- Subjects
- Published
-
Naperville, Ill. :
Sourcebooks
c2007.
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Physical Description
- 245 p.
- ISBN
- 9781402208539
- One. Introducing Ten Zen Seconds
- Two. Breathing and Thinking
- Three. The Twelve Incantations
- Four. Incantation 1: I Am Completely Stopping
- Five. Incantation 2: I Expect Nothing
- Six. Incantation 3: I Am Doing My Work
- Seven. Incantation 4: I Trust My Resources
- Eight. Incantation 5: I Feel Supported
- Nine. Incantation 6: I Embrace This Moment
- Ten. Incantation 7: I Am Free of the Past
- Eleven. Incantation 8: I Make My Meaning
- Twelve. Incantation 9: I Am Open to Joy
- Thirteen. Incantation 10: I Am Equal to This Challenge
- Fourteen. Incantation 11: I Am Taking Action
- Fifteen. Incantation 12: I Return with Strength
- Sixteen. Using the Twelve Incantations
- Seventeen. Choosing Incantations
- Eighteen. Combining, Customizing, and Creating Incantations
- Nineteen. Bookends
- Twenty. Ten Zen Seconds Centering Exercises
- Twenty One. Introducing the Centering Sequence
- Twenty Two. Practicing the Centering Sequence
- Twenty Three. Customizing the Centering Sequence
- Twenty Four. Centering in Public
- Twenty Five. Centering and Healing -
- Twenty Six. Centering for Performance
- Twenty Seven. In the Vanguard
- Twenty Eight. Your Centering Practice
- About the Author
I am going to teach you a centering technique that verges on the miraculous. You can dramatically improve your ability to center, become more calm and more powerful, and radically improve your life by taking ten-second pauses of the sort that I'm about to describe. You'll be amazed to learn that such a life-altering strategy can come in a span as small as ten seconds, but it can! Hundreds of my clients, and hundreds of volunteers, have used this technique to center, calm, and ground themselves while waiting in traffic, sitting in the dentist's office, preparing to record a new album, or readying themselves to talk to their teenager. They know firsthand that this technique works.
This ten-second technique has two components: a breathing part and a thinking part. The basis of Ten Zen Seconds is using a single deep breath as a container for a specific thought. First you practice deep breathing until you can produce a breath that lasts about five seconds on the inhale and five seconds on the exhale. Learning to do this will take you only a few minutes. Then you insert a thought into the breath, silently thinking half the thought on the inhale and half the thought on the exhale. This, too, will take you only a short time to learn. In an afternoon you can familiarize yourself with the program outlined in this book.
Excerpted from Ten Zen Seconds: Twelve Incantations for Purpose, Power and Calm by Eric Maisel All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.