Mondays Mindful Quote: Rumi | Mindfulness and Psychotherapy
August 10, 2009
Welcome to Mondays Mindful Quote. This is a new tradition at the Mindfulness and Psychotherapy Blog. Every Monday Im going to cite a quote or a poem that is related to mindfulness and psychotherapy in some way and then explore it a bit and how it is relevant to our lives. For me, quotes and poetry can often sink me into a state of greater understanding.
The breeze at dawn has secrets to tell you.
Dont go back to sleep.
You must ask for what you ...
really want.
Dont go back to sleep.
People are going back and forth across the door sill
Where the two worlds touch.
The door is round and open.
Dont go back to sleep.
With the beginning of the week comes an opportunity (which is really available to us at any moment) to recognize that we may be starting the week off from a place of auto-pilot, falling into the same old habitual styles of thinking and behavior that were really wanting to change. This might mean engaging in habits that dont serve your health and well-being (e.g., drinking/eating too much, isolating, too much TV) or with habitual ways of thinking (e.g., negative self talk).
Rumi reminds us that the breeze at dawn has secrets to tell you. Dont go back to sleep. This reminds us that right from the morning time, we can break out of our habitual tendencies and become present. We dont need to fall back into the same old, same old.
What is it that you really want? Re-mind yourself of it and dont go back to sleep.
However, he notes how it is very subtle, we touch the ability to change, going back and forth across the doorsill.
He reminds us that the doorsill is there, its round and open, deep down we can feel it and may have even tasted it.
Sometimes it takes a reminder like this, to put us into a place where we can see the doorsill, see the hope, to make a change. When we have the experience of making the change, this allows us to trust ourselves that we can indeed do it. Well still cross back and forth across the doorsill from time to time, but over time, with practice, well be more awake and cross over less and less.
Give yourself the gift of crossing the doorsill and not going back to sleep.
Please share your thoughts, stories, and questions below. Your interaction here provides a living wisdom for us all to benefit from. Elisha Goldstein, Ph.D.[21] is a Clinical Psychologist and conducts a private practice in West Los Angeles. He is co-author of A Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Workbook (New Harbinger, February 2010) Check out Dr. Goldstein's acclaimed CD's on Mindful Solutions for Stress, Anxiety and Depression, Addiction and Relapse Prevention, and Success and Stress Reduction at Work[22] -- "They are so relevant, I have marked them as one of my favorites on a handout I give to all new clients" ~ Psychiatrist. He also current has a FREE Mindful Companion EBook: Top Mindfulness Quotes and How They Can Support Your Mental Health[23]. If you're wanting an interactive program to find relief from anxiety and stress, check out Dr. Goldstein's progressive online behavioral change program[24] in Aliveworld. If you're wanting to integrate more mindfulness into your daily life, sign up for his Mindful Living Twitter Feed[25]. Dr. Goldstein is also available for private psychotherapy[26].
Elisha Goldstein, Ph.D.[40]
Mindful Solutions for Stress, Anxiety, and Depression[41]
CD's by Elisha Goldstein, Ph.D.
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