Practice

Art of Mindful Living - Bell of Mindfulness

Article Index
Art of Mindful Living
Beginning Anew
Bell of Mindfulness
The Body as Practice
Breathing
Dharma Discussion
Eating Together
Gathas
Going Home
Hugging Meditation
The Kitchen
Lazy Day
Listening to a Dharma Talk
Living Together
Noble Silence
Resting
Sangha Body
Sangha Building
Second Body
Sitting Meditation
Solitude
Taking Care of Anger
Taking Refuge
Tea Meditation
To Bow Or Not To Bow
Touching The Earth
Traveling
Waking Up In The Morning
Walking Meditation
Working Meditation
All Pages

Bell of Mindfulness

inviting-bellOn your arrival you might hear a bell sound and suddenly people around you have stopped still, stopped talking, and stopped moving. It might be the telephone ringing or the clock chiming, or the monastery bell sounding. These are our bells of mindfulness. When we hear the sound of the bell we relax our body and become aware of our breathing. We do that naturally, with enjoyment, and without solemnity or being stiffed.

When we hear one of these mindfulness bells ring, we stop all of our conversations and whatever we are doing and bring our awareness to our breathing. The ringing bell has called out to us:

Listen, listen,
this wonderful sound brings me back to
my true home.


By stopping to breathe and restore our calm and our peace, we become free, our work becomes more enjoyable and the friend in front of us becomes more real. Back home we can use the ringing of our telephone, the local church bells, the cry of a baby, or even the sound of fire engines and ambulances as our bells of mindfulness. With just three conscious breaths we can release the tensions in our body and mind and return to a cool and clear state of being.



Last Updated (Monday, 24 August 2009 01:17)