Written by a monk-turned-leadership-guru, Mindfulness For the Wandering Mind offers unique insight on how you can focus your mind, become more resilient, respond better to conflict, and build stronger professional (and personal) relationships. It's all possible when you begin to understand how your mind works and take control of this complicated mechanism. This book will show you how to identify and close the 'apps' that are constantly running in your own mind, so you can eliminate distractions and find greater peace and productivity in your daily life.
In this book, you'll find specific meditation processes and actions you can take to help you succeed as you begin or continue your journey. Through presentations and talks across the country, Pandit Dasa has offered his wisdom on applying mindfulness in the workplace. In this book, he shares his wisdom with you, revealing that, no matter what your external circumstances or environment, you can find the time and space to unlock the benefits of mindfulness.
Mindfulness For the Wandering Mind is for anyone who is looking for a solution to the constant feelings of overwhelm, distraction, and anxiety that plague us in today's media-saturated world. Teach your brain how to block out the noise and find focus, and observe the radical transformation that mindfulness can make in your life.
Humanity has ignored the most powerful tool in its possession. An instrument more powerful than anything we are capable of inventing. An instrument that has the power to create war between families and nations or bring about complete peace and harmony. This device is our mind. Our mind has greater depth than the ocean and it is capable of storing more apps than any smart device. Closing the Apps, written by Pandit Dasa, a former monk who now works as a contemporary meditation and mindfulness consultant and keynote speaker, takes us for a ride into our mind to understand how it has the potential to either help us live our best moral and ethical life or drag us down the road of anger, hopelessness and destruction. Closing the Apps provides numerous practical suggestions on how to implement simple, everyday, secular mindfulness practices for any situation, whether it’s interacting with our colleagues in a fast-paced, high stress environment or whether we are struggling to find that all-elusive work-life balance. Its down-to-earth and relevant messages are a refreshing and inspiring read for you, your family, your friends, and your colleagues.