This past weekend, a friend and I were watching my son play. We could not help but giggle and feel good as we witnessed him…He is five and very imaginative. All his play is accompanied by the appropriate sounds – when he got on his bike, he let out a, “Hee-haw!!!” as he sped away and there is always a soft murmur of battles with exploding bombs and gunfire as he fights the galactic fleet with legos…
I remarked to my friend, “That is being present – fully engaged in the moment. Not worried about what if or is there enough – just being. I remember that. I love that.”
I began reflecting on when I feel that way now in my life. I feel this when I see clients, meditate, during sex, being in my garden…and what I realized – I need to work on this. This feeling of presence – being in the moment without being distracted by anything else - well, I need more of that in others areas of my life as well…so, now I’ve been trying this experiment with myself.
When I feel myself slipping out of the present by becoming anxious about the future, or bored, or even when I begin triggering about something – I think of my son and “Hee-haw!” It reminds me to be right here, right now and most importantly, it reminds me to breathe – to settle myself in this moment.
I invite you to watch some kids at play and discover if this is something to work on for yourself – being present. Identify an image (must be a positive, feel-good picture!) that works for you and begin connecting to this image in times you feel yourself not present or slipping from presence – you just might be surprised by what you discover! Have fun and drop me a line if you have any questions or want to share your stories.
Tags: becoming present, Best Life, childhood, empowering, play, positive image
This entry was posted
on Tuesday, June 17th, 2008 at 1:13 pm and is filed under Bible & Religion, Communication & Relationships, Dating & Singles, Empowerment, Friend & Family, Spiritual Self.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.