
- "Tony, Tony, look around. Find the thing that can't be found." And then say three times in a row the name of the item that you're looking for.

July 16, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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July 13, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
CJ & MJ: BFFs
Aunt Mimi
My mom and sister (Aunt Mimi) accompanied us to Devil's Tower, Wyoming, a sacred place to the
Plains Indian tribes (and me too). I love to go bouldering on the rocks beneath the tower.
See? There I am, waving to you!
July 09, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Hi Everyone,
Be sure to listen to my latest conversation with Julie Cusmariu on Heartbeat Radio: Creativity Under Fire.
Love + Creative Thoughts,
Robyn
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June 11, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Hi everyone,
In a little over an hour, I'll be on the air with Julie Cusmariu on Heartbeat Radio. We're going to be talking about Creativity under Fire, and I'll give listeners a few tips that can help unblock creativity.
On a related note, I've attached a link to iTunes, where you can download (for free!) several of my meditations. Mindfulness Practices with Robyn McKay
Enjoy and have a happy day!
Love,
Robyn
June 10, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Now more than ever, creative people are being called upon to re-style, re-invent, and in some cases, re-construct our world. A little pressure fuels creativity. But an overload of stress, depression, and anxiety blocks the creative process. So, what do you do when you must create, but you just can’t?
Join me this Wednesday, June 10th as I talk with Julie Cusmariu on Heartbeat Radio as I talk about the barriers to creativity, and provide you with tips for unblocking and heightening your own creativity.
Here's my first tip: Meditate. Every day.
Some of you (who am I kidding?) most of you think that you can't meditate because you can't make your mind stop thinking. I've got news for you: You don't have to stop thinking in order to meditate! In fact, asking you to stop thinking is akin to asking your nose to stop smelling or your eyes to stop seeing.
You don't have to stop thinking.
Got it?
But you don't always have to pay attention to your thoughts. In fact, spending about 10 minutes a day focusing on your breath instead of on your thoughts reaps major benefits, including less anxiety and less depression (both conditions that block creativity).
Try it! To make it easy, I've added a FREE 7-minute mindfulness of the breath meditation, right over there >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Download it to your iPod or listen on my blog. Either way, enjoy!
Be sure to tune in on Wednesday, where I'll give you more tips for reconnecting to your creativity.
love,
Robyn
June 08, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
During my lunch break at a local smoothie
store, I met a 3-year-old girl who was on an outing with her dad. They had just
ordered, and she contentedly colored on a coloring book as they waited for
their treats. Her blonde hair was held back with sparkley barrettes and her equally
sparkley sunglasses that had slipped down to the tip of her nose. While we
waited, she chattered happily about her color choices and wondered aloud was I
getting a smoothie, too? Her dad joined us, and I politely let him know that we
were visiting about her art work, and then wandered away to the nearby book
section. As I browsed, I heard her ask, “Dad, do you want to color too?” His was a
quick, dad-like reply, “no, I’d rather watch you.” And then almost as an
afterthought, he commanded, “be sure to color in the lines.” I turned from the
bookshelves and raised my eyebrows as we made eye contact over his daughter’s
head. “No.” I responded in defense of his daughter’s style, she was three years
old, after all. He looked surprised. He was speechless. Most likely, he probably
wished that I would mind my own business. “No.” I said again firmly, hoping
that my single word response would carry volumes. The truth is that I didn’t
have any other words to use just then. It wasn’t the time or the place to
introduce myself or to tell him that his command could turn into a life
time of his daughter’s attempts at perfectionism, a sure-fire cure for
creativity. At that moment, my wish was that the little girl would always color
outside the lines. I hoped that her dad would celebrate her uniqueness, and I
wanted him to give her permission to break the rules of coloring. That way,
even if she doesn’t change the big, wide world with her out-of-the-lines
coloring style, at least she’ll have a chance to be her natural-born creative
self.
May 16, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
I've been thinking a lot about thoughts lately.
Maybe it's because I'm teaching Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy for Depression at Arizona State University, where I work as a staff psychologist. Since it's cognitive therapy, we do a lot of talking about thoughts, about how positive ones, negative ones, and even neutral ones affect the body and the spirit.
Here's what I know:
All thoughts are sticky. One thought attracts another and another, and so on until you have a snowball of related thoughts. What happens next is interesting: your emotions get involved. For example, one happy thought + another + another brings about a positive emotion. The same kind of thing holds for sad thoughts or angry thoughts or whatever. Your emotions respond to what you think about. What you think about responds to how you feel. Both your thoughts and your emotions are intimately connected with how the body feels.
For instance, if you're feeling happy, your thoughts are moving in a positive "I can do it" direction. In turn, your body probably feels pretty good. But when you're feeling sad, your thoughts are more likely to be distorted. The "might as well go eat worms" kind of thoughts that we all think from time to time become prominent in your experience. Your body follows, and pretty soon the shadow of depression rises and begins to overtake you.
Your thoughts are not facts. Yet, most of us unconsciously believe: "if I think a thought, it must be true!"
The truth is that we don't even know where thoughts come from. Thoughts are just mental events that occur whether we ask for them or not. Most of the time, we're so out of control of our thoughts that we're not even aware of what we are thinking, much less about the effect that our thoughts are having on our experience in the world.
Most people that I work with tell me that they can't meditate because "I can't make my mind stop thinking" or "I can't shut off my brain." Here's some new information: Just as the nose smells and ears hear and the eyes see, the mind thinks. That's what it does.
I would never ask you to stop thinking. But you don't always have to pay attention to your thoughts (not all the time, anyway). My mentor Lynn Rossy at the University of Missouri says, "most of the time, our thoughts lead us around by the rings in our noses." Put another way, we act as if we have no control of what we're thinking.
When you feel out of control, guess what happens? The double whammy of anxiety and depression comes knocking. Future-directed, out-of-control, worried thoughts quickly move the body into a state of anxiety and panic. Past-oriented, ruminative thoughts are the precursor to depression. Either way, you're not in The Now. And as far as creativity and insight goes, The Now is where it's at.
How do I get into The Now?
Mindfulness means paying attention on purpose, as openhearted and non-judgmentally as possible (Jon Kabat-Zinn). Formal meditation practices are a way of cultivating mindfulness in our lives. The formal practice of mindfulness meditation teaches that you are more than your thoughts. You can train your brain to stay focused in spite of what your mind is thinking about.
To get into the now, start meditating regularly. When you meditate, you become aware of your thoughts - not all of them, but at least you begin to notice when (and what) you're thinking. When you keep practicing, you begin to develop the ability to watch your thoughts without getting sucked into the drama that they create in your head.
You can start by focusing on your breath. Breathe in. Breathe out. And know when you're breathing in and when you're breathing out. Take 5 good breaths, 5 times/day. That's a good first step.
More to come...
Love + thoughts
Robyn
April 28, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
April 14, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Outside my window, I see the bright blue desert sky and the remnants of the wildflowers that bloomed in blue chaos just a week ago. It's springtime in Arizona, the world is alive with change: besides the flowers blooming and dying, and the hummingbirds migrating, people are preparing for graduations and job transitions. Transitions, however beautiful and exciting, also evoke fear and anxiety.
There is a space in every moment - between breaths or between heartbeats - that when we pay attention, we find silence. You *know* that your next breath is coming. You *know* that your very next heartbeat is inevitable. And because you know, you don't worry.
Why do we have such a hard time with other transitions, then? Are other transitions more important than the next breath or heartbeat that ensures that you continue to live?
Over coffee yesterday, my friend Mike told me, "Sometimes you have to be willing to step out into nothing and trust that you will be caught by something." It reminded me of a scene in Indiana Jones' The Last Crusade, when Indy has to make a leap of faith into an abyss. When he steps out into the void, he finds foothold on an invisible bridge.
You can stand with your toes at the edge of the pool and refuse to jump. You can teeter on the edge of a trapeze platform and refuse to fly.
You also can stand at the edge of your life, paralyzed by fear and anxiety because you can't see what's going to happen next.
The challenge is to embrace that in-between space, to enjoy and even appreciate the not knowing what's going to happen next, to allow the anticipation to propel you further into your life, all the while trusting that there will be something -or someone- will catch you. With practice, you can experience the space in between your heartbeats and even in between your thoughts.
Why not catch those in-between moments of your life - the moments between awake and asleep, between one job and another, between one thought and another? There is peace in the pauses that life provides: get in the gap and see if you can feel it. And then trust that the Next Thing is going to be there to catch you.
Love + peaceful in-between thoughts,
Robyn
April 04, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
