meditation
To forgive is simply to give up hope of changing the past.
Jhourney
the purpose of jhana practice is to make it easier to be the people we aspire to be
Jhourney
learning to spot faster-than-thought mental habits, and relate to all of experience with wholehearted acceptance and appreciation
Jhourney
Given that emotions play such an essential part in our experience, even if some emotions might feel better than others, it is critical that we listen to all of them. At the most basic level, resisting emotions is resisting our own information processing: we just can’t be as effective or as smart as we could be without processing (read: embracing) o... See more
Jhourney
discovering the beauty in our so-called “negative” emotions
Jhourney
If all emotions can be embraced, there is much less to fear in life.
Jhourney
Memories are not static — whenever we recall a memory, it becomes temporarily modifiable, like opening a file on a computer to edit it. During this brief window of malleability, we have the opportunity to revise the emotional meanings and predictions we've attached to past experiences.
Jhourney
we might oversimplify by saying all approaches to therapy boil down to two things: get the brain into a more malleable state, and then update a maladaptive mental habit to be more useful in the future.
Jhourney
Our negative relationship with some emotions (e.g., sadness or anger) comes not from the emotion itself, but our resistance to feeling it.
A powerful way to check in with our emotions is by asking ourselves, “How much am I bracing vs how much am I embracing?” When we brace, we are resisting our experience. This resistance creates internal conflict ... See more
A powerful way to check in with our emotions is by asking ourselves, “How much am I bracing vs how much am I embracing?” When we brace, we are resisting our experience. This resistance creates internal conflict ... See more