SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Welcome to the Mindful
Wellbeing Workshop:
Module 9 – Integration
within the workplace
Outline – Session 9
• Integration into the workplace
• Mindful Meetings
• Mindful work sessions
• Mindful discussions with colleagues
• Mindful direction – self and others
• My own practice sessions
• Seated Meditation
• Three minute breathing space
• Mindful Reflection
• Feedback on this course
The body scan - meditation
The Body Scan - Script
Find a place where you will be safe, secure, and undisturbed. Lie on your back on a firm mat or cushioned floor, arms resting by your side, palms facing upward. If you
find it difficult to stay awake during the meditation, it may be helpful to open your eyes or prop your head up with a pillow. If neither helps, you can change position
that that would help you stay awake. Other positions include standing or sitting in a chair.
Close your eyes and start to focus your attention on the fact that you are breathing. Allow each inhale and exhale to flow through your body. Notice how your body
feels with each breath as well as where the breath flows. With each breath, allow yourself to sink deeper into the floor. •Keep in mind that your mind will inevitably
wander through this practice as that is what all minds do. When this happens, notice it and gently and kindly bring your attention back to the part of the body on which
you were focusing.
As you continue to breathe, on the inhale, imagine the breath filling your lungs and then moving down into the belly, into the left leg, and all the way out of the left
toes. As you exhale, imagine or feel your breath moving in through your toes, up the left leg, through the abdomen, all the way up into your chest, and finally out
through your nose. With a playful approach, practice a couple of cycles of this kind of breathing.
Use this breathing technique throughout the remainder of the scan. When you notice a tense or unpleasant sensation, breathe into it and imagine relaxing, releasing,
and letting go. Notice all the sensations in your body, beginning with the bottom of your left foot. Where do you feel pressure? What does it feel like? Move with your
attention from the bottom of your left foot, up the ankle to the left leg, lower leg, knee, upper leg, across the pelvic region, down the right leg. Move into your pelvic
region, scanning the front and back of your body. Notice all the sensations that arise and let them go.
As you focus on each part of the body, observe what you see and feel there without forcing anything to happen. If you don’t feel anything in an area of your body,
that’s okay. Simply act as an observer, noticing how your body feels today. Continue up through the stomach, upper chest, neck, down the left arm, back up through
the collarbone down the right arm, up to your hairline, forehead, and finally face. Remember to observe each small area of every part of your body. For example, you
may want to notice what is happening in between your toes, ankles, shoulders, ears, tongue. Investigate every area of the body with gentle curiosity. After observing
every point in the body, feel your body as a whole, breathing in and out, fully alive.
Homework Debrief
Did you practice the body scan?
If so, what was your experience?
If you did not practice the body scan, what prevented you from practicing it?
What would help you increase your commitment or the likelihood of practicing?
Did you pay attention to daily routines?
If so, what was your experience?
Do you have any other questions or concerns?

More Related Content

PPTX
Module 8 mind hic v2
PPTX
Module 8 mind hic
PPTX
Module 8 mind blank
PPTX
Lesson 7 mod 2 mind hic
PPTX
Lesson 7 mod 2 mind blank
PPTX
Lesson 7 mod 4 mind hic
PPTX
Lesson 7 mod 4 mind hic
PPTX
Lesson 7 module 4 mindful
Module 8 mind hic v2
Module 8 mind hic
Module 8 mind blank
Lesson 7 mod 2 mind hic
Lesson 7 mod 2 mind blank
Lesson 7 mod 4 mind hic
Lesson 7 mod 4 mind hic
Lesson 7 module 4 mindful

What's hot (18)

PPTX
Lesson 7 module 4 mindful hic
PPTX
Lesson 2 mod 1 mind hic
PPTX
Lesson 2 mod 1 mind blank
PDF
Just breathing
PPTX
A guide to Meditation
PDF
Belly Breathing Skill
PDF
sitMAI, Reactivation of Body and Mind
PPT
Coping Strategies For Dealing With Employees Suffering With Stress
PPT
Demo of Zen meditation
DOCX
Spontaneous meditation
PDF
Beginning Mediation SM v1 - 08 Nov, 2010
PDF
25 Proven Ways to Relax
PDF
Impact of-covid-patient-recovery
PPTX
Sleep workshop 2015
PPT
Ten steps to mindfulness meditation
PDF
UX STRAT Online 2020: Sarah Atkinson, Optum
Lesson 7 module 4 mindful hic
Lesson 2 mod 1 mind hic
Lesson 2 mod 1 mind blank
Just breathing
A guide to Meditation
Belly Breathing Skill
sitMAI, Reactivation of Body and Mind
Coping Strategies For Dealing With Employees Suffering With Stress
Demo of Zen meditation
Spontaneous meditation
Beginning Mediation SM v1 - 08 Nov, 2010
25 Proven Ways to Relax
Impact of-covid-patient-recovery
Sleep workshop 2015
Ten steps to mindfulness meditation
UX STRAT Online 2020: Sarah Atkinson, Optum
Ad

Similar to Module 9 mind blank (20)

PDF
Body Scan Meditation.pdf
PDF
3 minutes body scan meditation
PPTX
MBH breath awareness
PPTX
VIPPASANA MEDITATION - "to see things as they really are"
PPTX
mindfulness_jgreen.pptx
DOCX
Ohm ShantiMeditation TrainersParticipants Guide.docx
PDF
Hypnotherapy Induction - Candle Breathing
PPTX
Meditation for Busy People
PPTX
Mindfulness workshop slide deck - intro & session 1
PPTX
Sizwe Mindfulness Session 2 - Automaticity
PDF
Relaxation & Mind Clearing to Decrease Stress
PPT
Meditation + guided imagery field guide
PDF
How to Meditate_ A Step-by-Step Guide.pdf
PDF
LISTENING: Body Scan activity
PDF
Mindful moments
PPSX
The cyclic meditation
PPTX
CYLIC MEDITATION - STRESS MANAGEMENT CORPORATE YOGA.pptx
PDF
The most natural and simple way to improvise your physical and mental health
PPTX
Mindfulness Coaching Session 1 - Attention & The Now
PPTX
module 4.pptx
Body Scan Meditation.pdf
3 minutes body scan meditation
MBH breath awareness
VIPPASANA MEDITATION - "to see things as they really are"
mindfulness_jgreen.pptx
Ohm ShantiMeditation TrainersParticipants Guide.docx
Hypnotherapy Induction - Candle Breathing
Meditation for Busy People
Mindfulness workshop slide deck - intro & session 1
Sizwe Mindfulness Session 2 - Automaticity
Relaxation & Mind Clearing to Decrease Stress
Meditation + guided imagery field guide
How to Meditate_ A Step-by-Step Guide.pdf
LISTENING: Body Scan activity
Mindful moments
The cyclic meditation
CYLIC MEDITATION - STRESS MANAGEMENT CORPORATE YOGA.pptx
The most natural and simple way to improvise your physical and mental health
Mindfulness Coaching Session 1 - Attention & The Now
module 4.pptx
Ad

More from WellbeingChampion (20)

PDF
EVDS - User Training Session
PPTX
Gems cholesterol reference
PPTX
Gems cholesterol module 9
PPTX
Gems cholesterol module 8
PPTX
Gems cholesterol module 7
PPTX
Gems cholesterol module 5
PPTX
Gems cholesterol module 6
PPTX
Gems cholesterol module 4
PPTX
Gems cholesterol module 2
PPTX
Gems cholesterol module 3
PPTX
Gems cholesterol module 2
PPTX
Gems cholesterol introduction
PPTX
Module 1 lesson 6 adrm and cnbr (mco)
PPTX
Gems TB reference
PPTX
Gems TB module 7
PPTX
Gems TB module 6
PPTX
Gems TB module 5
PPTX
Gems TB module 4
PPTX
Gems TB module 3
PPTX
Gems TB module 2
EVDS - User Training Session
Gems cholesterol reference
Gems cholesterol module 9
Gems cholesterol module 8
Gems cholesterol module 7
Gems cholesterol module 5
Gems cholesterol module 6
Gems cholesterol module 4
Gems cholesterol module 2
Gems cholesterol module 3
Gems cholesterol module 2
Gems cholesterol introduction
Module 1 lesson 6 adrm and cnbr (mco)
Gems TB reference
Gems TB module 7
Gems TB module 6
Gems TB module 5
Gems TB module 4
Gems TB module 3
Gems TB module 2

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
Understanding The Self : 1Sexual health
PDF
Fundamentals Final Review Questions.docx.pdf
PDF
cerebral aneurysm.. neurosurgery , anaesthesia
PPTX
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 7
PPTX
POSTURE.pptx......,............. .........
PDF
Zuri Health Pan-African Digital Health Innovator.pdf
PPTX
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 14
PPTX
Public Health. Disasater mgt group 1.pptx
PPTX
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 1
PDF
01. Histology New Classification of histo is clear calssification
PDF
Culturally Sensitive Health Solutions: Engineering Localized Practices (www....
PDF
Essentials of Hysteroscopy at World Laparoscopy Hospital
PPTX
unit1-introduction of nursing education..
PPTX
Benign prostatic hyperplasia, uro anaesthesia
PPTX
HIGHLIGHTS of NDCT 2019 WITH IMPACT ON CLINICAL RESEARCH.pptx
PPTX
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 17
PPTX
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 16
PDF
Introduction to Clinical Psychology, 4th Edition by John Hunsley Test Bank.pdf
DOCX
ch 9 botes for OB aka Pregnant women eww
PPT
12.08.2025 Dr. Amrita Ghosh_Stocks Standards_ Smart_Inventory Management_GCLP...
Understanding The Self : 1Sexual health
Fundamentals Final Review Questions.docx.pdf
cerebral aneurysm.. neurosurgery , anaesthesia
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 7
POSTURE.pptx......,............. .........
Zuri Health Pan-African Digital Health Innovator.pdf
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 14
Public Health. Disasater mgt group 1.pptx
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 1
01. Histology New Classification of histo is clear calssification
Culturally Sensitive Health Solutions: Engineering Localized Practices (www....
Essentials of Hysteroscopy at World Laparoscopy Hospital
unit1-introduction of nursing education..
Benign prostatic hyperplasia, uro anaesthesia
HIGHLIGHTS of NDCT 2019 WITH IMPACT ON CLINICAL RESEARCH.pptx
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 17
Nancy Caroline Emergency Paramedic Chapter 16
Introduction to Clinical Psychology, 4th Edition by John Hunsley Test Bank.pdf
ch 9 botes for OB aka Pregnant women eww
12.08.2025 Dr. Amrita Ghosh_Stocks Standards_ Smart_Inventory Management_GCLP...

Module 9 mind blank

  • 1. Welcome to the Mindful Wellbeing Workshop: Module 9 – Integration within the workplace
  • 2. Outline – Session 9 • Integration into the workplace • Mindful Meetings • Mindful work sessions • Mindful discussions with colleagues • Mindful direction – self and others • My own practice sessions • Seated Meditation • Three minute breathing space • Mindful Reflection • Feedback on this course
  • 3. The body scan - meditation
  • 4. The Body Scan - Script Find a place where you will be safe, secure, and undisturbed. Lie on your back on a firm mat or cushioned floor, arms resting by your side, palms facing upward. If you find it difficult to stay awake during the meditation, it may be helpful to open your eyes or prop your head up with a pillow. If neither helps, you can change position that that would help you stay awake. Other positions include standing or sitting in a chair. Close your eyes and start to focus your attention on the fact that you are breathing. Allow each inhale and exhale to flow through your body. Notice how your body feels with each breath as well as where the breath flows. With each breath, allow yourself to sink deeper into the floor. •Keep in mind that your mind will inevitably wander through this practice as that is what all minds do. When this happens, notice it and gently and kindly bring your attention back to the part of the body on which you were focusing. As you continue to breathe, on the inhale, imagine the breath filling your lungs and then moving down into the belly, into the left leg, and all the way out of the left toes. As you exhale, imagine or feel your breath moving in through your toes, up the left leg, through the abdomen, all the way up into your chest, and finally out through your nose. With a playful approach, practice a couple of cycles of this kind of breathing. Use this breathing technique throughout the remainder of the scan. When you notice a tense or unpleasant sensation, breathe into it and imagine relaxing, releasing, and letting go. Notice all the sensations in your body, beginning with the bottom of your left foot. Where do you feel pressure? What does it feel like? Move with your attention from the bottom of your left foot, up the ankle to the left leg, lower leg, knee, upper leg, across the pelvic region, down the right leg. Move into your pelvic region, scanning the front and back of your body. Notice all the sensations that arise and let them go. As you focus on each part of the body, observe what you see and feel there without forcing anything to happen. If you don’t feel anything in an area of your body, that’s okay. Simply act as an observer, noticing how your body feels today. Continue up through the stomach, upper chest, neck, down the left arm, back up through the collarbone down the right arm, up to your hairline, forehead, and finally face. Remember to observe each small area of every part of your body. For example, you may want to notice what is happening in between your toes, ankles, shoulders, ears, tongue. Investigate every area of the body with gentle curiosity. After observing every point in the body, feel your body as a whole, breathing in and out, fully alive.
  • 5. Homework Debrief Did you practice the body scan? If so, what was your experience? If you did not practice the body scan, what prevented you from practicing it? What would help you increase your commitment or the likelihood of practicing? Did you pay attention to daily routines? If so, what was your experience? Do you have any other questions or concerns?

Editor's Notes

  • #4: THE BODY SCAN - SCRIPT •Find a place where you will be safe, secure, and undisturbed. •Lie on your back on a firm mat or cushioned floor, arms resting by your side, palms facing upward. •If you find it difficult to stay awake during the meditation, it may be helpful to open your eyes or prop your head up with a pillow. If neither helps, you can change position that that would help you stay awake. Other positions include standing or sitting in a chair. •Close your eyes and start to focus your attention on the fact that you are breathing. Allow each inhale and exhale to flow through your body. Notice how your body feels with each breath as well as where the breath flows. With each breath, allow yourself to sink deeper into the floor. •Keep in mind that your mind will inevitably wander through this practice as that is what all minds do. When this happens, notice it and gently and kindly bring your attention back to the part of the body on which you were focusing. •As you continue to breathe, on the inhale, imagine the breath filling your lungs and then moving down into the belly, into the left leg, and all the way out of the left toes. As you exhale, imagine or feel your breath moving in through your toes, up the left leg, through the abdomen, all the way up into your chest, and finally out through your nose. With a playful approach, practice a couple of cycles of this kind of breathing. •Use this breathing technique throughout the remainder of the scan. When you notice a tense or unpleasant sensation, breathe into it and imagine relaxing, releasing, and letting go. •Notice all the sensations in your body, beginning with the bottom of your left foot. Where do you feel pressure? What does it feel like? •Move with your attention from the bottom of your left foot, up the ankle to the left leg, lower leg, knee, upper leg, across the pelvic region, down the right leg. Move into your pelvic region, scanning the front and back of your body. Notice all the sensations that arise and let them go. •As you focus on each part of the body, observe what you see and feel there without forcing anything to happen. If you don’t feel anything in an area of your body, that’s okay. Simply act as an observer, noticing how your body feels today. •Continue up through the stomach, upper chest, neck, down the left arm, back up through the collarbone down the right arm, up to your hairline, forehead, and finally face. •Remember to observe each small area of every part of your body. For example, you may want to notice what is happening in between your toes, ankles, shoulders, ears, tongue. Investigate every area of the body with gentle curiosity. •After observing every point in the body, feel your body as a whole, breathing in and out, fully alive.
  • #6: IMPORTANT NOTES   At the beginning of the training, some participants argued that mindfulness practice causes them to experience even more thoughts and sensations than before. It is likely that this is occurring because they are becoming increasingly aware of their thoughts and body sensations. Until now, although these thoughts were present, participants were simply less aware of them. The good news is that this awareness is the first step toward change. Once we become aware of how much time we spend in our head, we can both feel the urgency to change and take appropriate steps to make the desired change effective.   Participants who find it difficult to start practicing mindfulness may benefit from the advice provided in Chapter 11 of his manual.