Day 5 - Awakening your 5 senses

We have 5 senses of sight, smell, touch, hearing and taste but how often are you tuned into each of your individual senses. 


  • When you see something how often are you mindfully aware what you are seeing?


  • When hear something how often do you take time to actually listen to what you’re hearing?


  • When you taste something how often do you stop and focus on the tastes you are experiencing?


  • When you smell something how often do stop a be with what you are smelling?


  • When you touch something how often do you focus on the textures?



For most people the answer is not very often! 


In everyday life we can be caught in the struggle of day to day tasks, the run of thoughts, automatic actions, something that we call the autopilot of life. It helps immensely to have some simple anchors that bring your attention back to the present. 



ONE OF THESE ANCHORS IS THROUGH YOUR 5 SENSES


The key to embodying mindfulness is to actually turn into a keen observer. Using the five senses — sight, sound, smell, taste and touch can help you take in the world around you. They can be of great help in slowing down and being more present with momentary experiences.


Sometimes most of what we observe in the world around us exists only as background noise. By slowing down to describe our environment we allow ourselves to fully appreciate what's happening around us.


When we draw our attention to our role as observers somehow other concerns and worries tend to fade into the background - why? Because we deliberately choose to come off autopilot.

Your mindfulness practice for session 6

Aim to practice this 5 senses mindfulness meditation as a formal practice for 2 days and as many times as you can during those 2 days.


You are practicing isolating one sense at a time and observe what your experience is without expectation or judgement. For example: if you isolate your sense of smell and you don't notice any particular smells then that is your experience.


There is no need to be judgemental or critical of the practice because you cannot smell anything. Allow yourself to be with that experience of nothingness. Just sit with it and if your mind tried to distract you bring your awareness back to the experience of nothingness.

The guided recording

Listen to the introduction recording below and read the notes 'further guide to awakening your senses'.


If necessary, schedule your practice time and set reminders to help keep you on track with your continued mindfulness practice.


Although this is a formal practice for today - aim to practice this mindfulness meditation often enough that it becomes an effective tool in your mindfulness toolbox.

5 senses meditation as an informal practice

Today you are being introduced to the 5 senses meditation as a formal practice but we want to turn formal practice in to everyday mindfulness.


It is understood that thoughts, feelings and emotions are subconscious actions and we can experience a negative mindset without even being aware of it.


You are encouraged to practice mindfulness as you go through your day just as you carry out other tasks.


From time to time take the opportunity to stop what you are doing and turn your attention to what is present in your environment from the vantage point of your 5 senses just as you have practiced today.



  • You may also choose to do short breath meditations.

  • You many choose to do an informal eating meditation as you practiced with the raisin and chocolate.

  • You may even choose an informal special place meditation or progressive muscle relaxation exercise.



Try to remember that this course is not just to practice each day's meditation and move on to the next. You are aiming to learn practical everyday mindfulness in different guises and be more mindful as you go through your day to day activities.

  • Further guidance of awakening your senses as mini mindfulness practices

    Read all the guiding notes for the 5 senses awareness meditation and listen to the guide for this meditation above. Make this meditation an informal practice, spending no more than 2 minutes on each sense. 


    During the mini meditations:.


    • Stop what you are doing.

    • Raise your awareness to one of your senses to see 'what's there'.

    • Pay particular attention and explore what you are sensing just as if you have never experienced it before. Use the curious mind just as you did during the raisin eating meditation.

    • Describe what you are experiencing to yourself just as if you were describing your experience to someone else and they had to guess what your experience was.

    • Don't force yourself to experience something. If, when you focus on one of your senses there is nothing there, then there is nothing there. Focus on the experience of being with nothing. This can be a strange feeling for many people...enjoy being in the moment of peace and silence.

    • Comit to staying with the sense and if you become distracted by thoughts, bodily sensations or urges to move on, note they are present but escort your awareness back to being with your senses. If you get distracted again, bring your attention back again.

    The important aspect of this meditation is to allow yourself to just be in the moment and stay in the moment. 


    Practice staying with an individual sense and continue to explore what is present. You will always face distraction when you are trying to be present. 


    The mindfulness approach is to recognise where you attention is being distracted to and make a conscious decision to stay present in the moment.

     

    This of course, is not an easy thing to do. We are all programmed to be thinking and doing and rarely do we practice just being. 


    Mindfulness helps you with this aim. Regular practice of mindfulness will continue to help you learn how to keep you focus of attention in the present moment rather than being pulled along by the autopilot of your mind.

Your next session - session 7

Todays mindfulness practice will become another stalwart in your mindfulness toolbox.


Being able to switch your mind from the subconscious autopilot to be conscious of any momentary experience is going to be so rewarding.


From an anger management perspective imagine for a moment the benefits to you and others around you when you are able to not only recognise a trigger but also have the ability to refocus your mind so that you don't follow the trigger on autopilot.


The 5 senses mindfulness practice will tun out to be a very powerful tool that you will soon be able to put in to practice.


When you're ready to introduce yourself to your next session (7) - the walking meditation, click on the link below or from the drop down menu at the top of the page.

Session 7 - The walking mindfulness practice
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