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Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Finding Peace in a Frantic World Paperback – International Edition, 5 May 2011
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Authoritative, beautifully written and much-loved by its readers, Mindfulness: A practical guide to finding peace in a frantic world has become a word-of-mouth bestseller and global phenomenon. It reveals a set of simple yet powerful practices that you can incorporate into daily life to break the cycle of anxiety, stress unhappiness and exhaustion. It promotes the kind of happiness that gets into your bones and allows you to meet the worst that life throws at you with new courage.
Mindfulness is based on mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT). Co-developed by Professor Mark Williams of Oxford University, MBCT is recommended by the UK's National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and is as effective as drugs for preventing depression. But, equally, it works for the rest of us who aren't depressed but who are struggling to keep up with the relentless demands of the modern world.
By investing just a few minutes each day, this classic guide to mindfulness will put you back in control of your life once again.
- ISBN-10074995308X
- ISBN-13978-0749953089
- Edition1st
- PublisherPiatkus
- Publication date5 May 2011
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions2.4 x 15.4 x 23.5 cm
- Print length288 pages
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Review
Peace can't be achieved in the outside world unless we have peace on the inside. Mark Williams and Danny Penman's book gives us this peace -- Goldie Hawn
Want a happier, more content life? I highly recommend the down-to-earth methods you'll find in MINDFULNESS -- Daniel Goldman, bestselling author of EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE
A deeply compassionate guide to self care, simple and profound -- Sir Kenneth Branagh
If you want to free yourself from anxiety and stress, and feel truly at ease with yourself, then read this book -- Ruby Wax
This book changed my life. It helps me to sleep and refocus. When I'm frazzled, exhausted or anxious, it helps me find my mojo again. It's revered and respected by psychiatrists, doctors and psychologists ... If you need headspace, you will find it with this book -- Alison Young, author of THE BEAUTY INSIDER
One of the best mindfulness books out there - it's a summary of the science behind using it to regain a sense of purpose, and a practical guide on how to do it ― Business Traveller
This is an inspiring programme for anyone who caring about his or her own health and sanity.
Peace can't be achieved in the outside world unless we have peace on the inside. Mark Williams and Danny Penman's book gives us this peace
Want a happier, more content life? I highly recommend the down-to-earth methods you'll find in MINDFULNESS
If you want to free yourself from anxiety and stress, and feel truly at ease with yourself, then read this book.
One of the best mindfulness books out there -- it's a summary of the science behind using it to regain a sense of purpose, and a practical guide on how to do it ― Business Traveller
This book changed my life. It helps me to sleep and refocus. When I'm frazzled, exhausted or anxious, it helps me find my mojo again. It's revered and respected by psychiatrists, doctors and psychologists . . . If you need headspace, you will find it with this book ― Alison Young, author of The Beauty Insider
Book Description
From the Back Cover
Life can be relentless, frantic and exhausting - but it doesn't have to be this way.
Authoritative, beautifully written and much-loved by its readers, Mindfulness: A practical guide to finding peace in a frantic world has become a word-of-mouth bestseller and global phenomenon.
It reveals a set of simple yet powerful practices that you can incorporate into daily life to break the cycle of anxiety, stress, unhappiness and exhaustion. It promotes the kind of happiness that gets into your bones and allows you to meet the worst that life throws at you with new courage.
Mindfulness is based on mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT). Co-developed by Professor Mark Williams of Oxford University, MBCT is recommended by the UK's National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and is as effective as drugs for preventing depression. But, equally, it also works for the rest of us who aren't depressed but who are struggling to keep up with the relentless demands of the modern world.
By investing just a few minutes each day to learn the simple meditations in this classic guide to mindfulness, you can take back control of your life once again.
'Peace can't be achieved in the outside world unless we have peace on the inside. Mark Williams and Danny Penman's book gives us this peace'
Goldie Hawn
About the Author
Dr Danny Penman Ph.D. is the bestselling author of Mindfulness: A practical guide to finding peace in a frantic world, co-written with Professor Mark Williams of Oxford University, and co-author of Mindfulness for Health with Vidyamala Burch. He is a qualified mindfulness teacher who first learned to meditate when he was 16. He is also a feature and comment writer for the Daily Mail, having previously worked for the Independent and the BBC. Danny has hosted mindfulness seminars for directors and senior figures from many leading companies. He is a frequent commentator on mindfulness for the BBC and various national newspapers.
Product details
- Publisher : Piatkus
- Publication date : 5 May 2011
- Edition : 1st
- Language : English
- Print length : 288 pages
- ISBN-10 : 074995308X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0749953089
- Item weight : 410 g
- Dimensions : 2.4 x 15.4 x 23.5 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 1,719 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 3 in Family & Lifestyle Depression
- 7 in Self Help Stress Management
- 7 in Stress
- Customer reviews:
About the authors

I am Professor Emeritus in Clinical Psychology at the University of Oxford. (I also publish as J Mark G Williams.) I have held previous posts in the Medical Research Council in Cambridge and the University of Wales, Bangor. My research aims to understand how to prevent recurrent depression, and how to decrease risk of suicidal behaviour in depression. With colleagues John Teasdale (Cambridge) and Zindel Segal (Toronto) and the support of Jon Kabat-Zinn (Center for Mindfulness, UMass) we developed Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) for prevention of relapse and recurrence in depression. Research has now found that MBCT significantly reduces risk of future depression in those who have suffered three or more previous episodes. In Great Britain, the UK National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE), working on behalf the National Health Service, has recommended MBCT as a primary treatment for prevention relapse in depression.
My previous books include Cry of Pain: understanding suicide and self harm (Penguin, 1997, 2002; Piatkus 2014) and with Z. Segal and J.D. Teasdale, Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy for Depression (Guilford, 2002, 2013) and The Mindful Way Workbook (Guilford, 2013), and Mindfulness -based Cognitive Therapy with People at Risk of Suicide (with Melanie Fennell, Thorsten Barnhofer, Sarah Silverton and Rebecca Crane; Guilford, 2015)
The Mindful Way through Depression: Freeing yourself from Chronic Unhappiness (Guilford, 2007; co-authored with John Teasdale, Zindel Segal and Jon Kabat-Zinn) is written for a lay-readership, and includes a CD narrated by Jon Kabat-Zinn so that readers may try mindfulness practice for themselves.
Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Finding Peace in a Frantic World (Piatkus, 2011, co-authored with Danny Penman) extends MBCT to those who find themselves over-busy, stressed and exhausted; who feel that life is running away from them. It includes a free CD of short meditations that anyone can use to enhance their quality of life.
Our most recent book, Deeper Mindfulness (Piatkus, 2023) reveals how the latest advances in neuroscience, combined with millennia old wisdom, can be harnessed to transform your life. These discoveries open the doors to a deeper layer of mindfulness known as the ‘feeling tone’. This sets the ‘background colour’ that guides your thoughts, feelings and emotions. It is also the tipping point from which you can reclaim your life in an increasingly stressful and chaotic world. Proven effective at treating anxiety, stress and depression, the downloadable practices in Deeper Mindfulness offer a new and more fruitful direction for both novice and experienced meditators. It also allows the rest of us to approach life with renewed strength, vigour and equanimity.

Dr Danny Penman is a meditation teacher and an award winning writer and journalist. He is co-author of the million-selling 'Mindfulness: An Eight Week Plan for Finding Peace in a Frantic World'. He has received journalism awards from the Humane Society of the United States and the RSPCA. In 2014, he won the British Medical Association’s Best Book (Popular Medicine) Award for 'Mindfulness for Health: A Practical Guide to Relieving Pain, Reducing Stress and Restoring Wellbeing' (published in the US as 'You Are Not Your Pain'). His books have been translated into more than 30 languages. His journalism has appeared in the Daily Mail, New Scientist, The Guardian, CNN and the BBC. He trained to teach mindfulness with the acclaimed Breathworks.
Dr Penman has been a keen meditator since his teenage years. He discovered mindfulness meditation in 2006 following a terrible paragliding accident that left him temporarily crippled and in constant pain. He was so surprised by how effective a painkiller (and stress-reliever) the meditations proved to be, that he sought out Professor Mark Williams of Oxford University, the co-developer of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy. The pair then wrote 'Mindfulness: An Eight Week Plan for Finding Peace in a Frantic World'.
Dr Penman recovered from his paragliding injuries in record time and he is now a keen runner, cyclist, and long-distance hiker. He credits his recovery, in large part, to the meditations he has practiced since his accident.
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Customers find this mindfulness guide well-written and easy to understand, particularly noting its effectiveness with early morning meditation sessions. The book's CD content receives positive feedback, with one customer highlighting how the guided meditations are invaluable. They appreciate the soothing voice of the narrator and find the content entertaining, with one noting how it helps them stay in the moment.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book insightful, explaining mindfulness well and creating positive changes in thought processes, with many noting that early morning meditation sessions are particularly effective.
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Customers find the book well-written and easy to read, with one customer noting that it makes a lot of sense.
"...club you over the head; it pulls no punches and therefore is good as further reading once you have a grounding in the basics...." Read more
"...It's full of sense, written in a way you can read without feeling you are being lectured to,the writing is warm empathic and compassionate which..." Read more
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Customers find the book easy to understand and read, with one mentioning that the accompanying CD with guided meditations is simple to use.
"...What this book does is give a formal structure - an 8 week course - to the whole idea of mindfulness, plus it gets you going with some very sensible..." Read more
"...It's got a small number of practical do-able strategies that seem like nothing much but somehow change your perspective on the world and yourself..." Read more
"...I found it easy to read, credible (it backs it's points up with references to studies) and written with compassion and understand that really came..." Read more
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Customers find the book to be well worth the money, describing it as an invaluable book/CD that is worth the effort.
"...self-help philosophy but the good reviews and above all the ridiculously low price made this worth the risk...." Read more
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"...on a book & I had to do it because I've found this to be an invaluable book/CD in helping my depression & accompanying anxiety symptoms & I want..." Read more
Customers appreciate the CD that comes with the book, finding it excellent and useful, with one customer noting that the meditation tracks are invaluable for guiding the process.
"...The paperback book comes with a CD included and the recordings are good and the man on the CD has a nice voice, easy to listen to...." Read more
"...This books and the accompanying CD have helped me so much...." Read more
"...has prepared a carefully thought out text, and an excellent audio disc of eight simple exercises. I particularly appreciated the style of delivery...." Read more
"...The meditations are well described. The book comes with a free CD which guides the reader through the meditations...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's voice, describing it as wonderful, relaxing, and soothing to listen to, with good audio meditations and a great English accent.
"...and awful' chants but I notice that it actually an interesting sensation to be in the wind...it tickles..!..." Read more
"...CD included and the recordings are good and the man on the CD has a nice voice, easy to listen to...." Read more
"...and Oxford University, and the writing, although easy to read, feels sound and well researched...." Read more
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Customers find the book effective, particularly noting that the weekly meditations work well.
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Customers find the book engaging and entertaining, with one mentioning it keeps them busy for hours, while another notes it helps them stay in the moment.
"...to turn towards your fears with openness and kindness and help you stay in the moment and see your fears for what they are, simply thoughts...." Read more
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"...It can bring you back from the brink of despair. It's so interesting and it can be like having your best friend there at your side to guide you...." Read more
Top reviews from United Kingdom
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 July 2012Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseI've suffered from depression most of my adult life and in that time have been fighting it on numerous fronts: Antidepressants, exercise, dietary changes, CBT and of course enough self help books to start a small shop on the subject. But all of these have only helped with some of the symptoms, none have really cured my depression and none have gone to the heart of it and shown me WHY I am depressed.
I had read in numerous places that meditation was considered beneficial and a particular branch of this, "mindfulness", even more so. But my first experiences with this subject were not good. Having bought the Dummies guide initially, it certainly had many "Aha!" moments but no structure and like most self help books soon went back on the shelf and out of memory. Then I tried a guided meditation CD which whilst considered one of the best in the field it was just too long - I can manage to stay awake for maybe 10 minutes at most when relaxing in this manner and I dare say anyone else on medication for depression would be the same. So that became a useful tool to help me sleep but nothing else.
This book was different. I'll be blunt, I nearly didn't buy it, having become jaded with the whole self-help philosophy but the good reviews and above all the ridiculously low price made this worth the risk. What this book does is give a formal structure - an 8 week course - to the whole idea of mindfulness, plus it gets you going with some very sensible length guided meditations on the CD. With most of these well under 10 minutes, the chances of nodding off are greatly diminished and the typical objections such as "I don't have time" are overcome. And let's be frank about this, if you're suffering from depression and feeling low, you CAN justify 10 minutes a day to try and fight it.
But talk about one huge red herring! Like many, I thought meditation was sitting cross-legged and staring into space. Whilst to an outsider this might appear to be what you are doing for some of this course (well apart from the cross-legged bit, you can sit or lie however you like) what's actually happening inside your head is remarkable. For more information on this you need to be careful to look up psychological mindfulness rather than the religious one, since there is virtually no reference to any religion in this course; this is not a course about Buddhism or any practice designed to enlighten you or take you to God.
What this is all about is giving you the tools to gently, carefully, see how your entire thought processes work. To use an analogy, imagine you have been living in a City all your life and this book takes you for a walk up a nearby hill, letting you look back on the scene and giving you a view you never had before. And it's as easy as going for a walk - just practice the mindfulness exercises in the book and on the CD - then things click. Yes, you may feel silly to start with (I did), yes you might think you're rubbish at meditating (I am), yes some of the exercises do elicit a feeling of "What's the point?" but stick with it, slowly but surely you are changing the way you look at life and more importantly, starting to detach yourself from the self-destructive thought processes which contribute to or even, as in my case, actually seed your depression.
How can something so gentle work so well? Everyone has their own view on this. Personally, I think the main power of this type of course is that YOU have to do the work. Yes, you really do need to do this every day and that won't suit everyone. But when you do, what you discover is self-discovered, you learn and heal by direct experience of something tangible, rather than blindly believing or accepting something you're told (which is the premise of many self help books, especially ones promising quick fixes).
The irony about this book is this: The worse you think you are at meditating the better mindfulness is! Because the other red herring is the whole foundation of mindfulness (coming into the present and freeing yourself from the shackles of the past and the worry of the future) is built on seeing what's going wrong in our heads, where our thought processes get screwed up. And how do we discover this? By failing at meditation and then gently and compassionately thinking "Ah, I can see I've wandered off track" - and repeating this over and over, seeing first and then understanding later how this process works. How the mind and our thoughts work and take us away from the moment we live in - this moment. How our whole life is a train of thoughts that just keep coming but one which we can learn to control. It's about switching off the autopilot.
So does it work? For me, yes. This is the first treatment in my whole adult life (I'm 40 now) which unlocked the root causes of my illness. It happened one morning in the shower actually just three days into this course. I was starting to run over some event that happened many years ago, reshaping it into something that might happen in the future, getting very negative about the whole thing, my mind running on and on. I remembered one of the exercises in the first week, to do something mindful as it teaches you to do. Then I saw it - I saw my depressive, negative thoughts from the outside. For the first time, I was no longer IN my thoughts, being that depressive and anxious person, I was seeing the whole process from the outside. From then, over the 8 weeks, this idea and concept was refined and re-enforced.
The book actually went further than this, but I am reluctant to waffle on too much about my experiences because it will sound too good to be true! Let's just say I have never been happier and my whole life experience has become the opposite of depression - I have been given new eyes. I should point out that I do this course now on a rolling basis, having first started seven months ago. I wanted to wait this long before reviewing since I still retained some concern it might be a temporary fix, but it does seem to have rewired many faulty parts of my life on a permanent basis.
The only thing this book lacks is any help or guidance on interacting with the same people who only knew you as a depressed person. You may experience a growing gulf between yourself and those around you when you become aware of what's underneath and start to unlock the good things there. Trying to explain this all to friends and family - which you'll want to, you'll be excited - is hard work because the tangible results and feelings you get are difficult to explain in lay terms (you have to experience it to understand it). You may also find that other people cannot explain the fact you do actually smile a lot more - you're so happy - they can become defensive and please don't let this burst your bubble. Just remember: This is all about YOU.
It has also opened many doors to areas I was previously a skeptic to, notably spirituality and the concept of us (as in the "I", the person or soul inside) being separate from our thoughts which I personally believe is the key to getting a grip on depressive illness.
For anyone else interested after you have tried this course there are a couple of recommendations for further reading from Amazon. The first is "Untethered Soul" by Michael Singer. This approaches core concepts of mindfulness from a non-meditation perspective. If meditation is the gentle and flowing guide, then Untethered Soul is the street-fighter which will club you over the head; it pulls no punches and therefore is good as further reading once you have a grounding in the basics. I found a combination of the tools from Mindful Meditation and Untethered Soul quite a potent mix in some challenging life events. "Mindfulness for Dummies" is a useful follow up book (by Shamash Alidina), mostly because of the reworking of the same ideas in different ways and the CD providing more guided meditation, though I cannot recommend it as a starting point to this journey because of its lack of good structure, only as a useful way of continuing your progress.
Finally, if you get hooked on the meditation side then by far the best book to explore this that I have found is "Buddhist Meditation" by Kamalashila. Obviously the slant on meditation here is a religious one (but in a nice and non-intrusive way) however this book has some very practical tools and guides to help you meditate without a guided CD, this is the start of yet another journey.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 31 December 2014Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseAmazing.. if you are wondering if it is worth the money hesitate no longer, I wish I had discovered it years ago. It's full of sense, written in a way you can read without feeling you are being lectured to,the writing is warm empathic and compassionate which rubs off, I started to feel a bit nicer towards myself just by reading it! The strategies are do-able, there isn't any reason why anyone who wants to couldn't take a 'mindful walk' ...what's three minutes of your life, just to see if it is different...?..and goodness me.. I am noticing things I've not noticed for years, if ever, on regular walks, sparking my interest, and I'm not now trying to do it, I'm just doing it. It adds a new perspective..so walking the dogs becomes something I enjoy rather than something else to tick off the list whilst I'm thinking what else I have to do to tick off the list. This book made me realise I had missed off my list 'enjoy life before I am dead'!, that before I was so busy getting through a list of things to do I wasn't experiencing anything in the moment, I was always a step or two ahead anticipating but then not experiencing something else. Pointless! The meditation cd (I bought the kindle version and the cd was sent in two days..very impressive) is great, I'm not a big fan of the birds singing,waves, green leafy woods type of relaxations because I'm awkward and tend not to want to be where I'm 'supposed' to be, and trying to breath differently to how I am breathing also makes me dig in my heels..so just following my breath works.. and strangely though the intention was not to breath deeply I did find I started to.. so twice a day I find a bit of peace, all of my own..and when life gets hectic I can find it again.. it's fabulous! It's got a small number of practical do-able strategies that seem like nothing much but somehow change your perspective on the world and yourself in it and with it your mood (for the better). I've only followed the programme for a couple of weeks so far but even from the first week began to notice changes I hadn't consciously made but which were enhancing my life and pleasure in it. I feel much better, but..and here's the strange bit I didn't feel 'not better' before (bought it to help someone else!!) so in a way it proved the point that we simply fail to notice what is going on around us and in us and thereby miss out on so much of what could enhance our daily living. I particularly like the ideas of ceasing to judge things but instead to 'notice', thus a mindful walk in the wind isn't filling my mind with 'oh this wind is so cold and awful' chants but I notice that it actually an interesting sensation to be in the wind...it tickles..! And letting go of judging myself has had other benefits, an issue I'd been trying to resolve for years and had given up trying to resolve it seems to have..er...resolved!! I am amazed. And shocked.. because I realise how out of touch with my body I am, trying to 'feel my feet' was a hoot.. I had to look to check they were still on the end of my ankles because I literally could not feel them, if anyone had said to me that I wouldn't be able to feel my feet I'd have laughed ..but now I can. And what do I notice..well mainly that things, sensations come and go, so I don't have to worry about that headache because if I just notice my head is hurting I remind myself it is a coming and going of a busy body and move on.. mostly it goes. I think if you are feeling extremely depressed you are going to find it hard to do even the smallest of strategies..but in fairness the book isn't aimed at someone in that category...yet if you could just manage it, or even some of it you might begin to open up a chink of light in that dark world. In my opinion if you are anxious it would be a godsend. I have bought a few mindfulness books but this one, for me, strikes the right note, and I convey huge thanks to Prof Williams.
Top reviews from other countries
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Francesco GilioReviewed in Italy on 31 August 20224.0 out of 5 stars Un buon riferimento per iniziare
Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseGli esercizi proposti sono utili per iniziare a praticare la Mindfulness. I capitoli introduttivi fanno capire bene il contesto.
Helen BaldwinReviewed in France on 20 October 20155.0 out of 5 stars Very helpful book for avoiding depression relapse
Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseA really excellent book which I found very helpful for finding strategies for avoiding relapse of depression and anxiety. It is very well written with lots of highly relevant and interesting examples. I am convinced that mindfulness is the solution!
Kindle CustomerReviewed in the United States on 14 December 20115.0 out of 5 stars If you are stressed (and who isn't nowadays), you need to read this book!
Initial Review 12/14/2010:
Let me begin by saying that I have always been a huge skeptic about mindfullness, meditation, and anything else along those lines. That is until I began seeing all of the new scientific research on the subject and the new theory of brain plasticity...how people can literally change their brains no matter how old they are. This research was enough to convince me to give mindful meditation a try. Staying with the theme of the science of meditation, I chose The Frantic World book because the program was created by a team of phD scholars from respected universities, such as Oxford, Cambridge, UMass, etc. Interestingly, the main author of this book, Mark Williams, was a skeptic when he started researching the subject as well. Not any more.
I am currently on week eight of the plan and I can tell you that I absolutely have noticed a difference. Not only do I feel calmer in situations that used to bother me the past physically, but I am also learning how to treat myself with more compassion, get out of autopilot and break many of my bad habits, and how to face my fears head on rather than avoiding them and actually making things worse. I have gone from a complete skeptic to someone who plans to continue to practice mindfulness for the rest of my life.
I'm not going to sugarcoat things and say that it's easy to find the time to meditate. It's not. One has to work hard to make sure that they find the half hour or so per day that they need to dedicate to the practice. That's not easy with work, kids, and life in general. I promise you though that it's definitely worth the time that you put in. I've never written a product review about anything on Amazon or any other site for that matter before. I am writing this review in the hopes that others out there who are struggling with stress, anxiety, etc read it and give mindfulness shot. Incorporating it into my daily life passively as well as actively meditating for short periods of the day has helped me tremendously.
Update 1/17/12:
Let's see if I can update my review using the comments section. Bear with me because I've never tried to do this before. I completed the entire Frantic World course several weeks ago. I definitely believe that it was beneficial. Do I still get stressed out from time to time? Of course. The idea behind mindfulness is not to make one live in some unrealistic, nirvana-like world...thought that would be nice :). To me it seems as though the goal of mindfulness is to help people deal with life's inevitably stressful situations more easily and quickly than they would have in the past. I think that incidents which would have dragged me down into a huge stressed-out mess for a prolonged period of time a year or so ago no longer seem to have the power to do so.
I am still continuing to do the mindfulness practices that were outlined in the book, particularly meditations four and seven. The first being a more general meditation using breathing and sensing the body and the second directed towards self-compassion or as the book calls it "befriending." Those two are my favorite, though from time to time I do practice meditation one and two, which are essentially body scans.
I plan to continue meditating. Though I rarely meditate for more than 20 to 30 minutes per day, I have not missed a single day since I started the practice. I believe that every little bit helps. It takes a long time to master any skill. Let's say that one meditated for 20 minutes every day for the entire eight week program. That seems like a long time right? Well, in reality one who has diligently done this meditation has actually only meditated for a total less than twenty hours. When one considers the popular modern-day theory that it takes 10,000 hours to truly be an expert at something, it looks like there is a long way to go. So what's my point in all of this rambling? I guess that my point is that mindfulness' benefits seem to accumulate over time. One will definitely benefit from taking the eight week Frantic World course, but don't just expect to do it for eight weeks and poof be magically stress free from then on. I'm sure that people who do this will experience some benefit, but I think that mindfulness is more of a life-long pursuit. The more one does it, the more benefit they will receive. Am I right? Who knows? I'm certainly not a psychologist or neuro-biologist. I'm just a normal family man who has read a lot on the subject of mindfulness over the past several months.
Speaking about reading, here's a list of a couple of other books that I have found helpful in this process. They more emphasize the practice of mindfulness in every day life, rather than purposeful meditation. Hopefully anyone who is reading this will find them helpful as well:
Just One Thing: Developing A Buddha Brain One Simple Practice at a Time - Rick Hanson
How to Train a Wild Elephant: And Other Adventures in Mindfulness - Jan Chozen Bays
Well, that's all for now. Perhaps I'll check back with another update and some more book suggestions some other time.
Update 2/7/12:
I have found that the new research on Positive Psychology meshes very well with mindfulness practices. I have been practicing and reading about both on a regular basis. Here's a list of the best books that I have found on the subject for anyone who's interested:
Authentic Happiness: Using the New Positive Psychology to Realize Your Potential for Lasting Fulfillment by Martin E. P. Seligman - Dr. Seligman is basically the founder of the Positive Psychology movement. He established the school on the subject at U Penn. While older, Authentic Happiness seems better than his newer book on the eubject because it cnotains more practical advice on how to incorporate positive psychology into your life, such as practicing forgiveness, gratitude, flow, etc...
Buddha's Brain: The Practical Neuroscience of Happiness, Love, and Wisdom by Rick Hanson - Dr. Hanson is another well known advocate of mindfulness, though his version of the meditations and his books seem to oncorporate many elements of Positive Psychology as well. It's a nice blend of the two. Not just some random person off of the street, Hanson's work delves deep into the science of the mind. He is the founder of the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley and has taught at Oxford, Stanford, and Harvard.
3/13/2012:
Make sure to check out the new book by Richard Davidson, The Emotional Life of Your Brain: How Its Unique Patterns Affect the Way You Think, Feel, and Live--and How You Can Change Them . It's absolutely amazing.
Update 5/31/2012
Wow it's been awhile since my last update. I hope that everyone is doing well. I know that I am. I recently has an amazing revelation that I had to share with others who are in a similar situation to the one that I found myself in last year. I used to feel sorry for myself that I went through a period of significant depression and anxiety. Thinking why me? I now have come to realize that those few short months that I felt a little off were one of the best things that has ever happened to me in my life. Hitting bottom actually enabled me to push off and soar to the top. I honestly feel as though I am a better person today than I was before I went through that whole ordeal. I consider myself to be a reasonably smart individual and this enabled me to do the research that was necessary to not only break the cycle of negativity that I was stuck in, but to actually come out the other side a better, stronger, happier, healthier, more spiritual person than I have ever been in my life. I always considered myself to be a relatively happy individual, but I am now realizing just how unhealthy how some of the habits that I had in the past, like holding grudges, believing in jinxes, etc... really were. Not only was I able to become a better person, but even better I can now pass this gift onto everyone in my family...and elsewhere for that matter. I can now build a solid foundation of positivity and confidence for my children that I'm not sure I would have been able to give them in the past. Again, I have always considered myself to be a good father, but kids pick up on it when you're not feeling great, when you hold a grudge, when you say something negative...I think that I can provide them with the gift of positivity at one of the important times for the development of their minds. A gift that they can hopefully pass onto future generations.
I never try to force religion upon anyone, but I have been absolutely amazed by the significant links between modern psychology, particularly positive psychology and even mindfulness, and many forms of religion. I'm not sure if psychologists are borrowing from religion, if preachers are borrowing from modern psychology or if they both independently arrived at the same conclusions but the links are definitely there. If you are a religions person and you haven't ever listened to him, I suggest that you check out some of the works by Joel Osteen, especially his book "Every Day is a Friday" and some of his sermons that are available on iTunes such as "Good, Better, Blessed" and "Living in Favor Abundance and Joy." These are some of the most uplifting things that I have ever listened to. Joel Osteen is one of the most dynamic, charismatic speakers of our time. I'm sure that there are people who reject religion in general or Osteen in particular. I know that I certainly never thought that I would listen to a televangelist regularly, but trust me Joel Osteen and his uplifting message are a gift from God that everyone should listen to. I'm not trying to push my views on anyone, again I'm just here to try to help others by suggesting things that have worked for me. I hope that anyone who is reading this who feels that they need a little help because they are anxious, depressed or just thinks that they could be a little more positive or relaxed in life finds it helpful.
Update 4/30/2013:
Hi everyone. I was on Amazon today looking for books on positive psychology and I noticed all of the wonderful comments that many people have made. Thank you so much for the kind words. My intention in writing this review was to try to help others improve their lives like I have been able to do through making changes, many of which were inspired by Mark William's brilliant work on the subject of Mindfulness.
So, how have things been going? To sum them up in one word...Amazing. The changes that I started making in my life two and a half years ago have literally made these the best years that I have ever had. I like to think that one's mindset is sort of like a huge ship. Once the ship of emotions sets off in a negative direction, it's slow-going and it requires effort to turn it around, but it can be done. When you do get it pointed in the right direction the inertia works just as well that way. Positivity, faith, mindfulness all become easier and more natural with practice over time as the structure of the brain changes. It takes just as much energy to be positive and expect something good to happen as it does to be negative ane expect something bad, but the former is a whole lot more fun and healthy than the latter.
Here's a few random thoughts on what I have learned throughout this process:
1. Don't label yourself as having this or having that, being a positive person or a negative person, or being prone to this phobia or that condition. We're all people and we all have emotions. The people that you see walking down the street have the same feelings that you and I have. There's nothing wrong with you if you feel sad or anxious or whatever from time to time. Everyone does. As much as some people would like you to think that they're immune to feelings such as fear, etc...they're not.
2. The key is not to avoid having negative emotions, it's to not let them spiral out of control. Recognize that a thought is just a thought. It can't hurt you. It's nothing more than a cloud passing through the sky of the mind. Trying to avoid anything just makes it worse. While it sounds funny, you have to face your fears in order to master them. Mindfulness has helped me tremendously with this one.
3. Always try to have as many positive thoughts as possible and to look at things in the most favorable light. I have tons of digital picture frames in my office and at home that constantly scroll (I had to change it to every 1/2 hour because every minute was becoming very distracting and not very mindful ;) ) pictures of happy times in my life. I also use the notepad in my phone to write down a couple of positive things that happened to me that day or recently when I have the time at work, such as a short break. The more you reinforce the positive, the more a part of your mindset it will become. Scientists have proven that neuroplasticity exists and that what you expose yourself to literally changes the physical structure of your brain.
4. I personally have found faith and religion to be very helpful in my life.
5. While I don't bury my head in the sand, I have significantly cut back on the news that I watch on television and read on the Internet. Why? The world is filled with millions and millions of people. The news will take the two or three people who have dome something wrong and rub them in your face for hours at a time. The people who commit crimes, etc. represent less than one percent of the population but if you constantly think about the news you'll believe that it's everyone. No thanks. I'm looking for the good in people and you know something, if you walk around with a smile and a positive attitude, looking to help people and thinking the best I've found that you call in the best. I meet more nice people today whan I ever did when I was looking for the worst in everyone.
HA, I just read Amazon's review guidelines..."Reviews must contain at least 20 words..." I've got that one covered. Well, that's all the time I have for now, but I wanted to provide an update for anyone who's interested. On a related note to steer things back towards the product, I corresponded with Dr. Williams via e-mail to thank him for all that his work has done for me and he told me that he is almost finished with a new workbook on the subject. I definitely plan on reading it when it's available.
Take Care everyone!
Jason
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V.C.Reviewed in Spain on 4 March 20165.0 out of 5 stars El libro que todos deberían tener!
Un libro muy bien escrito que ayuda a traer paz a la mente. A mi me resulto perfecto ya que soy una persona muy mentalmente activa.
Te enseña técnicas de como controlar tus pensamientos y no dejar que ellos controlen tu vida para el malo.
Todo a travez de practicas de meditaciones que se pueden escuchar desde tu movil por internet.
Lo que mas me gusta es que no se trata de un libro "espiritual" como casi todos que hablan de meditación, sino abordan la meditacion como una tecnica fiable, basada en estudios psicológicos y te explican como actua en tu mente.
sophoReviewed in Germany on 5 May 20255.0 out of 5 stars Totally recommended
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseLove this book and the program.
I have been doing Body Scan meditation for a long time now and it helped me through very anxious moments, yet program and the book has much more to offer









