Thursday, September 1, 2016

How to Take Your Mindfulness Meditation Technique Further

Meditation

Meditation is a beautiful and powerful thing. In the chaos of the world it lets us center ourselves, quiet our minds, and find a deep peace and sense of calm. As entrepreneurs, we’re always confronted by questions, decisions, projects, plans, tasks, and more. In this cacophony of responsibility, meditation can be a powerful sanctuary and a way to reconnect to what’s important.

It can open our minds, help us react better to circumstances, focus on the most important part of any situation, and prepare us for emotional ups and downs. Daniel Schwartz wrote an excellent guide to mindfulness meditation with a special focus on entrepreneurs. If you haven’t read it yet, now’s the time to start.

In this article we’ll be expanding on some of Daniel’s ideas and introducing a few other gentle meditative techniques to help you enhance your practice and your peace of mind.

A Quick Reminder on Mindfulness

Here’s a very quick precis of Daniel’s article — it’s the essential underpinning of any other meditation technique.

  1. Find a comfortable, quiet place and close your eyes.
  2. Breathe in and out slowly and deeply.
  3. Let your mind relax.
  4. Contemplate what is going on in your mind without judgment.
  5. Think about things and let them go.

Read the full article for a good explanation of the technique and more insights.

The rest of these techniques are for you to use as you wish. None of them are "better" than any others. They’re all useful in the right circumstances. Pick and choose the ones you like, try them out, and see how they work for you.

Focused Sitting Meditation

This first meditation technique is a slight variation on mindfulness meditation and will help you increase your concentration and focus.

Practice as follows:

  1. Find a comfortable, quiet place and close your eyes.
  2. Breathe in and out slowly and deeply.
  3. Let your mind relax.
  4. Find something to focus on — this could be a mental image, a picture, a word you repeat (a mantra), your breath, or an object like a candle.
  5. Gently focus your attention on that object, and that object alone as you continue to breathe in and out.
  6. If your mind starts to wander, gently pull it back to whatever you’re focusing on.

Although this is one of the simplest forms of meditation, it’s also one of the most powerful. Regular practice will help you shut out distractions at work and let you be single-minded about getting things done.

Focused Walking Meditation

If you’re like me, you spend most of your time sitting at a screen in front of a desk. If you’re like me, you also know you need to get away from that desk and screen more than you do. Walking meditation is a great way to combine a simple meditative technique with the other thing we all need — exercise.

Practice as follows:

  1. Find a good space outside.
  2. Walk along at a slow to medium speed, focusing on each step.
  3. Bring your breath into a rhythm with your steps, breathing in and out as you walk.
  4. Focus on the feeling of walking — how it feels, your feet touching the ground, your muscles working.
  5. As your attention wanders, simply bring it back to the act of walking and sensing your body.
  6. Keep practicing, and as you meditate widen your awareness to other parts of your body — the swinging of your arms, the feel of the air against your skin.
  7. Notice the tiny details, use them to center yourself in the here and now, in your body, appreciating how you move.

This meditative technique is great for helping us connect with ourselves and our physical presence in the world. It helps us focus on just one or two things and is a powerful way to build up concentration and discipline. With regular practice it can help you concentrate on tasks for long periods without becoming fatigued or bored.

Connected Walking Meditation

This style of meditation is similar to the last one, with one important difference — it’s about focusing outwards as well as focusing inwards. This one is a great way to feel connected with the world around you, to get moving, and to really appreciate your surroundings.

Continue reading %How to Take Your Mindfulness Meditation Technique Further%


by Paul Maplesden via SitePoint

Why I Introduced Scala In Our Project

I don’t like Scala. And I think it has some bad and very ugly aspects that make it a poor choice for mainstream development.

But recently I still introduced it in our project. Not only that, but the team has no experience with Scala. And I’ll try to explain why that is not a bad idea.

Continue reading %Why I Introduced Scala In Our Project%


by Bozhidar Bozhanov via SitePoint

4 Clever Psychology Rules for Making Better UX Decisions

According to a study by Missouri University of Science and Technology, over 94 percent of users’ first impression of a website are design-related. Research also shows that a whopping 88 percent of people do not return to websites due to usability issues. If you think all it takes to design a website is having good […]

Continue reading %4 Clever Psychology Rules for Making Better UX Decisions%


by John Stevens via SitePoint

Mailgun Delivers a New Reporting Dashboard

Better Nested Attributes in Rails with the Cocoon Gem

Cocoon

In this article we are going to discuss how to build more complex forms using Rails' nested attributes feature. I will show you how to manipulate multiple associated records from a single form and properly set up the models and controller to enable this feature. Also, we are going to discuss common pitfalls and power our form up to make it more dynamic using the gem called Cocoon. This solution allows adding and removing nested fields asynchronously while providing lots of customization options and callbacks.

The source code is available at GitHub.

The demo app is available at sitepoint-nested-forms.herokuapp.com.

Building a Simple Form

For this demo I'll be using Rails 5 but most of the described concepts can be applied to Rails 3 and 4

Go ahead and create a new application without the default testing suite:

Continue reading %Better Nested Attributes in Rails with the Cocoon Gem%


by Ilya Bodrov-Krukowski via SitePoint

What's New in watchOS 3: Background Tasks

Lazysizebg : jQuery Lazy Background Loading Plugin

jQuery.lazysizebg allows the user to specify different size background images for small, medium, and large screens and loaded after the page is loaded.

If you must have hero images on your pages and want to optimize for smaller screens, this is a quick, low profile tool for accomplishing this.

The post Lazysizebg : jQuery Lazy Background Loading Plugin appeared first on jQuery Rain.


by Admin via jQuery Rain