The Calm Collective:
Meditation, Mindfulness, Buddhism, Somatics, and Personal Growth
Sink into sleep: Overcoming insomnia with meditation
I once read a thing somewhere - probably on Instagram, if I’m being honest - and it said something like: “If you think everybody hates you, you probably need sleep. If you think you hate everybody, you’re probably hungry.”
Walking around: Daily opportunities for mindfulness
The truth about living mindfully is that it is most effective when practiced in as many little moments of your day as possible. Long, formal sit down mindfulness meditations are great for building tolerance and resilience. But finding and taking those brief windows of opportunity to incorporate it into your day is the real treasure in these practices.
Countdown to ease: Mindfulness meditation as an antidote to anxiety
Let’s face it, the modern world is rife with reasons to feel anxious. Having a front row seat to all forms of suffering in real time during this time of polycrises is not exactly akin to a spa day. Not to mention the rising amount of pressure on us as individuals to do it all and do it right. So let’s start with this (and say it with me): your anxiety is valid!
Good Grief: How meditation can help us to sit with difficult feelings
If you’re anything like me, sometimes we think we need a perfect set of conditions to begin the thing we’ve been avoiding or putting off, but who do we expect to be when we get those perfect conditions?
Finding ease in the return
Despite, there’s a part of me that is bracing for the return to a "regular" rhythm while another part of me acknowledges that I don’t actually know what my back-to-work rhythm will be like. As a result, the question I’ve been asking myself lately is: What would it feel like if it were easy? I can't help but laugh to myself because it is a classic case of the two arrows!
How do you recognize and respond to being TIRED?
How do you experience fatigue? What behaviours or shifts make you aware that you need care or rest? What do you turn to in those moments?
Exploring mindfulness through human connection
I am back in Montreal and have had some time to reflect on my experience in Mexico over the past few months. The thing that keeps coming back to me is how the lack of automation I observed led to more moments of human connection.
Appreciating pleasure, extending compassion
Awareness riles me up, joy resources me; and compassion spurs me into action. Compassion takes awareness and joy and elevates it into action. And so, this month, I’ve included some resources and a meditation around the theme of compassion.
Community Care vs. Self Care
Creating networks of care and generosity to meet the immediate needs of our neighbours. And addressing the root causes of challenges we face and demanding transformative change.
Setting Feelings-Based Intentions for 2023
So often, our intentions stay rooted in pass/fail productivity-based items like achievements to tick off, places to go, tasks to complete. What if you approached New Year’s resolutions with a focus on how you’d like to feel this coming year.
Tools for ending the year quietly + Holiday gift guide
We are entering my very favourite time of the year. Not because of the holidays, per se, but because of the rituals, traditions, and routines I’ve built around turning inward as the calendar year closes and we arrive at the darkest day.
Finding the Sacred in Daily Life
Rituals and routines share a fine line; at first they can challenge us, or even feel forced, but eventually I find that they open things up for me. On the other hand, rituals and routines are quite different; rituals are more mysterious when routines serve a specific outcome. Despite, it is my mindfulness practice that helps to bridge routines from feeling mundane to feeling special.
On Grief and Letting Go
This time of year generally carries undertones of death and grief with it. Between the waning light and the falling leaves, it reminds us that everything is temporary, for better and worse.
Return From Summer Vacation
This time of year reminds me of the nervous excitement of reconnecting with friends after a summer apart, while also carrying a certain heaviness with my seasonal sadness creeping in.
Summer Vacation
As the manic energy of summer ramps up, and I continue with Project Slow Down. The reality is that Project Slow Down is likely to be a lifelong project, and I’m learning to be okay with that.
What is Enough?
My approach to productivity has always been about learning to work smarter, not harder, so that I can do less and just be. I suppose part of the reason I repeat myself so much with regards to this is that I fall off the “rest-and-do-less” bandwagon more than I’d like, especially when my capitalist conditioning pushes me towards a fear and scarcity mindset.
Who Do You Expect To Be When You Get There?
If you’re anything like me, sometimes we think we need a perfect set of conditions to begin the thing we’ve been avoiding or putting off, but who do we expect to be when we get those perfect conditions?
A Self-Love Note for You
Valentine’s Day has a way of bringing about a lot of mixed emotions, many of which stem from a belief that happiness lies outside ourselves in objects or other people. Loving-Kindness meditations can serve to tap into our own inner source of love as a means of loving ourselves wholly and fully—imperfections and all—so we can be present and available enough to love everyone around us.
Small Changes, Big Rewards
I’m curious, how do you approach change—incrementally, or are you someone who tends to dive in headfirst? It’s something I’ve been reflecting on a lot recently as I realize my approach to change is … well … changing.
New Year, Same Me
Last year, I embarked on my first semi-sabbatical—an endeavour that allowed me space to work on decolonizing and re-indigenizing myself and my life. As a result, my semi-sabbatical has evolved into a general approach to life rather than something temporary.