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A Tool You Need Right Now: Mindfulness Can Help Work Performance
If talk of “mindfulness” makes you think of quiet meditation on a mountaintop, incense and candles, or healing crystals, think again. The practice of mindfulness – or being present in the moment – is increasingly common in corporate settings. Even a Harvard Business Review article touted mindfulness as a way to increase effectiveness at work.
If you want to increase mental clarity, develop essential leadership skills and remove the annoying distractions that keep you from focusing on what really matters at work, it may be time to try mindfulness.
During Forté’s Women Lead Webinar in April, “Be Present: Mindfulness for Work and Life,” Shannon Demko – certified mindfulness instructor and founder of The Mindful MBA – explained what mindfulness is, how to do it, and how it can lead to success at work.
What mindfulness is
Mindfulness has many definitions. Shannon said there is a “common perception that it means checking out of the world, but it is the opposite.” She likes how Jon Kabat-Zinn, a world-renowned mindfulness leader, defines mindfulness: “Paying attention in a particular way: on purpose, in the present moment, and non-judgmentally.”
Shannon explained that the objective of mindfulness is “to be present; to develop an ability to connect to discomfort in a new way; to observe and not be overcome; and make intentional choices.” In a world with endless distractions, it is easy to check out of behavior or activities that make us uncomfortable.
Mindfulness “helps us understand what is going on within us, even if it is uncomfortable, and how to make choices that will help us face challenges and not be distracted by them,” Shannon explained.
Even if stress is only imagined and not real, the body can react physiologically and negatively affect metabolism, circulation and inflammation. According to Shannon, “mindfulness brings our mind to the present moment instead of where the brain tells us we need to be, and so our bodies are where they need to be, too.”
How to practice mindfulness
Shannon demystified that practice of mindfulness by describing it as “similar to any other kind of workout you might do – in the gym, for example.” Mindfulness can be practiced through meditation and breathwork or mindful activities such as yoga, walking or running.
To practice mindfulness, three things are necessary: