Resonate Edition 27 | Page 4

MINDFUL MOMENTS W hen was the last time you stepped out the front door and found yourself in a completely unknown environment? When each sensory experience, from the sounds of the streets to the air you breathe, arrests you to the point where all you can do is stop… and take it in? For Global Interaction cross-cultural workers Janelle, Scott, B and Phil, the answer is everyday. When they left the familiarity of home to serve in Africa and Asia, they expected their lives to rapidly transform as they adjusted to new languages and ways of life. But what surprised them was that the transition also brought remarkable clarity, calm and mindfulness. resonate · issue 27 · page 4 Although mindfulness goes by many names (like attentiveness or carefulness) the practice is widely regarded as a moment-by-moment awareness of our environment and an acceptance of the thoughts and feelings that arise in response. It’s not about emptying our minds or filling them up with ‘happy thoughts’. Instead, it’s an exercise in anchoring ourselves to the present. Because mindfulness shifts our focus away from past or future anxieties, it has become a popular prescription for good mental health. (The recent adult colouringbook craze certainly attests to the growth of this trend.) For those who find colouring in the lines anything but relaxing, there are also puzzles and books and ironically even smartphone apps designed to instil calmness and harmony in our digitally-distracted lives. But there is nothing novel about mindfulness in a Christian context. Throughout the Bible we read about renewing our minds, taking every thought captive and not being anxious about tomorrow. Jesus certainly had this covered, encouraging his followers to slow down and consider the lilies of the field (long before mindfulness nature retreats came into vogue). My discussions with Janelle, Scott, B and Phil inspired me to do just that (no colouring-in required). What does mindfulness mean to you? For B, who teaches English in Central Asia, mindfulness begins as an inward awareness of God’s activity in her daily life. ‘It is being really intentional and conscious of God’s presence and what is going on around me.’ The refreshing consequence is that when she shifts her focus onto the author of her faith, she actually discovers more of the person God made her to be. Phil in South Asia has been on a similar journey. He explains that as he cultivates this self-awareness, he develops a more deliberate awareness of the needs of others. This is vital to his work in supporting community development projects in a desperately poor part of the world. ‘I want to truly see the people around me and not just get tunnel-visioned about getting a task done.’ For Janelle in Cambodia, being mindful amidst the demands of the team’s busy sports ministry is a daily exercise in focus and diligence that has strengthened over time. ‘I try to constantly consider what the situation is, what people are feeling and thinking. It helps me take a step back and look at it a bit more thoughtfully.’