are ways you can “unautomate” your life to interact with people in your community?
- Observe ways to connect with others
- Small talk with Jessica St. Clair and Casey Wilson