Shudip Talukdar says Mindfulness emerges as hottest meditative tool
Mindfulness is fast emerging as the hottest meditative tool, which is known to contribute to our wellbeing and productivity.
Mindfulness is all about being focussed on the present moment, which has the power to liberate one from the shackles of past failures or pointless day dreaming about the future.
Given its global sweep and popularity, Time magazine featured mindfulness on its covers early this year as “the science of finding focus in a stressed out, multi-tasking culture”.
“The key to success in a fast paced world is a calm, resilient and non-judgmental inner being, steeped in mindfulness,” Santhosh Babu, a leading life coach, author and business consultant, said.
“So it boils down to choosing how you want to feel and be while you are doing what is required in your role,” added Babu, managing director, Organisation Development Alternatives (ODA), motivating corporates to change limiting beliefs.
“Some of the organisations that I am working with are already adopting mindfulness as a part of their leadership development programmes,” said the life coach.
Steve Jobs, Apple’s iconic CEO, also vouched for mindfulness.
“If you just sit and observe, you will see how restless your mind is. If you try to calm it, it only makes it worse,” Jobs told his biographer Walter Issacs. “But over time it does calm, and when it does… that’s when your intuition starts to blossom and you start to see things more clearly and be in the present more,” he told Issacs.
Retaining competitive edge, which requires long, fatiguing hours at work, could also mean burnout, sleep deprivation and exhaustion, which is currently afflicting the American workforce, according to Arianna Huffington, editor-in-chief of “The Huffington Post”.
However, meditative programmes could be an answer to existential crisis.
Mindfulness, pursued vigorously by the General Mills, an American food processing giant, may explain why it ranks third in the Fortune list of “Global Top Companies For Leaders,” and performing consistently well over the years.
Meditative states decrease blood pressure and lower brain’s hyperactivity, promoting mental peace, emotional harmony and optimal performance, as clinical studies by Ramesh Manocha, medical scientist at the University of Sydney, have established.
Closer home, Babu is anchoring the country’s first-ever retreat on mindfulness at Palakkad in Kerala this month to help professionals tap its potential and take business to the next levels.
Babu did odd jobs as primary school teacher, dog trainer, stage hypnotist and World Wildlife Fund volunteer, before teaming up with senior business leaders to help them overcome limiting beliefs.
“Increasing demands on our time and attention, besides being at the beck and call of cell phones and tablets, render the task of being in touch with our inner selves rather difficult,” said Babu.
“We learn that the only corner in this universe where we have complete control is ourselves. This explains the popularity of mindfulness as a concept, tool or a way of life,” added Babu.
People tend to follow one of the personal transformational tools like yoga or meditation.
“But I am trying to achieve something more ambitious at the retreat, harmonising multiple methodologies to catalyse an inner shift and integrate body, mind and soul,” said Babu.
“This year we have therapists from New York and London along with their Indian counterparts at the retreat. I hope next year we have a larger population from all over the world coming to India, where mindfulness as a concept probably originated,” said Babu.