A recent walk took us past dozens of picnic tables leaning against each other — upright on their sides — to wait out winter.
When I lean physically, I have the sense of being off balance. Mentally it’s much the same:
- When I lean back mentally (dwell on the past), I’m not fully present.
- When I lean forward mentally (dwell on the future), I’m not fully present.
- When I lean into center — now — I’m in the present moment.
In Chinese calligraphy the word mindfulness is expressed by two characters: The top character (a shelter) represents the word now; below that is the character for heart. The literal translation means bringing the heart into the present.
Does your heart reside in the shelter of now?
© Laurie Buchanan
Find me on Twitter @TuesWithLaurie
Find me on Facebook
Credit: The Chinese symbol for mindfulness used in this post was created by Japanese-born calligrapher and writer Kazuaki Tanahashi.
Just learning about mindfulness – this is a great analogy for me to start with – thank-you, Laurie!
In My Corner — I’m glad this post resonated with you 🙂
(Stacey) and me too! Keep going!
This is beautiful Laurie and as I teach meditation 3 times a week, I will be sharing this special description of stillness and being present. Thankyou
Karen
Karen — I’m tickled pink that you’ll be able to share this in your meditation classes 🙂
Have a lovely afternoon and thank you for the reminder dear Laurie. 🙂
Nomzi – I always appreciate your presence in this space.
Likewise Laurie. I am so grateful that you are here. Keep shining. 🙂
So very true.Laurie.The chinese letters will serve as a good visual cue.I enjoy a magazine titled”Mindful”. website-www.mindful.org.
phone no-1-855-492-1675. Someone from this group might be interested.
One has to be always aware andreally practice this till this science becomes an atrform within oneself.
Roamer – Thank you for the magazine information, I appreciate it 🙂
What a beautiful text, Laurie. You got me thinking. I am trying to stay in the present but it’s sometimes a bit difficult, my mind takes me to the past and then I often dwell on the mistakes I’ve made, or in the future and then I wonder what will happen if I do this or if I do that. Then I miss wonderful things that are happening in this moment. So I’m trying to stay here and now, without those distractions. (I am really sorry for my bad English, it’s not my mother tongue).
Daria — Your English is perfect and I appreciate that you shared your comment. Thank you 🙂
I love how you think! I mostly try to stay centered and stay in the present, but you make me aware that I lean forward and backward a bit too much. 😳
Roughwighting — I’m so glad this post resonated with you 🙂
A bit of both. My past has made me who I am, so I don’t want to forget those who shaped me, even if they are not around any more I always carry them in my heart.
Fatimasaysell — Yes, indeed 🙂
Interesting photo, Laurie, and great reminder to stay in the present. Of course, as a historian, I do have to dwell in the past a bit. 🙂 Happy Tuesday!
Merril — As a historian, I highly respect your visits to the past, pulling it forward (so to speak) to help the rest of us see how it has shaped our present day 🙂
Awww, thanks so much, Laurie. That’s very kind. 🙂
Laurie, it doesn’t benefit me to rehash the past over and over, it doesn’t change a thing, with the exception of learning from mistakes made. I do visit the future on occasion to visualize where and how I would like to be someday. But the Present holds so much for me, I am afraid to take my eyes off of it for more than a minute lest it get away from me! Beautiful analogy.
Sandi – You hit the nail square on the head with the word, “visit.” You don’t “dwell” on the future, but visit on occasion. That’s the ticket!
Your question has called for a mind/heart correction today. Leaning backward or forward too far precedes a fall.
I like how you illustrated the problem/solution with the picnic tables and Chinese calligraphy. Once again, you have captured the essence of mindful living. Thank you for the encouragement to stay centered.
Marian — I love what you said, “Leaning backward or forward too far precedes a fall.” Discovering it the hard way, I know this to be true 🙂
I hope it does, at least I ask my heart to be in the shelter of now! But when I looked at the photo, I thought about us leaning on each other for shelter.
Tiny — I like the way your mind works! 🙂
I would hope the heart is never sheltered.
aFrankAngle — I appreciate and honor your perspective.
I am a great believer in mindfulness and try to use it on a day to day basis but I find it hard . Since living in Wales I have found a wonderful Pranic Breathing teacher …that keeps me in the present but when I get hone I’m doolally again . My Husband says ‘You pay good money to breath and it don’t do you a jot of good ‘ Men what do they know lol
Cherryx
Cherry — Oh my gosh, I’m cracking up this morning at “doolally” and your husband’s comment! 🙂
I try to stand straight, but there are those moments of weakness. . . Thank you for the gentle reminder.
Carol — Me too 🙂
Thank you for this.. very helpful on this day..xo
Pam — I’m so glad this was helpful, thank you for letting me know.
What a fabulous, succinct post, Laurie. Interestingly, I had just commented on another friends’ blog this morning about the beauty of being “in the moment.” It’s such a simple concept, yet one that is lost on so many of us as we’re distracted by social media, television, news — all those distractions of the past and future — instead of stopping and just BEING. I’m guilty of it, too. Such a terrific reminder.
Melissa — As you said, being in the moment a simple concept, yet hard to remember; and sometimes even harder to BE, because we so badly want to DO 🙂
I tend to be a little like a tall fir tree Laurie. I can lean in all directions a fair distance without falling over but none of these are stationary. In small or large circles I keep coming back to center and now. So I suppose the roof over my house is the sky – this is where my heart resides under the now.
Terrill — I love, Love, LOVE your beautiful response 🙂
❤ 🙂
Writersdream9 — So glad you stopped by 🙂
Beautifully put into words! A great reminder to keep yourself “centered” especially during the busy Holiday season and enjoy the moment you are in! Thank you! Tina
Tina — You bring up a wonderful point…not only to be in the moment, but to actually ENJOY it! 🙂
I’m sure you noticed, Laurie, that the top brush stroke of the Chinese calligraphy and the angle of the picnic tables bear a resemblance to each other.
You asked if my heart resides in the center of now. Having just returned from five days with grandchildren, I can answer, “Yes, I know this feeling, this place.” I don’t always know it, of course, but as I turn to an essay with a deadline, I hope to write it from my center to the world. Your post, as always, pulls me toward that center. Thank you.
Shirley — Five days with grandchildren sounds LUSCIOUS. I can well see how the heart-based energy of such a love-filled visit would pull one to center 🙂
Hi Laurie
I like the Buddhist idea of “big mind”, so that one is centred in the present, and extensive through space and time (aware and not overly focussed upon either the future or the past).
In this fashion one has the greatest amount of time both in terms of awareness of things coming and to choose the most appropriate actions in the present, and awareness of things past with time to learn the lessons present in those experiences, and always mindful of what is here and now.
So yes – most certainly centred in the now, and not to the exclusion of either the future or the past or any other aspect of the context of being.
Certainly there is pathology in either longing for futures without taking appropriate actions in the present, or in dwelling in the past without bringing forth the lessons from that past into the present.
Certainly one must be present to one’s own needs, and not to the exclusion of the needs of others.
Centred and expansive (in all dimensions on can conceive or appreciate)!
Ted — CENTERED and EXPANSIVE. Yes! I love what you said: “Most certainly centred in the now, and not to the exclusion of either the future or the past or any other aspect of the context of being.” Thank you for sharing the Buddhist idea of Big Mind here 🙂
Leaning is never a good idea. You’ll lose yourself in somebody else’s chaos. Being present in your own space will keep you on track.
Joan — Amen siSTAR! 🙂
Grateful for the reminder to be centered and in the here and now 🙂
Ann — I’m glad this post resonated with you 🙂
Thanks Laurie. It makes perfect sense although I hadn’t thought about it that way. I read a post this morning about the cognitive enhancement resulting from Mindfulness and now your post. Trying to live the present…a moment at a time. Have a lovely week.
Olga — Yes, indeed. One moment at a time 🙂
Laurie, my Blue Brain has loved being Orange and in the moment with our Thanksgiving holiday family celebration and promoting “Purr-fect Pals” A Kid, A Cat & Diabetes”. My yoga practice encourages me to stay in the moment and also the knowledge that I will be 70 years of age in February. Enjoying every moment at this stage of my personal and professional is a joyful blessing!
Sheila — Like you, my yoga practice is an integral part of learning to stay in the moment. CONGRATULATIONS on your new book! My hat is off to YOU! 🙂
Gosh… there’s a difficult question! I worry quite a lot as I get older. Does that mean I’m dwelling too much on the future? On a possible future. Perhaps not always a realistic one…
Ali — I don’t have the answer to your question, but I can tell you with certainty that the view from NOW is rather pleasant 🙂
Thanks Laurie!
Laurie — I’m afraid my heart is pulled in many directions: out west to my daughter in San Francisco, to eternity where my sister now lives, to the present where my darling granddaughter and my step-daughter keep me company, to the future where I hope to find some romantic love, to the past where I wish I had loved them all better . . .
Barbara — Thank you so much for sharing your poignant response.
I love this perspective Laurie! Thank you for asking the question.
When heart and mind are in the now there is real peace ❤
Val — I’m glad this post resonated with you. I agree with your equation: Heart + Mind in NOW = Real Peace 🙂
I always did like your posts. You are such a positive person.
Sometimes it’s a hard lesson to remember.
Marie — Yes, indeed.
My heart is certainly in the now as I have too much emotional investment to even think I should be bogged down with nostalgia, and I am a rather nostalgic person at that. I certainly do agree that the leaning either way can never lead to a soulful revelation. Lovely post Laurie!
Sam — I’m so glad you stopped by. I wanted to tell you again how much I’m enjoying your Caldecott Medal Contender series 🙂
Shelter: as long as it’s not a dark cave.
Carl — Agreed 🙂
presently working on emails and replies after 7 days off the computer – I am so relaxed and not leaning at all – Liangong also works on my balance as I repair the damage to my body after last years fall…
these words are a wonder full present
Patricia — So glad to hear you’ve been “unplugged” for a week and that you’re relaxed to the Max! 🙂
Well put, Laurie! Lean into center… 🙂
Amy — I’m glad it resonated with you 🙂
A great reminder about balance…!
Christy — I’m glad this post resonated with you 🙂
A lovely post. I look forward to reading more 🙂
Thanks also for visiting wordverseuniverse.
Beeholdn — Welcome to Tuesdays with Laurie 🙂
Love this. I guess the upshot of this is that your heart is protected in the moment–even when it feels like it is not. Going into the future and the past are often our fears fleeing from the moment.
Michael — I love your observation: “Going into the future and the past are often our fears feeling from the moment.”
my Latin motto for decades: memento mori, carpe diem et gaudeamus igitur! = remember you’ll die, live this very day and therefore, enjoy it to the fullest! 🙂 you may know Ronsard’s lines:“Take my advice and live now, do not wait until tomorrow! Pick up the roses of life this very day… time goes on, my Lady, alas! – not time, but we go away…” 🙂 (Pierre de Ronsard)
* * *
I love Chinese characters, too… 🙂
Melanie — I love your motto! And I enjoyed following the link you shared as well, thank you 🙂