The Intelligent Breath – 2: 1 Breathing Activity

The Intelligent Breath – 2: 1 Breathing Activity

The Intelligent Breath – 2: 1 Breathing

Conscious breathing stimulates feel-good chemicals that help you to stay calm and focused, but even more amazingly conscious breathing has been attributed to the increase of empathy, and long levity better social connections and self-love.

Find out more on deep breathing here –

This article is used as a general guide to better health and wellbeing.

It is not intended to replace medical advice.

If you are suffering from anxiety, depression or poor health we strongly advise you seek medical attention.

The views and opinions in the supplied source material, including videos are independent of Horatio’s Jar and platforms content is provided on.

We do not hold responsibility for their accuracy.

Copyright Horatio’s Jar, 2019 

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Just Breathe – A Video Activity

Just Breathe – A Video Activity

Just Breathe

The breath is a quiet observer to how you think and feel and how healthy you are in mind and body; short, shallow breathing reveals anxiety, high blood pressure, poor digestion, irritability and emotional instability. And a deep long and sumptuous breath is often the opposite and reflects a harmonious and balanced approach in mind and body and emotional stability.

Just like everything we consume – the breath can either be a medicine or a poison; depending on how you use it. If your breathing is short and restricted will increase acidity as well as activate your sympathetic nervous system – keeping you anxious and edgy all day. Learning how to breathe properly to enhance the quality of your life and improve your health and wellbeing.

Learn Deep Breathing Here :

The ability to connect and grow authentic relationships with our friends and family is essential for your health and wellbeing and learning deep breathing will help you do that.

Find out how and why here;

This article is used as a general guide to better health and wellbeing.

It is not intended to replace medical advice.

If you are suffering from anxiety, depression or poor health we strongly advise you seek medical attention.

The views and opinions in the supplied source material, including videos are independent of Horatio’s Jar and platforms content is provided on.

We do not hold responsibility for their accuracy.

Copyright Horatio’s Jar, 2018

All Rights Reserved

How To Bake A Meditation Cake

How To Bake A Meditation Cake

How To Bake A Meditation Cake

Meditation practice is a little bit like baking a cake, it requires certain ingredients placed in the right order, mixed and baked for a set amount of time to get the right result. Without a recipe or the right ingredients, you are likely to end up with mush.

Dandipani an Australian Hindu Monk, entrepreneur and keynote speaker says it takes a lot of courage to investigate your inner self and if you have never meditated before then the experience can be mixed, He says the first thing people come into contact with when they meditate is their subconscious mind (that is the place that stores all the things that you ever experienced, a place that is like your mental junkyard)  and find it uncomfortable so they give up.

He says that in order for your meditation to be effective you should treat it like a business meeting with yourself and make sure you keep the appointment. Like every meeting, there is usually an intention or a goal as to why you are holding it. As meditation is a meeting with yourself the purpose is really to get to know yourself and explore different aspects of yourself and your psyche.

Along with the goal of getting to know yourself, meditation can also include a personal goal, like wanting to be more patient, efficient, relaxed or a better person. These intentions are what anchor us to the practice so when the mind drifts away you can come back to where you need to be. Like a roadmap.

Sally Kempton who is a world expert in meditation and was a Hindu Monk in India for twenty years explains that if you don’t have a clear idea of where you are going it is much the same as someone trying to drive a car without knowing where to put the petrol. Instead of putting it into the car, they instead pour it onto the floor.

What You Will Need

Time
Make a time every day where you can be alone, uninterrupted for at least 20minutes Your meditation does not have to be more than 1 – 2 minutes when you first start out

Space
You need to make a dedicated space for your mediation that is not used for anything else, It does not need to be huge just big enough to sit or lay down comfortably

Comfort
Cushions and props, a chair or mat that you can sit on to keep the spine straight and hips flat. You don’t have to cross the legs and you can lay down, as long as the spine is straight and you don’t fall asleep.

Intention
Your intention is your goal for the meditation. Why are you wanting to mediate? Having a goal is really important so choosing something meaningful is best, Most people chose things like learning to be patient, more loving or courageous. It is recommended by all the experts to stay committed to the one goal until you achieve it.

Patience
When you first begin your practice it might be difficult to manage all the mind stuff. Just sitting in your space for your affirmed time without caving in is a good way to overcome the urge to stop. Patience makes the cake taste better in the end.

Posture
Having a straight back is absolutely crucial to your practice. The spine is central to all meditation practices as it is where the main energy centres are aligned as is the pathway in which your outgoing energy is withdrawn and then reversed

Technique
Most accurate forms of mediation will begin with sitting still eyes closed or almost closed, back straight, chin tucked in and body relaxed. Fingers are also sometimes fixed in a position called a mudra, this helps with focus and attention, The breath is central to all mediation and focusing on the breath is used to withdraw your attention back into the body.

Some schools use sounds and mantra to begin the practice and to end it, Most practices include a gratitude practice where you intentionally give thanks to yourself or something that is important to you this helps to retrain your mind to become positive, Positivity makes you more attractive and it also boosts your metabolism, reduces inflammation and keeps illness at bay.

Creativity and Intuition
Exploring and experimenting with different methods, creative visuals, sounds and movement can all enhance your practice. You don’t need to stay doing the same thing every day. Variety is really good at making sure you are enjoying your meditation.

Teacher
The advice and guidance of a good teacher is a must as you begin your practice,  you should definitely explore the variations that exist in the world. You will probably find that with the experience of different practices you will collect and integrate bits of different practices that you like and make your own personal style, You should always experiment on what works for you.

Discipline
Mediation is not easy and some days you just can not win. Showing up is the first step and the second step is sitting it out for the designated time you have chosen without caving in. This conditioning of the self will also condition the mind. Self-discipline is absolutely necessary for achieving any goal in life.

Kindness
Always be kind to yourself no matter what. Even when it gets tough thank yourself and keep going.
‘Your only obstacle is the mind’ – Emily Rack

Dandipani cautions all his pupils when they begin their practice that practising meditation is not going to fix your life, ‘You can’t eat a carrot in the morning and then eat junk food for the rest of the day and expect to be healthy. If you want to fix your life you need to work on every aspect of it and let meditation become a part of it.  

He says meditation is about your energy and he says ‘life is a manifestation of where you direct your energy to’. Energy and awareness are the same things and medtiation is about learning to harness your energy and direct it to where you want it to go. This ability to navigate your own awareness means you are more likely to make better decisions as to where you would like to spend your life currency.

‘Where your mind goes your energy flows’.

This article and the attachments are a general guide to better health and wellbeing.
This article and the attached content is not intended to replace medical advice.

If you are suffering from anxiety, depression or poor health we strongly advise you seek medical attention.
Copyright Horatio’s Jar 2018
All Rights Reserved

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The Mandala – Kids Activity

The Mandala – Kids Activity

Mandala is Meditation

Just like meditation, colouring also allows us to switch off our brains from other thoughts and focus only on the moment, helping to alleviate free-floating anxiety. The art of mandala making or even colouring in a mandala has been proven to reduce anxiety and stress, help focus the mind, improve our relationships and help us to feel more at home in the world.
The repetitious patterns and lines of the mandala are why it is so useful in making us feel calm and focused, other types of doodling and colouring don’t have the same effect as a mandala does in reducing stress and improving cognition. 

An Ancient Tradition

An ancient meditation tradition dating back 10,000 years, the word Mandala comes from the Sanskrit language and means circle. Used as a tool for self-development, focus and meditation, the mandala is an integral practice to Buddhist and Hindu religions.

Traditional mandala always begun as a circle, and from there, patterns and shapes evolve around the ring to create a design. The conventional use of mandala is to gather wisdom and healing. Mandala also helped to develop concentration, self appreciation and inner happiness. Today you can explore your own interpretation of mandala by either making your own or using a template like the one attached here.

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The Iceman

The Iceman

The Iceman

Ages 12+

With the growth of new sciences like neuroplasticity & epigenetics, we are looking further into the mind than ever before. Discovering that what we think, how we feel and what we do can impact our genetics, health and our reality.

All over the world contemporary science and eastern introspective practices have joined forces to explore fields of the mind and body previously out of reach. Examining how the effects of meditation, deep breathing, yoga and mindfulness can enhance our cognition, change our physiology, rewire our brain and transform our perspective of reality.

Meditation, energy therapies, chanting and other introspective ideologies spout that by thought and intention you can directly impact your body and your reality. What was previously capped as quasi-psycho spiritualist mumbo jumbo or new age science is now been put under the microscope, and those fanciful ideas are fast becoming a reality.

Just like when we thought the world was flat and we were the centre of the universe, we now are learning that the power of intention can be just as powerful as homogenised medical practices in pain management and cell renewal. The new great leap for mankind will be in how we perceive and create reality through our own thoughts and actions.

The Iceman

The Wim Hof Method https://www.wimhofmethod.com/practice-the-method

Wim Hof got his nickname “The Iceman” by breaking a number of records related to cold exposure. His feats include climbing Mount Kilimanjaro in shorts, running a half marathon above the Arctic Circle on his bare feet, and standing in a container while covered with ice cubes for more than 112 minutes.

Now There Is Proof

The most intriguing and possibly the most studied athlete on the planet to date is Wim Hof AKA The Iceman. This Danish daredevil born on April 20th 1959, has single-handedly changed our perceived knowledge and scientific understanding of how breath and mediation can significantly alter body chemistry. 

Wim has crushed over 20 world records including; the most extended submersion in freezing waters; he has climbed Mount Everest and Mount Kilimanjaro in a pair of shorts multiple times, run a marathon in the Namibian Dessert without drinking any water or eating any food. 

If this wasn’t enough, Wim has also completed a full marathon (42.195 kilometres (26.219 mi)), above the arctic circle in Finland, in temperatures close to −20 °C (−4 °F) in a pair of shorts.

The most startling and controversial experiment Wim has participated in recently was where he and 12 students volunteered to be injected with E .coli at the Radboud University Hospital, Netherlands. 

He and a team of 12 students trained by Wim in his breathing practice were able to actively suppress parts of their autonomic nervous system and control their reaction to an incredible toxic bacterium. This active and deliberate intervention using the breath and the mind to consciously modify their chemistry was thought impossible – until Wim proved otherwise.

Wim can consciously modify his own autonomic systems and can actively control the release of chemicals and hormones in his body by using his mind and his breath.

He attributes his superhuman athleticism and the mastery of his mind and body to the way he uses his breath. His technique which is now accessible worldwide includes the exposure to extreme temperatures, controlled hyperventilation coupled with concentrated breathing patterns and breath holding and good old fashion will and determination.

Exploring the depth of his unknown abilities began as a spontaneous urge to jump into freezing water in his homeland in the Netherlands when he was just 19. Wim says “nature is your teacher'” and believes that “hard nature” is the key to unlocking the hidden potential we all have to change our physiology, biochemistry and our endurance.

Copyright Horatio’s Jar 2018
All Rights Reserved

This article and the attachments are a general guide to better health and wellbeing.
This article and the attached content is not intended to replace medical advice.

If you are suffering from anxiety, depression or poor health we strongly advise you seek medical attention.