Law of Least Resistance and Dharma

Question:

First and foremost I would like to tell you that I am a tremendous fan. I have listened to all of your audio tapes repeatedly. They are so enjoyable, peaceful and so full of knowledge. However, I have a few questions. But I will start with one. In your book Seven Spiritual Laws of Success you state that one should chose the path of least resistance. I am currently doing pediatrics and entering child neurology. before transitioning from peds to child neurology, I informed my Peds Director about entering child neurology, she disapproved and then she made my life very difficult. My father also told me to just stick to peds and not do neurology. I listened to your tapes and thought about forgetting about child neuro. I was confused. But in the end, I kept saying that I should do it because it makes me happy regardless of the havoc it created around me. So what extent should I apply the rule of least resistance? What about minorities who fight for equality and are met
with resistance. Should they not fight for equality? I want to lead a spiritual and peaceful life but sometimes decisions I make upset people. What can you offer with regards to the philosophy of least resistance in my life?

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Three-Digit Phone Number for Suicide Prevention Signed into Law

A few weeks ago, local Utah politicians (Rep. Chris Stewart and Sen. Orrin Hatch) helped get a suicide prevention bill onto President Trump’s desk that he signed into law. It tasks the government with creating a three-digit number that works as a shortcut to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (1-800-273-8255) for suicide and mental health crises, much like 911 for medical emergencies. It also authorizes an investigation into the effectiveness of both the lifeline and the Veteran Crisis Line.

If you would like to see changes to either of these services, now is a very good time to contact your congress critters and give them your feedback.

Without comment, President Donald Trump signed into law on Tuesday legislation sponsored by Rep. Chris Stewart and Sen. Orrin Hatch, both Republicans, to require the Federal Communications Commission to study the feasibility of such a hotline. 

It is also ordered to recommend which three-digit number would be best for the hotline, examine the effectiveness of the current National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and Veterans Crisis Line, and recommend ways to improve the current system. 

Stewart and Hatch hailed the new law and said it is long overdue. 

“We now have the opportunity to make the National Suicide Prevention Hotline more accessible and easier to remember,” Stewart said. “By creating a hotline dialing code that is short and easy to remember, we are taking an important step towards potentially averting tragedy. This new law truly has the ability to save lives.”

More can be read here, here, and here.

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Leaving behind

Same message, different traditions, same time period

If people seek peace in outward things, whether in places or in methods or in people or in deeds … however great or of whatever kind all this may be, this is all in vain and brings them no peace. Those who seek thus seek wrongly; the further they go the less they find what they are seeking. They are like one who has taken a wrong turning: the further he goes, the more he goes astray. But what should he do? In truth, if one gave up a kingdom or the whole world and did not give up self, he or she would have given up nothing. But if one gives up oneself, then whatever one keeps, wealth, honour or whatever it may be, still they have given up everything.  

Meister Eckhart, German theologian, philosopher and mystic, 1260 – 1328

To study the self is to forget the self. 
To forget the self is to be enlightened by the ten thousand things 

Dogen, Buddhist monk and philosopher, founder of the Soto school of Zen, 1200 – 1253,

 

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Watermelon Arugula Salad

Watermelon Arugula Salad

Okay so let’s just start with the elephant in the room. I made a salad for you this week instead of something covered in chocolate or layered with ice cream. I’m sure you are wondering what the H.E. double hockey sticks is going on here? I assure you that I would be wondering the same exact thing if I were you. All I can say is, “What?! I eat salads too ya know!” For me to actually make, photograph, and post a salad recipe on the blog though, you know it has to be something REALLY special. It can’t just be any salad. How boring. But this salad is something else entirely.

Watermelon Arugula Salad

This recipe is based off a salad that I had for the first time a few weeks ago. It was like 800 degrees in San Diego, and I was out to lunch with some co-workers. I was looking at the salads on the menu, because it was way too hot to eat anything else, and the word watermelon jumped off the menu at me. I thought, “What?! You can’t put watermelon on a salad. I have to try this.” So I ordered it, and added some grilled chicken to it of course, because lean protein bro. It was love at first bite. Then I thought, this would be really easy to make at home, so I made it for dinner the next day. Then when Brad freaked out and was like, “this is the best salad ever”, I knew I needed to post it on the blog. Trust me, I did go back and forth for a bit wondering if anyone even wanted, slash, needed another salad recipe. This salad is just so good though, I decided you just had to have it. So boom. I photographed it and wrote it up.

Watermelon Arugula Salad

So what’s new with you besides amazing watermelon salads? I’m taking a trip to the Caribbean in 3 weeks! Eek! I’m so excited. You know what I’m not excited about? My muffin top. I will be scantily clad for like 10 days straight, which means I need to get my ish together. I have 3 weeks to do this. Of course when I booked the trip, I had several months to do this, but that wouldn’t have been fair to all the dessert and good food that I ate up until this point, am I right? I’ve also given up my greatest love to loose this muffin top too…booze. I’m 3 weeks stone cold Steve Austin (sober). Now that I’m in the 3rd week of no booze, I feel fine. It’s just like with sugar, once you detox the cravings are gone and I’m not a total mess in social situations that involve it. My sleep is spectacular and I feel great. I just still have this stupid muffin top. Mainly because I just really like to eat. I started counting macros to help keep myself in check. My carbs are always the first to go. It’s like I blink and they’re gone.

I love carbs…said everyone ever.”

Watermelon Arugula Salad

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Watermelon Arugula Salad
2016-07-21 11:53:40

Serves 2
Print

Prep Time
10 min

Total Time
30 min

Prep Time
10 min

Total Time
30 min

Ingredients

Watermelon Arugula Salad
  1. 4 cups (4 ounces, 115g) baby arugula
  2. 1 cup (154g) diced watermelon
  3. 6 ounces (170g) grilled chicken, thinly sliced
  4. 3 ounces (85g) sliced avocado or 1/2 of a large avocado
  5. 2 tablespoons ricotta salata
  6. pinch of sea salt
Sherry Shallot Vinaigrette
  1. 1 medium shallot, minced
  2. 2 tablespoons sherry vinegar
  3. 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  4. 1 tablespoon water
  5. 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
  6. ¼ cup (60ml) extra virgin olive oil
  7. sea salt and pepper to taste
Directions

Watermelon Arugula Salad
  1. Evenly divide the arugula between two salad bowls. Top each bowl of arugula with ½ cup diced watermelon, 3 ounces (85g) of sliced grilled chicken, and sliced avocado. Then sprinkle 1 tablespoon of the ricotta salata and sea salt across the top of each salad as a garnish. Toss with the Sherry Shallot Vinaigrette or serve the dressing on the side.
Sherry Shallot Vinaigrette
  1. Add the minced shallot, sherry vinegar, lemon juice, water, and Dijon mustard to a small mixing bowl. Stir together then let the ingredients macerate for at least 15 minutes.
  2. Gradually stir in the olive oil using a fork or small whisk, until combined. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Store leftover dressing in the refrigerator. The olive oil will solidify when cold. Before using, let sit at room temperature or set the bowl in hot water until it liquefies again.
Notes
  1. If you like your dressings a little on the sweeter side you could definitely add a touch of honey to taste.
Clean Eating with a Dirty Mind http://cleaneatingwithadirtymind.com/

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The mystery of the inflamed brain

The Netflix drama ‘Brain on Fire is the story of a young woman in the U.S. who suddenly develops severe psychiatric symptoms. Some clever detective work reveals that she has a rare and mysterious condition causing brain inflammation. We hear from an Australian teenager who’s been through the same ordeal—but once treated has survived and thrived.

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How Not to Go to War

When the drums of war start beating, can cooler heads prevail and negotiations in good faith start? Vijay Mehta has written a useful overview of efforts to create a Department of Peace within governments so that there would be an institutionalized official voice proposing other avenues than war. (1) That Cooler Heads May Prevail – How Not to Go to War   Such proposals are not new. In 1943, Alexander Wiley, a liberal Republican senator had proposed to President Franklin Roosevelt that he establish a cabinet-level post of Secretary of Peace as there was already a Secretary of War. The Secretary of War has now been renamed Secretary of Defense, but the function has not radically changed. A Secretary of Peace in Wiley’s vision would be charged with preempting conflicts before they exploded into violence and proposing peaceful resolutions. In the U.S.A. after the end of the Second World War, in a “never again” atmosphere, other members of Congress suggested the creation of such a Department of Peace. However, such a vision was never transformed into a reality. As the Cold War took up ever more energy and funds, a compromise was reached in 1984 at the time that Ronald Reagan was President. The U.S. Institute of Peace was created and has produced some useful publications and does some conflict resolution training for diplomats and mediators. However, the leadership of the Institute of Peace has not played a visible role in foreign policy formation. One must look elsewhere for cooler voices to cover the beat of the war drums. There is currently a test in real time as the situation in Venezuela grows more complex. There are real possibilities of armed violence, ranging from armed violence within the country to the creation of armed militias operating from Colombia and Brazil…

Continue Reading

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Transforming Self-Care into a Passionate Movement

Over the past eight weeks, we’ve begun changing our perspective of self-care, taking it from a purely individual pursuit to one that relies on community, and filling our toolbox with best practices, resources, and practical tips along the way.

Now, for this final installment of the “Self-Care in Politically Charged Times” Series, we’re going to start looking at self-care as a societal movement that we must champion. Take a moment to imagine the power of a self-care movement—a wave of kind care connecting communities, healing our bodies and minds, sustaining our energy and momentum, and helping us all live healthier, happier, and more balanced lives.

That’s pretty awesome.

So how do we make self-care a cornerstone practice, bringing it into our social groups, homes, and offices? Before we embark on this journey, I think it’s important to examine and appreciate the rich history of self-care.

The History of Self-Care

The “radical” concept of self-care was born during the civil rights era, a time when brave individuals were fighting the relentless enemies of prejudice and discrimination. These American heroes created the first real communities of care, standing strong together in the face of seemingly impossible challenges and unspeakable treatment.

It can’t be lost on us that one of the concepts they were fighting for was (and remains) the basic human right to self-care. People of color were often denied medical treatment at hospitals and health care centers. The government had turned its back on them. Self-care, quite literally, became a matter of life and death. They were fighting an exhausting battle and the only support to be found was in each other and within themselves.

The basic idea of being able to care for oneself, of having the time, money and resources necessary to do so, was born out of the civil rights movement.

We don’t just deserve to be alive, we have the right to live our best lives.

In our age of bath bombs, drop-in meditation studios and face masks, self-care may seem like a no-brainer, but for populations that were (and still are) marginalized, it was a bold statement and one that should inspire us all today. We don’t just deserve to be alive, we have the right to live our best lives.

Why Do We Need a Self-Care Movement?

What is a movement anyway? A movement is simply a group of people who share a purpose and create change together. Yes, a successful one requires strong leadership and partnerships, support from stakeholders, well-defined goals, and a solid plan in place to achieve them. However, more than anything else a movement requires passionate members. It demands energy and skin in the game from those who want to move the needle and drive the change.

Sound like anyone you know?

I hope so because the times are ripe for change. Following the 2016 presidential election, a growing uneasiness and undercurrent of anxiety has emerged in this country—regardless of who you voted for and what side of the political spectrum you find yourself in. If you ask me, it’s a genuine national health crisis. But it can also be the impetus for a self-care movement that can have a profound and lasting impact on this country.

We have the opportunity to reclaim the term self-care and make it synonymous again with the late activist Audre Lorde’s statement that self-care is “not self-indulgent, it is self-preservation”.

We need to understand that our self-care impacts the lives of those around us in innumerable positive ways.

In order for self-care to become a national movement, we must be clear about what it is and what it’s for: its intention and purpose. The motivation behind self-care needs to extend beyond our own in-the-moment happiness. We need to understand that our self-care impacts the lives of those around us in innumerable positive ways. We need to realize that from a macro perspective, self-care reaches beyond the individual to impact communities, neighborhoods, our nation, and, ultimately, the world.

How to Build a Self-Care Movement: Bringing Positive Change to the Collective Struggle

So, how do we begin building our self-care movement and incorporating it into our communities and workplaces so that “communities of care” become part of the culture? Here are a few ideas. Some are easy fixes. Others are complex issues. But they’re all areas we need to explore:

1)  Let’s Destigmatize Mental Health. As people who have created communities of care around us, we are the leaders of our self-care movement. Let’s commit to bringing positive energy and workable solutions to those struggling with mental health issues. We need to change the way we look at mental health in this country and make sure every person has access to the caregivers, transportation, treatment, and funds needed to properly address mental health.

2) Commit to Sharing Your Self-Care Knowledge. We all have daily routines and personal challenges. But let’s stop trying to go it alone. When we take the time to create space in our schedules for others; when we organize and meet up with our friends and social groups; even when we exchange a few thoughtful emails, we’re building communities of care and, therefore, fueling the self-care revolution — One. person. at. a. time. Let’s become the leaders who create guilt-free and inviting spaces around us. Let’s set the intentions for groups that are making a difference. Let’s make sure that the individuals in our networks enjoy the added support of those in their lives who care.  

3) Help Define the Standards. The slow adoption of self-care in our culture is in big part due to a lack of definition. We don’t know what the standards of self-care are or should be because they’ve never been clearly established. It must be our mission to create a well-defined vision for self-care grounded in real principles and standards. I define self-care as the practice of taking an active role in protecting our own well-being, pursuing happiness, and having the ability, tools, and resources to respond to periods of stress so that they don’t result in imbalance and lead to a health crisis. In my past life, as the President of large service company, when a client would complain about customer service, I would first examine whether or not we, as a company, properly defined the expectations for the client. That’s the idea here. Once we define the standards for self-care, it’ll legitimize our cause by providing a clear roadmap for people to follow. They’ll be able to create a plan, measure their progress, and make changes along the way based on realistic and achievable goals.

I define self-care as the practice of taking an active role in protecting our own well-being, pursuing happiness, and having the ability, tools, and resources to respond to periods of stress so that they don’t result in imbalance and lead to a health crisis.

4)  Understand that Exhausted Leadership is Poor Leadership. Exhaustion leads to shorter attention spans, increased emotional volatility, and poor decision making—Not exactly the qualities of a great leader. That’s why it’s vital that our efforts in leading the self-care movement are sustainable. If we burnout, it will be replicated by our staff, volunteers, children, and others in our sphere of influence. To create a culture of self-care we must be willing to model a sustainable work pace. We must communicate to others that social transformation work begins with the self. When we imagine what advocacy work looks like visually, for example, perhaps we can see it as a series of peaks and valleys. The peaks are where advocacy work happens, and the valleys are where we rest, celebrate and reflect, gathering our strength to climb the mountain ahead.  If we conduct our lives and model this workflow in our organizations, we can build resiliency and make sure that we keep people engaged and ensure that none of us falls victim to burnout.

5)  Ask Reflection Questions to Yourself and Your Team. In the effort to move from reflection to action, and to build momentum to climb that next peak, we should ask ourselves “key questions” that will help us improve our own self-care habits and that of those around us. These questions may include:

  • How does the quality of my leadership diminish due to the lack of my own self-care?
  • Which habit(s) negatively impact my self-care and what new behavior can I substitute it with?
  • Do I have a self-care plan in place to ensure I follow-up on this new behavior and have I shared this plan with others who will hold me accountable?
  • How will I track my progress along the way?
  • How can I best support my staff/volunteers/friends/family members in their endeavors?

The modern self-care movement needs to start as a practice to avoid burnout, rather than as a response to it. The movement must demand that individuals put their health and wellness first without feeling guilty for doing so. If we all collectively share our plans for self-care, we declare boldly that our needs, our state of mind, our body and our overall health matters. We give permission to others to invest in themselves and take the courageous step to acknowledge that they have needs, that their needs are important, and that those needs deserve to be met.

Since this is the last week of the self-care series (or at least part 1 of the series), I don’t want you to feel like you’ve been left high and dry. I am part of your self-care community. Mindful is part of your self-care community. I hope you’ve been joining me in our private Facebook group every week for our live Q&As and meditations. This week we’re meeting on Saturday (11 am ET) instead of Friday for our final session in this series. It’s my hope that everyone will join me, share where you are in your journey, and help me continue this conversation we’ve started. And then, let’s turn this conversation into a Movement!

Thank you so much for joining me over the last 8 weeks for this self-care journey. In truth, we’ve only just begun.

MORE FROM SHELLY TYGIELSKI:

Well-Being

“No” Is A Complete Sentence 

“No” is a word most of us use too infrequently. And, what’s worse, when we say “No” we usually add on all sorts of wheedly explanations. But “No” is a complete sentence, and here’s why.
Read More 

  • Shelly Tygielski
  • January 16, 2019

The post Transforming Self-Care into a Passionate Movement appeared first on Mindful.

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Jellyfish-Like Creature Discovered With “Transient Anus” (or Disappearing Butthole)

Have you ever taken a big poop and thought to yourself—I don’t really need my anus right now, I wish it would just disappear. No? Neither have we.

But for the Mnemiopsis leidyi (or warty comb jellies), such is their daily reality–whenever they need to defecate, their anus materializes before vanishing as soon as they’ve released solids.

Scientists say this is the first-ever discovery of a “transient anus” in the natural world, according to an article published by New Scientist.

And unlike regular jellyfish with their run-of-the-mill 24/7 anal opening and digestive system, these sea creatures have a simple anal pore that releases digested food once the gut has filled to capacity.

The discovery was made by Sidney Tamm of the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, who told New Scientist:

“That is the really spectacular finding here … There is no documentation of a transient anus in any other animals that I know of.”

The biologist knew something was strange when observing the wary comb jellies gobbling up tiny crustaceans and baby fish. While the creature had a mouth, or entrance, it seemed to lack an exit–it simply lacked an anus.

Yet as Tamm observed the creatures, he noticed that when it did need to defecate, a small anus would suddenly appear and once it was done releasing excrement, the anus disappeared just as suddenly.

It’s a radically different digestive process than the rather straightforward one enjoyed by other jellyfish and comb jellies, which have one gut connected to one opening–which serves as both the mouth and the anus.

Tamm noted:

“It is not visible when the animal is not pooping … There’s no trace under the microscope. It’s invisible to me.”

And as it turns out, the anus simply doesn’t exist until it’s needed–it’s simply not a fixed feature of the creature’s physical anatomy.

Instead, waste accumulates in the gut of M. leidyi until the gut expands outward, coming into contact with the epidermis. At that stage, the gut fuses with the epidermis and an anal opening quickly forms. After the waste has been expelled, the opening shuts and then vanishes.

Mature warty combs grow a new anus approximately once every hour, while larvae do it far more quickly at a rate of about once every 10 minutes.

The jellyfish-like creature, also known as a sea walnut, belongs to a group of invertebrate marine creatures known as ctenophores, which descended from ancestors 525 million years ago, during the Cambrian period.

With such an ancient lineage, the animal potentially offers a living guide to the early evolution of animal digestive systems and the birth of the permanent anus in animals such as humans, or a lack thereof in the case of animals like jellyfish.

But in the meantime, social media users are brimming with laughs and puns over the discovery of the “transient anus.”

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The post Jellyfish-Like Creature Discovered With “Transient Anus” (or Disappearing Butthole) appeared first on The Mind Unleashed.

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Getting Started with Meditation

Question:

I recently read your e book on the seven spiritual laws, and I was wondering where I should start in order to apply these laws to my everyday life. I am unfamiliar with meditation, and I have never done yoga. So how do I go about it if I am lacking those skills? At this time, taking classes proves to be difficult. Any suggestions on how to get started at home?

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