10 Easy Ways to Cultivate Gratitude

10 Easy Ways to Cultivate Gratitude

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10 Easy Ways to Cultivate Gratitude

OK, so you’ve probably guessed by now that I’m a bit of a fan of gratitude.  A gratitude practice seriously takes very little time and it’s impact is HUGE!  As a busy mama of two, both of these components are very important to me.

Gratitude researchers Emmons and McCullough (2003) found that a simple gratitude practice resulted in increased happiness, optimism and satisfaction with life, and decreased negative affect and physical illness.  They also found that people with a regular gratitude practice slept more and had a better quality of sleep each night.  How cool is that?!

Many gratitude researchers ask their participants to keep a short gratitude diary each day, simply noting down what they’re grateful for.

But this isn’t the only way to cultivate gratitude.

I regularly take gratitude photographs for Capturing Gratitude and share them on Instagram and Facebook, and I weave gratitude gently into my day in other ways as well.

Today I thought I’d share with you 10 other ways to cultivate gratitude:

  1. On waking in the morning, say thank you for another day of simply being alive (put a note next to your bed if you need a reminder).
  2. Each night before you sleep, list 10 things you’re grateful for from the day (count them off on your fingers).
  3. Before each meal, say a quiet thank you to everyone who contributed to the food on your table (this might include the cook, the store, the farmers, mother earth etc).
  4. If you have children, create a bed time rhythm that includes taking it turns to finish the sentence ‘I’m grateful for ……’.
  5. Write down something you’re grateful for each day and put it in a gratitude jar (and pull one out whenever you’re feeling down).
  6. Look for the silver lining. If you’re going through a challenging time, find one thing about the situation to be grateful for.
  7. Remember that there are millions of people around the world who do not have access to clean drinking water.  Drink a glass and be grateful.
  8. Write down 100 things you’re grateful for (go, I dare you!).
  9. Dedicate a bench in your back yard or community as a Gratitude Bench, and go and sit there regularly and contemplate all that you’re grateful for.
  10. Create a Gratitude Tree by writing down what you’re grateful for on a small piece of cardboard and hang it in a designated tree.  Invite your friends and community to do the same.

Do any of these resonate for you?  Pick one and try it out.  I highly recommend doing your own experiment to see the effect a simple gratitude practice has on your life.

And if you’d like to try the option of a gratitude bench or tree and you’re near Byron Bay (Australia), The Farm and I are hosting a picnic at midday on Sunday 19th June at the Gratitude Bench, and we’re creating a Gratitude Tree for our community.  All are welcome!  BYO picnic (or get something at the cafe).  Details and RSVP is here.

Hope to see you there and do leave a comment below and let me know which gratitude practice you’re going to test drive in your life.

With gratitude,

The information provided on this podcast is intended for informational purposes only and should not be considered professional advice

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The Art of Radical Self Care

The Art of Radical Self Care

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The Art of Radical Self Care

I’ve been hearing a lot about self care recently. I’m a big advocate for self care, but it feels to me like the word has been misappropriated by businesses trying to sell us something. A massage, a day at the spa, a green smoothie, a restorative yoga class. If we’re not careful, self care can become just be another THING that we have to spend our money on and try to squeeze into our already busy lives.
Then self care becomes stressful and something else that we can beat ourselves up about for not being able to afford or for failing to find the time to do. The way I see it, true self care is very simple. True self care is simply asking ourselves, “In this moment, what do I need?” It may be a massage or a restorative yoga class, but it may also be sleeping in, making love, baking, calling your Mum, lying in the sun, stretching, meditating, dancing, reading, having that hard-to-have conversation with your partner, going for a run, working late to get that project finished or lying next to your kids as they fall asleep. When we practice self care like this, it becomes RADICAL self care. It’s radical not only because we’re taking time for ourselves, but because we’re listening to our intuition and acting in accordance with it’s calling.  It’s radical because we’re ignoring the ‘shoulds’, the advertising machines and our cultural conditioning. And it’s radical because we’re living life from the inside, based on what it FEELS like rather than what it LOOKS like. If we all lived in this way, the world would be a very different place.

Another world is not only possible, she is on her way. On a quiet day, I can hear her breathing.” Arundhati Roy

Let me share what self care look like for me. My self care looks like practicing yoga for 20 minutes in the morning and iRest meditation in the evenings. It also looks like prioritising sleep over my morning yoga practice.  It looks like not giving myself a hard time if I don’t practice and most definitely not giving myself a hard time that I don’t practice for hours every day like I did when I was living in India and didn’t have kids or a job. It looks like reading a novel in bed most nights. It looks like introducing a meat into my diet after being  vegetarian for 15 years. It looks like hiring an assistant to help me keep up with the emails and phone calls that I’m so grateful for, but feel overwhelmed by at times. It looks like walking on the beach whenever I get a chance. It looks like turning off the computer at night, even though I want to keep working, so I can get a good night’s sleep. It looks like resting when I’m tired. Radical huh? I’d love to hear about what radical self care looks like for you. Right now, in this moment, what is your intuition calling you to do? Share with us all by leaving a comment below (then go do it)!

The information provided on this podcast is intended for informational purposes only and should not be considered professional advice

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Join our community over at the Yoga Psychology Institute and download my favourite Spotify playlist for nervous system regulation

On gratitude, self harm and making music (an interview with Ash Grunwald and Lissie Turner)

On gratitude, self harm and making music (an interview with Ash Grunwald and Lissie Turner)

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On gratitude, self harm and making music (an interview with Ash Grunwald and Lissie Turner)

I’m delighted to bring you the first in a series of gratitude interviews for Capturing Gratitude, filmed on the gratitude bench in Byron Bay, Australia.

Last year Uplift Connect created an amazing gratitude video, sharing curated snippets of a full day of filming on the gratitude bench.  They have kindly shared with me the full interviews, and I’m so excited to in turn share them with you.

At university, I listened to Mel Bampton on Triple J (radio), and was stoked to find out last year that she had changed her name to Lissie Turner and opened a yoga shala just around the corner from my house (she’s an amazing yoga teacher by the way).  Lissie has a definite way with words and has an authenticity and vulnerability about her that is breathtaking.

Lissie dragged her good friend and acclaimed musician Ash Grunwald along to the gratitude bench to talk about cups of tea, death, self harm and making music.

This is one gratitude interview that you don’t want to miss.

The International Day of Happiness is just around the corner, on March 20th, and we’re diving into another 30 Days of Gratitude.  Want to join us?  Come on over to the Capturing Gratitude website to find out how you can get your gratitude on.

Loads of gratitude to Uplift Connect for this video, The Farm Byron Bay for building the gratitude bench and to Lissie Turner and Ash Grunwald for sitting on the bench, sharing their stories and being the glorious human beings that they are.

This video isn’t your usual gratitude list.  We’d love to hear your thoughts after watching it, so do leave a comment below.

With gratitude,

The information provided on this podcast is intended for informational purposes only and should not be considered professional advice

WANT MORE LIKE THIS IN YOUR INBOX?

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Cultivating an Inner Resource

Cultivating an Inner Resource

In iRest meditation we cultivate what we call an Inner Resource; a memory or a visualisation that supports us to tap into our innate sense of being and ok-ness. I often feel this deep sense of being-ness and ok-ness when I walk on this beach. When I look at this photo I took the other morning on...

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The Worry Train

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Join our community over at the Yoga Psychology Institute and download my favourite Spotify playlist for nervous system regulation

My #1 Parenting Tip

My #1 Parenting Tip

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My #1 Parenting Tip

There are so many parenting experts out there, and they all have an opinion about the way we should be parenting. I have a library of parenting books I’ve collected since I first conceived of the idea of having a baby, and ever since I had my first baby bump people have taken it upon themselves to offer me parenting advice (even strangers in the street!).
While there are many parenting books that I do love (like this one and this one for example), I’m not an advocate of following one particular parenting lineage or methodology.  And I’m definitely not an advocate of over-riding your own intuition in order to do what the ‘experts’ tell you to do. I love working with new parents. It’s an absolute honour to teach yoga teachers about perinatal mental health and to sit with new mothers and fathers and support them to navigate the ups and downs of having a new baby.  It’s a sacred time, and I feel so honoured to walk beside parents during this time. A question I get asked regularly from parents is how to deal with their child’s challenging behaviour. And my answer is inevitably, “you get your own needs met“. You see, as parents, WE’RE the experts on our children.  And when OUR needs are getting met, we naturally and intuitively respond to our children’s needs.  Including their challenging behaviours. This works in two ways. Firstly, when our needs are getting met, we’re happier. And when we’re happier, the whole family is happier. Sound too simple to be true?  Trust me, it’s not.  My husband’s mantra since the birth of our first child has been “happy mama, happy baby,” and I’ve been endlessly grateful for this.  Children are sensitive beings, and they pick up on our moods.  When we’re stressed and strung out, they feel it.  When we’re happy and fulfilled, they feel that too. Secondly, when we’re stressed, over-tired and unhappy, it’s very difficult to deal with the demands of parenting.  Our tolerance thresholds are low and it’s hard to cope. Children have needs, LOTS of needs, and we cannot hope to meet them if our own needs are not being met. To meet the needs of others, our own cup needs to be full.  Giving to others when our cup is full and overflowing feels effortless.  Giving when our cup is empty, feels a lot like hard work.  Resentment is likely to build up, and this seeps out in all sorts of unconscious ways like yelling and storming out of the room. Think of it like this; getting your own needs met is like putting on your own mask in an airplane crash before you put on your child’s.  Not because parenting is like a plane crash, but because we can’t meet our children’s needs if we have nothing left to give. When we’re feeling fulfilled and happy in our lives, it’s so much easier to cope with the tears, the throwing things, the refusals to go to bed and the defiant “NO!”.  When our cup is full, we can allow our children to fully express their emotions and desires without feeling like we’re loosing control.  We can hold the space for them to do what ever they need to do in that moment and we can tune into our intuition and take clear and loving action that is in the best interest of everyone involved. So, here’s my invitation.  Don’t read this article and let it be just another ‘nice’ idea. Instead, close your eyes, take and couple of breaths, and ask yourself “what do I need in this moment?” Then go and do it (or if you can’t do it right away, send someone an SMS and make a date for them to watch the kids so you can do it some time very soon)! If you don’t believe me, try is as an experiment.  For the next week, make your own needs a priority.  And see how it affects your children and your ability to be the parent you want to be. Leave me a comment below about your experience with getting your needs met, I’d love to hear it. With gratitude,

The information provided on this podcast is intended for informational purposes only and should not be considered professional advice

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Cultivating an Inner Resource

Cultivating an Inner Resource

In iRest meditation we cultivate what we call an Inner Resource; a memory or a visualisation that supports us to tap into our innate sense of being and ok-ness. I often feel this deep sense of being-ness and ok-ness when I walk on this beach. When I look at this photo I took the other morning on...

read more
Grace

Grace

Moving past mid year we’re called to review and come into alignment with our heart’s deepest calling. As we’re drawn to what we truly love the source of this calling is Grace. How do I speak about Grace? I think of it as an undefinable essence, an abiding Presence and Mystery awakening...

read more
The Worry Train

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I find there is a complex interplay between the various factors that lead to maternal anxiety. Anxiety can intensify after the birth of a first child, as there is a sense of things being special with the novelty and uncertainty that the first child brings, and the enormous learning curve that the...

read more

Join our community over at the Yoga Psychology Institute and download my favourite Spotify playlist for nervous system regulation

Yoga and the Highly Sensitive Person

Yoga and the Highly Sensitive Person

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Yoga and the Highly Sensitive Person

I can’t help but feel that yoga was designed for (and by) Highly Sensitive People.  It’s the perfect tool for any HSP.

Highly sensitive people feel things more deeply than others.

We are often very creative and have a deep inner or spiritual life.  We feel others emotions and we’re not always sure how to cope with that.

Shopping centres can be a nightmare with the bright lights, the hustle and bustle and blaring music.  Sad movies (or even commercials) bring us to tears and any kind of drug, whether it’s coffee, chocolate, alcohol, illegal, herbal or prescription has a big effect on us.

Wondering if you’re a HSP?  Check my article on the Gifts and Challenges of the Highly Sensitive Person.

The nervous system of a highly sensitive person picks up on more information from the world than the nervous system of a non-sensitive person.  While this has some amazing benefits, it also means that we can become overwhelmed and overstimulated more easily than others.

I love being out and about in the world and connecting with others.

But I do feel the effects of it.

After a big day of engaging with others, my nervous system feels jangled.  Jazzed up.  Pulsating.  Even fried if I’ve really been over-doing it.

On days like these when I close my eyes and focus inwards, I can feel the energy pulsing throughout my entire body, like a strong and sparking electrical current.

I’ve learnt the hard way that pushing through this ends up with me feeling miserable and depleted.

Now days I stop, find somewhere quiet by myself and practice yoga.

I’m not talking about handstands or back bends.  I’m talking about the off-the-mat kind of yoga.  I’m talking about lying quietly on my bed and just noticing the pulsing of energy through my body.  I’m talking about iRest Yoga Nidra, mindful breathing and listening to soothing music.

It takes surprisingly little time to feel the benefits of the practices.  A few minutes of being with my experience just as it as, and some gentle mindful breathing can make the world of difference.  My nervous system starts to calm down and I feel more at peace with myself and the world.

I’ve been spending time in a recording studio in Byron Bay, recording yoga practices like these for A Daily Dose of Bliss.  And I’d love to share one of them with you now.

Here is Mindful Breathing, the very first track in A Daily Dose of Bliss.  Find yourself a comfortable position to sit or lie in for the next six and a half minutes, gather your beginner’s mind and press play.

Your nervous system will thank you for it.

If you’re a Highly Sensitive Person like me and would like to learn some simple yet powerful practices to calm your nervous system, do check out A Daily Dose of Bliss.

You’ll learn a new practice every day for 6 weeks, and it only takes 5-10 minutes each day.

I’d love to share it with you.

See you in the shala,

The information provided on this podcast is intended for informational purposes only and should not be considered professional advice

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Cultivating an Inner Resource

Cultivating an Inner Resource

In iRest meditation we cultivate what we call an Inner Resource; a memory or a visualisation that supports us to tap into our innate sense of being and ok-ness. I often feel this deep sense of being-ness and ok-ness when I walk on this beach. When I look at this photo I took the other morning on...

read more
Grace

Grace

Moving past mid year we’re called to review and come into alignment with our heart’s deepest calling. As we’re drawn to what we truly love the source of this calling is Grace. How do I speak about Grace? I think of it as an undefinable essence, an abiding Presence and Mystery awakening...

read more
The Worry Train

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I find there is a complex interplay between the various factors that lead to maternal anxiety. Anxiety can intensify after the birth of a first child, as there is a sense of things being special with the novelty and uncertainty that the first child brings, and the enormous learning curve that the...

read more

Join our community over at the Yoga Psychology Institute and download my favourite Spotify playlist for nervous system regulation

Your Sacred Guide

Your Sacred Guide

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Your Sacred Guide

Did you know you have a sacred guide inside of you to gently steer you through this wild and precious life? You’d be wise to get to know her. She comes with many names….. inner wisdom, goddess, satguru, gut feeling, inner knowing, instinct, sixth sense. I like to call her Intuition.  But please, call her what you like.  She responds to any name spoken with love.
When I researched the word ‘intuition,’ the Collins dictionary offered this sentence to further our understanding, ‘You can’t make a case on intuitions, you know.’ Is it no wonder that so many of us feel disconnected from our intuition? We’ve grown up listening to the so-called “experts”, and we’ve been bombarded with advertising from dawn to dusk telling us what we need to be happy.  We’ve allowed ourselves to be drawn away from our inner knowing. Your intuition speaks to you in whispers. While the experts and the advertisements speak with loud voices and neon lights.  If we’re not careful she’s easily drowned out. But she’s worth listening out for, as her mission is to guide you to create a life that you truly desire.  A life of authenticity, joy and wholeheartedness. When you listen to her whispers, you’ll guided to live a bespoke life that’s tailored just for you.  Not a run-of-the-mall, off-the-shelf, mass-produced, flat-pack life.  A life that’s fit for the glorious individual that you are. Because you are an individual expression of life itself. You are life living itself through you.  Just like a wave is distinct and individual when it surges up above the ocean, you are a distinct and individual part of creation.  And creation has great plans for you. So I implore you.  Listen to her whispers.  Listen for the way she speaks through your body.  A lightness.  A heaviness.  A longing.  A secret long-held desire. Listen.

The information provided on this podcast is intended for informational purposes only and should not be considered professional advice

WANT MORE LIKE THIS IN YOUR INBOX?

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Cultivating an Inner Resource

Cultivating an Inner Resource

In iRest meditation we cultivate what we call an Inner Resource; a memory or a visualisation that supports us to tap into our innate sense of being and ok-ness. I often feel this deep sense of being-ness and ok-ness when I walk on this beach. When I look at this photo I took the other morning on...

read more
Grace

Grace

Moving past mid year we’re called to review and come into alignment with our heart’s deepest calling. As we’re drawn to what we truly love the source of this calling is Grace. How do I speak about Grace? I think of it as an undefinable essence, an abiding Presence and Mystery awakening...

read more
The Worry Train

The Worry Train

I find there is a complex interplay between the various factors that lead to maternal anxiety. Anxiety can intensify after the birth of a first child, as there is a sense of things being special with the novelty and uncertainty that the first child brings, and the enormous learning curve that the...

read more

Join our community over at the Yoga Psychology Institute and download my favourite Spotify playlist for nervous system regulation