Mostrando postagens com marcador Zen. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Zen. Mostrar todas as postagens

1 de jan. de 2017

Esvazie sua xícara

Prometi que irei publicar alguns dos exercícios do livro "Liminal Thinking", um dos melhores que li nos últimos 5 anos.

O sub-título do livro é "crie a mudança que você quer mudando a forma como você pensa." E para fazer isso, precisamos rever nossos preconceitos, julgamentos, ideias fixas sobre o mundo e sobre as pessoas. Por mais que algumas destas ideias sejam construtivas, temos também muitas ideias limitantes sobre nós e sobre tudo o que nos cerca. Crenças que nos impedem de ser o nosso melhor e de enxergar o melhor nos outros ou de entender plenamente por que os outros agem de certa forma.

Para acessar meu comentário sobre o livro, clique aqui.

Este exercício se chama "esvazie sua xícara", por causa desta história:

"Certa vez um professor foi visitar um mestre para aprender sobre Zen Budismo. O mestre colocou chá até que a xícara do professor estivesse cheia e depois continuou colocando mais chá. O professor assistiu a cena até que não conseguiu se conter.

'A xícara está cheia!' disse o professor. 'Não cabe mais chá!'

'Como esta xícara', disse o mestre, 'sua mente está cheia de ideias e opiniões. Como posso te ensinar o Zen a menos que você primeiro esvazie sua xícara?'"



Exercício "Esvazie sua xícara"

Passe um tempo com alguém e tente escutá-lo (a) como se você estivesse escutando pela primeira vez. Esvazie sua xícara de todas as teorias e julgamentos que você tem sobre aquela pessoa. Deixei seu ego completamente de fora desta conversação. Escute apenas com um objetivo: escutar. Veja o que acontece.

2 de set. de 2016

10 passos para você se ajudar nesta jornada chamada VIDA


Mais um lindo post de um dos meus sites favoritos: Zen Habits.

O mais importante é o momento presente. Isso é o que de fato importa.



Self-Help List


1. Say thank you to everything and everyone, even to your grief and those who frustrate you.

2. Ask how you want to use this gift of a day.

3. See this moment as the most important moment in the world, and don’t wait to be happy.

4. Do every task out of love for someone else, and yourself.

5. To make better habits, put everything you have into small steps. And ask for help.

6. Travel lighter, pack fewer fears.

7. Overcome procrastination by sitting with one task, not letting yourself run from discomfort.

8. One thing at a time.

9. See discomfort as no big deal.

10. Ask yourself how you want to spend your one wild and precious life.

7 de fev. de 2016

Apenas respire


Toda vez que vejo o mar fico surpreso.

A força incessante das ondas numa praia parece a respiração do planeta. Faça dia, faça noite, as ondas estão lá.

Há algum de sublime, espiritual neste movimento das ondas. Esta quantidade imensa de energia que vem do coração do planeta não pode ser algo explicado somente pela Física.

Nossa respiração também é incessante, também contém uma energia espiritual, a energia da vida.

Não é a toa que as principais técnicas de meditação consistem em prestar à atenção em nossa respiração...

E você, já prestou a atenção na sua respiração hoje?

Um texto do site Zen Habits fala exatamente disso.

15 de dez. de 2015

Quem nunca se preocupou com a opinião do outro?


Gosto muito do Leo Babauta. Ele é o autor do blog zenhabits.net

Neste post ele aborda uma preocupação comum de todos nós: o que os outros vão achar de mim?

Meu trecho preferido (bem em linha com os ensinamentos do livro "O Poder do Agora"):

So what can we do?

We can be aware of these anxieties as they come up. We can realize that the anxieties aren’t a command but rather just something that arises, like clouds coming over a mountain. They’ll pass, float away, if we just watch them without too much attachment.




Constantly Worried About How Others Perceive Us

BY LEO BABAUTA

If someone tells you that they don’t care what other people think, they are fooling themselves.

None of us are free from this worry.

Everyone is trying to look good in the eyes of others. Everyone stresses out about how they look, how they’re perceived, whether people think they’re awesome or good people. It’s why Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, blogs and mirrors exist.

Unfortunately, this constant worry about how we’re perceived in the eyes of others can cause us to struggle. We worry about having the right clothes, about how our bodies look, how our hair looks (or the lack of hair, in my case), whether people will laugh at our writing, whether someone will “like” our photos or posts. This takes up so much mental energy.

We can’t just completely forget about it — it’s not in our human nature. We can tell ourselves that “other people’s opinions don’t matter” or “no one is really thinking about us” but it won’t stop our brains from worrying about it.

So what can we do?

We can be aware of these anxieties as they come up. We can realize that the anxieties aren’t a command but rather just something that arises, like clouds coming over a mountain. They’ll pass, float away, if we just watch them without too much attachment.

Then we can go below these anxieties and see our basic goodness underneath. We are good people, with good hearts, and we just want to be loved and appreciated. We worry about not being loved, we worry about being judged, and these are very human worries. We are good, underneath it all.

I encourage you to take a minute right now to contemplate this.

Get to know this goodness in yourself. It is always there, and you can tap into it when the worries come up.

Because no matter what other people think of you, you’ll know that this goodness is there.

6 de mar. de 2014

1 Mês sem Celular

Sempre me fascino por estas experiências que nos tiram da zona de conforto e ao mesmo tempo nos ajudam a retomar nossa HUMANIDADE.

Leo Babauta ficou 1 mês sem celular. No relato a seguir ele conta o quão desafiadora foi esta experiência nos primeiros 4-5 dias. Depois deste período ele percebeu que viver sem celular ajudava muito a se reconectar com os outros e a viver no momento presente.

Desconectar do mundo virtual para se conectar no real. Vamos praticar?

My Month Without a Smartphone

In February, I went (almost) completely without my iPhone. I thought it would be hard, and it was at first, but it turned out to be one of the best changes I’ve made in my Year of Living Without.
I highly recommend periods of no cellphone: for disconnectedness, quietness, and full attention to people you’re with and your thoughts and your surroundings.
It wasn’t easy at first. Having a smartphone everywhere you go (which I purposely didn’t have until last summer) creates mental habits — checking things constantly, sending messages, looking things up immediately when a thought pops into your mind, doing something. I suffered withdrawal for a few days, when I would want to reach for my phone constantly every time I was out of the house, and sometimes even in the house.
I was missing out on emails from colleagues and Snapchats from my kids. I couldn’t book something immediately, make a reservation, look up a need-to-know-now fact. I couldn’t read on the train. I couldn’t tell what time it was — this was a big one, as I don’t have a watch and use my phone to tell time, and I realized I’m always worried I’m late!
I watched these urges, and found them interesting. The best thing to do with urges is to be curious. So on trains, on walks, in a tea shop, I’d just watch my urges with curiosity. How did I get like this?
But then I accepted my new reality, after about 4-5 days. I just knew that I wasn’t going to be checking things, reading, looking things up, doing tasks, when I was out of the house. I knew that this was going to be disconnected, quiet, mindful time. This was my reality, and it wasn’t bad at all. In fact, I grew to like it.
My world didn’t fall apart because I wasn’t productive every second of the day, and wasn’t on top of every message instantly. I actually survived not immediately knowing exactly where Crimea was or who won the Oscars last year. Shocking, I know.
I meditated as I walked outside, and sat on a train, or waited in line. I was actually aware of the present moment, much more often than usual.
When our lives are always connected, being disconnected can be a relief. This was my experience in February. For the first few days of March, I continued the habit. Yesterday, for what seemed like a good reason, I brought my phone on an errand … and all of a sudden my old habits came back.
I think I’ll leave my phone at home most of the time now.
What’s next? This month I’m doing no alcohol. What that means is no glass of red wine with Eva every night. I thought it wouldn’t be too hard, because I did more than a month without alcohol last year. But the first few days have shown me a few surprisingly strong urges to have a few sips of wine. I’m OK with the urges — I see them as a part of myself I’m learning about, with curiosity.

1 de mar. de 2014

12 Sintomas de um Possível Despertar



Por J. Krishnamurti:

1. Uma tendência crescente de deixar as coisas acontecerem ao invés de tentar controlá-las;
2. Ataques frequentes de alegria, sorrisos sem explicação e explosões de risos a qualquer momento;
3. Sensações de estar intimamente conectado aos outros e à natureza;
4. Episódios frequentes de apreciação e admiração com coisas simples;
5. Uma tendência de pensar e agir espontaneamente, no lugar do medo baseado na experiência passada;
6. Uma nítida habilidade de curtir cada momento;
7. Uma perda da habilidade de se preocupar;
8. Uma perda do desejo por conflito;
9. Uma perda de interesse por tomar as coisas como pessoais;
10. Uma perda de apetite em julgar o outro;
11. Uma perda de interesse em julgar a si mesmo;
12. Uma inclinação em dar sem esperar nada em troca.

8 de jul. de 2013

10 pensadores que você precisa conhecer


Acredito que ninguém cria algo novo do zero. Sempre há alguma influência de teorias prévias ou da experiência de vida.

Encontrar conteúdo hoje em dia não é mais um problema. O desafio continua a ser encontrar o pensamento que vai contra a maré do senso comum e da superficialidade.

Se você se interessa por gestão de pessoas, motivação, inovação, felicidade ou até espiritualidade irá se beneficiar pelo contato com estes autores. Eles formam a base de grande parte do que acredito e guia meu trabalho neste blog e fora dele.


27 de out. de 2012

Uma visão budista sobre o emprego

"O conceito de emprego aparece com a revolução industrial, a automatização e a eficiência da produção. O conceito de postos de trabalho é uma construção humana artificial, dela surge a noção de desemprego e suas derivações. Nossa existência humana necessita de inclusão social, mas ver o emprego como a única forma de inclusão social é uma grave limitação.
No sentido budista, a inclusão social ocorre quando ocupamos um espaço útil dentro da coletividade humana, o que não precisa se dar por intermédio de um emprego."



Lama Padma Samten

O Lama e o Economista, 2004. Editora Rima


O quanto você e sua organização estão sendo úteis para a coletividade?

Se sua empresa deixar de existir, que falta fará à sociedade?

Quais talentos você dispõe e como colocá-los em prática para atender melhor seus clientes internos e externos?

29 de set. de 2012

Encontrando Paz na Incerteza


Gosto muito do Zen Habits. É um dos melhores blogs que conheço.

De vez em quando encontro pérolas por lá como esta.

O autor fala sobre um tema, um desafio para todo Ser Humano adulto: como conviver com as incertezas da vida e encontrar a paz.


Finding Peace with Uncertainty

Post written by Leo Babauta.


Fear of an uncertain future: it can stop us from doing great things, and it can keep us holding onto things that are hurting us.

For example: you might be holding onto clutter for reasons of comfort and security, even if the clutter gives you anxiety and costs a lot of money.

And: you might be staying in a job you don’t like, because you’re afraid of taking the plunge, because you’re afraid of failing.

And again: you might not travel to a country that feels very unfamiliar because you don’t know what will happen — and miss out on an amazing life-changing experience.

This is just the start of how fear of an uncertain future affects our lives.

A reader recently asked “how to be at peace with uncertainty, how to let go of fear of the future.” It’s a great question, because we all deal with this fear. All of us.

What’s Going On Here

Where does this fear of uncertainty and the future come from? It might seem like a silly question, but if you think about it, there’s nothing inherently scary about the future, even if you don’t know what’s going to happen. It’s not more likely to be painful or disastrous than the present already is — it just seems that way.

Think about it: the odds of you getting into a car accident is not greater tomorrow than it is today. The odds of anything bad happening are not greater next week than they were this week. The odds of something great happening are also just as great next month as they were this month.

So why is it scary? Why is not knowing so scary? If you roll a dice and don’t know what it will be, is that scary? No, it’s not the “not knowing” that’s the problem … it’s the possibility that what comes up on that dice will bring us pain, suffering, loss.

And this imagined pain isn’t physical pain (most of the time we’re not fearing physical injury) … it’s the pain of loss and change. We are comfortable in this cocoon we’ve built up around ourselves — these routines and possessions and people we know and places that are familiar and safe. Losing this comforting environment, and going into a place where we’re vulnerable and might fail, might not be good enough, is painful and scary.

We grasp, clinging to this comfortable idea of how things should be, and of course it will change, and we will feel the pain of that change.

The change itself isn’t the problem — it’s fighting the change, fearing the change, not wanting things to be different.

How to Get Good at Uncertainty

And so we see that the answer is becoming good at change. If we are good at dealing with new things, with things as they come no matter how different they are, then we don’t fear it. Then change itself becomes comfortable.

If we become comfortable with change, it’s not scary. We can then embrace it, find joy in it. You can see this in people who we call “adventurous” — they seek new experiences, because they know they’ll be fine, and that it can be amazing. (Note that this is different than the “adventure-seeker” types who have turned excitement into their form of comfort — when the excitement is taken away, then they feel the pain and loss of this change.)

So how do we get good at change? Some suggestions that are working for me (I’m still learning):

Try something new, but small and safe. New things can be scary because we’re afraid we’re going to fall on our faces. But if it’s something small — learning to juggle beanbags in our living room, learning to balance on a rope that’s close to the ground, listening to a language-learning podcast, for example — it’s not as scary. There’s no real risk of getting hurt. And the more we do this, in small, non-scary steps, the more confidence we’ll gain that new things are not painful.

When you mess up, don’t see it as painful failure. When you’re doing new things, there will be times when you make mistakes, mess up, “fail”. But these words are associated with negative things, like pain … instead, start to look at mistakes and “messing up” as something positive — it’s the only way to learn. Messing up is a way to get better at something, to grow, to get stronger.

See the wonder and opportunity in change. Change might mean leaving a comfort zone, and losing something (or someone) you love, but there’s much more: it’s the bringing of something new and amazing, a new opportunity to explore and learn and meet new people and reinvent yourself. When change happens, look for the wonder in it, the new doors that have opened.

Ask “what’s the worst-case scenario”? If you’re exposing yourself, getting out of your comfortable environment, leaving behind security … it can be scary, but when you think about what is the worst thing that is likely to happen, usually it’s not that bad. If you lost all your possessions today in a disaster, how bad would that be? How would you cope? What opportunities would there be? What new things could you invent from this blank slate?

Develop a change toolset. Learn how to cope with changes, no matter what they are. Have a fall-back plan if things collapse. Have friends and family you can call on. Develop some skills where you can get a job or start a new business no matter what happens with your current job or the economy. Learn ways of making friends with strangers, finding your way around a strange city, surviving on little. With a toolset like this, you can feel confident that you can handle just about anything that comes.

Become aware of your clinging. Watch yourself clinging to something when you feel fear and pain. What are you clinging to? Often it’s just an idea — the idea of you and a romantic partner, an image of who you are. 
Become aware of what’s going on. 

See the downsides of clinging. Once you see your clinging more clearly, see the pain that results from it. If you’re clinging to your stuff, see the space it takes up, and the extra rent that costs you … see the mental energy it takes to live with all the stuff, the money you’ve spent on it, the lack of space you have to live. Anything you cling to has a downside — we only see the good side of it, and so we want to cling to it.

Experience the joy in the unknown. When something new happens, when you don’t know — we often see this as bad. But can we re-frame it so that it’s something joyful? Not knowing means we are free — the possibilities are limitless. We can invent a new path, a new identity, a new existence. This can be joyful.

Flowing With the Unknown

When I moved with my wife and six kids to San Francisco in 2010, it was a scary thing for us. Eva and the kids were especially scared, because we were leaving behind everything comfortable and going to a place where we had much less of a safety net, and didn’t know anything. It was scary for me, because I was responsible for these young lives, and had no idea if I could make it.

And yet, I also saw the joy in this new venture, and tried to frame it to Eva and the kids as an adventure. With this spirit, we embraced this scary unknown. We didn’t know where we’d live, or how we’d get around, or what beds we’d sleep on. And yet, we survived — we found a place to live, and explored this new city, and found our way around. We took the changes as they came, and flowed with the new landscape of life that we discovered upon arrival.

This has been a recurring theme for me: I constantly dive into unknown waters:

That’s just the start of it, but as I’ve learned to embrace change, to become confident in my abilities to survive no matter what comes, I no longer fear it (as much). As a result, I am able to take on new challenges, create new things that I would have been afraid of creating just a few years ago.

I’ve learned that when you’re in the unknown, you don’t know what might come … and so you have to flow with this change. This flexibility is one of the most important tools you can develop. When the unknown future throws something unexpected your way, you deal with it without fear, without anguish, without anger. You respond instead of reacting, with balance and calmness, and the joy of knowing that all will be fine, and in the process you will have experienced something new and beautiful.

My friend Jonathan Fields wrote the book on this topic:Uncertainty: Turning Fear & Doubt into Fuel for Brilliance. Read it!

25 de out. de 2011

Você é capaz de renunciar ao poder?


"Ele foi escolhido e educado para ser o grão-mestre de uma ordem secreta e mística chamada Estrela do Oriente. Aprendeu vários idiomas e mergulhou fundo no estudo das religiões e filosofias. No entando, em Agosto de 1929, no dia marcado para assumir o alto cargo que lhe havia sido destinado, Jiddu Krishnamurti supreendeu os milhares de membros presentes, extinguindo a ordem "de uma vez por todas e para sempre".

Em seu discurso, que entrou para a história das ordens esotéricas, afirmou que "a Verdade é uma terra sem caminhos", e ninguém pode aproximar-se dela "por nenhuma religião, nenhuma seita"; que a crença "é uma questão puramente individual" e não pode nem deve ser organizada; que "o mestre mora dentro de nós, não precisamos buscar nada nos outros; que sua única preocupação era "libertar o homem de todas as prisões, de todos os temores"; e que não queria seguidores, já que "a partir do momento em que seguimos alguém, deixamos de seguir a Verdade":"Não serei mais um cego conduzindo outros cegos."

Daí em diante seguiu seu próprio caminho, fazendo palestras pelo mundo afora, apresentando explicações surpreendentemente simples, e ao mesmo tempo profundas, para os grandes problemas da vida."

Nota do editor - Comentários sobre o viver - Breves textos - Volume 1


Quantas pessoas você conhece que são capazes de renunciar ao poder?

Embora não concorde 100% com sua visão, achei que a atitude de Krishnamurti foi incrível. Ele teve a coragem para mudar uma relação de poder baseada na hierarquia e se tornou um líder muito maior do que seria se tivesse aceito a indicação de grão-mestre. 

Jidu se tornou um líder legítimo pelo que era enquanto Ser Humano e não pela cor da roupa ou do crachá que possuía.

Após ler esta breve descrição do editor, comprei o livro e tenho me surpreendido a cada página.

28 de nov. de 2010

Policiais meditando?


Enquanto o Capitão Nascimento se torna nosso "herói nacional" e a sociedade bate palmas para a estratégia de extermínio a qualquer custo, cabe discutir um pouco a polícia que queremos.

Precisamos de uma abordagem integral para a questão da segurança pública, que considere não somente o combate à violência (algo essencial), mas também a prevenção, feita com investimentos duradouros (décadas de planejamento) em Educação, Saúde e Lazer das periferias brasileiras (esta segunda parte da equação não rende votos no curto prazo e geralmente é deixada de lado por nossos formuladores de políticas públicas).

Com relação ao atendimento prestado por nossos políciais, qual a visão que você tem da polícia?

Agradável, educada e bem treinada?

Excessivamente violenta?

Qual a polícia que queremos para nós e as gerações futuras?

A reflexão e novos caminhos para pensarmos nosso sistema de segurança pública são essenciais.

Que tal treinar nossos policiais para um processo de autoconhecimento, que leve a um melhor atendimento da população e uma abordagem completamente nova da questão da segurança pública?

O programa Cidades e Soluções da Globonews mostrou o que tem sido feito neste sentido com policiais militares do Espírito Santo.
  • Website: globonews.globo.com
  • Selecione o programa Cidades e Soluções
  • Pesquise em Programas Anteriores
  • Digite: Projeto inovador treina PMs do Espírito Santo em templo zen budista