Be Mindful

Mindfulness, or keeping your awareness in the here and now, is important for mental health and elite performance. The key is to stay in the moment in the face of distraction, no matter how great that distraction may be.

Controlling your awareness and mind so you can direct it to what matters in the moment is integral for success in any discipline, be it music, sports, drama, or business. Yet we live in the age of distraction. Email, social media, text messages, and short videos all compete for our attention, not to mention the job we are supposed to be doing.

As you improve how you manage your mental space, try being mindful by increasing your awareness of what is happening in and around you. Merely register the data from your senses or thoughts with detachment and objectivity as pure facts— watching and observing without labelling, judging, interpreting, or analyzing.

What do you see?

What do you hear?

What do you smell?

What do you feel?

This technique involves being 100% present in the moment, with all your attention directed at the here and now.

I love doing this when I listen to a great piece of music. And at an art gallery: when faced with a masterpiece, I really can’t think about anything else. The natural environment always captures my attention.

Being mindful with loved ones is powerful. When in a conversation with a friend or family member, try being absolutely focused on what they’re saying, not allowing your mind to wander and not worrying about how you’re going to respond. Just listen and try to understand what they’re saying.

You can also practice mindful breathing. Close your eyes and start taking slow, deep breaths. Inhale deeply through your nose, hold for a moment, and then exhale slowly through your mouth. Concentrate fully on the sensation of your breath entering and leaving your body. Feel the rise and fall of your chest or the air moving in and out of your nostrils. If your mind starts to wander, gently bring your focus back to your breath without judgment. Acknowledge the distraction and return your attention to your breathing.

Sharpening your focus and living in the moment are great ways to dissipate stress. So much of our stress comes from thinking about the past or the future. When we stay in the present, we often realize that things are pretty good. 

Practice being right here, right now.

That’s it for this week! Let me know your thoughts in the comments.

Yours for health, wellbeing & peak performance - Dr. Greg

Greg Wells PhD

For Dr. Greg Wells, health and performance, particularly under extreme conditions, are personal and professional obsessions. As a scientist and physiologist, he has dedicated his career to making the science of human limits understandable and actionable. Dr. Wells has spoken to audiences all over the world at events such as TEDx and The Titan Summit, where he has shared the stage with Robin Sharma, Richard Branson, Steve Wozniak and Deepak Chopra.

For over 25 years, Dr. Wells has worked with some of the highest-performing individuals on the planet, including Olympic and World champions, and with organizations ranging from General Electric to BMO, Deloitte, KPMG, BMW, Audi, Sysco Foods, YPO and Air Canada. He is also committed to inspiring children and young adults through his close working relationship with school boards and independent schools.

A veteran endurance athlete, Dr. Wells has participated in the grueling Nanisivik Marathon 600 miles north of the Arctic Circle, Ironman Canada and the Tour D’Afrique, an 11,000 km cycling race that is the longest in the world. He is also a travel and expedition adventurer who has journeyed through every imaginable terrain and conditions in over 50 countries around the world.

Dr. Wells is author of three best-selling books – Superbodies, The Ripple Effect, and The Focus Effect – and hosted the award-winning Superbodies series, which aired on Olympic broadcasts worldwide in 2010 and 2012.

Dr. Wells has a PhD in Physiology, served as an Associate Professor of Kinesiology at the University of Toronto and is an exercise medicine researcher at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto.

He is the CEO and founder of The Wells Group, a global consulting firm committed to achieving the moonshot of helping teams, schools and businesses become places where people get healthy, perform optimally and ultimately - reach their potential.

http://www.drgregwells.com
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