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Introduction to Mindfulness - Dean Amory

Art and Benefits of Mindfulness Meditation

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services. They did not exclude people taking methadone, very violent<br />

offenders or people experiencing psychotic episodes.<br />

As Alan Marlatt himself stated when questioned on this policy at the<br />

workshop in Copenhagen: “My position is that anyone can benefit<br />

from this. If they’re not getting anything out of it they can drop out.<br />

They can always give it a try”<br />

Overall, this was a very enjoyable experience for all of us who worked<br />

on this program, and, by all accounts, for the participants themselves.<br />

This is not an insignificant observation. We have heard reports of<br />

patients in certain mindfulness courses who found the program very<br />

“heavy going”. Basically, the aim of mindfulness is <strong>to</strong> open our minds<br />

and hearts <strong>to</strong> an appreciation of the present, and <strong>to</strong> an experience of<br />

gratitude for simply being alive at all. When I attend Plum Village, the<br />

monastery of Thich Nhat Hahn in the south of France, what strikes<br />

me is that this practice is one which gives people a sense of joy and<br />

well being. And that if it doesn’t, one is probably trying <strong>to</strong>o hard, or<br />

simply approaching it with the wrong attitude.<br />

It seems only logical that if we can present mindfulness training with<br />

a lightness of <strong>to</strong>uch, and with a sense of joy, in our courses, the<br />

likelihood of sustained practice afterwards will be much greater.<br />

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