Hi Edgar:
 
I didn't get through all the reading from your article but I can certainly 
confirm out of (and in and off) practise and personal experience of mindfulness 
that is one of the greatest, practical, effective and shortcut tools given to 
lead one to what Bill calls "Shi....."
 
And here it goes a practical video that can be of inspiration towards 
mindfulness.  The song is from one of the Sisters in the TNH tradition.  The cd 
is with the tittle: "A basket of Plums".  And as for the show it was created 
first in the power point by one of my friends.  Then someone else took the 
powerpoint show and a song from that cd and created this straight forward to 
the point of mindfulness affirmation or in action.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbwZ_fe623E
 
Thanks Edgar
Mayka

--- On Tue, 1/3/11, Edgar Owen <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Edgar Owen <[email protected]>
Subject: [Zen] News: Mindfulness and death -- who wins?
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, 1 March, 2011, 12:35


  













A grudge match between humanity and death -- who wins?February 28th, 2011 in 
Medicine & Health / Psychology & Psychiatry 



Death can be terrifying. Recognizing that death is inescapable and 
unpredictable makes us incredibly vulnerable, and can invoke feelings of 
anxiety, hatred and fear. But new research by George Mason University 
psychology professor Todd Kashdan shows that being a mindful person not only 
makes you generally more tolerant and less defensive, but it can also actually 
neutralize fears of dying and death.
"Mindfulness is being open, receptive, and attentive to whatever is unfolding 
in the present moment," says Kashdan. In his latest research, Kashdan and his 
colleagues wanted to find out if mindful people had different attitudes about 
death and dying.
"Generally, when reminded of our mortality, we are extremely defensive. Like 
little kids who nearly suffocate under blanket protection to fend off the 
monster in the closet, the first thing we try to do is purge any death-related 
thoughts or feelings from our mind," says Kashdan.
"On the fringes of this conscious awareness, we try another attempt to ward off 
death anxiety. We violently defend beliefs and practices that provide a sense 
of stability and meaning in our lives."
Kashdan says this practice often has an ugly side—intolerance and abuse. "When 
people are reminded that death is impending, their racist tendencies increase," 
he says. In a series of experiments conducted by the University of 
Missouri-Columbia, for example, white people asked to read about a crime 
committed by another person give harsher penalties for black compared with 
white defendants after being reminded of their mortality.
Kasdan wondered what might prevent these defensive, intolerant reactions from 
occurring. In a recent study published in the Journal of Personality and Social 
Psychology, he and his colleagues looked at what might happen when mindfulness 
and the terror of death collide.
"A grudge match between humanity and death," says Kashdan.
If mindful people are more willing to explore whatever happens in the present, 
even if it uncomfortable, will they show less defensiveness when their sense of 
self is threatened by a confrontation with their own mortality?
Based on the results of 7 different experiments, the answer appears to be yes. 
When reminded about their death and asked to write about what will happen when 
their bodies decompose (in grisly detail), less mindful people showed an 
intense dislike for foreigners that mention what's wrong with the United States 
(pro-U.S. bias), greater prejudice against black managers who discriminated 
against a white employee in a promotion decision (pro-white bias), and harsher 
penalties for social transgressions such as prostitution, marital infidelities, 
and drug use by physicians that led to surgical mishaps.
Across these various situations, on the contrast, mindful people showed a lack 
of defensiveness toward people that didn't share their worldview. Mindful 
people were diplomatic and tolerant regardless of whether they were prompted to 
think about their slow, systematic decline toward obliteration.
"What we found was that when asked to deeply contemplate their death, mindful 
people spent more time writing (as opposed to avoiding) and used more 
death-related words when reflecting on the experience. This suggests that a 
greater openness to processing the threat of death allows compassion and 
fairness to reign. In this laboratory staged battle, mindfulness alters the 
power that death holds over us," Kashdan says.
Provided by George Mason University






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