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The quiet art of attention

(billwear.github.io)
865 points billwear | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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thewanderer1983 ◴[] No.41832384[source]
Stoicism explores these ideas. One of the basic premises is that all external events are out of our control and to focus on what is, basically what is in our mind and our actions. Then we should try to discipline our ideas around virtues which are always good instead of outcomes and externals. That summary doesn't do it justice, if interested in exploring further. There are some good books on amazon or check out dailstoic for a quick overview. https://dailystoic.com/what-is-stoicism-a-definition-3-stoic...
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maroonblazer ◴[] No.41833051[source]
Buddhism explores these ideas too.

For a modern approach to this mindset I highly recommend "Seeing That Frees" by Rob Burbea.

https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/08772fe1-564c-4a95-9a5d-...

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kn81198 ◴[] No.41834305[source]
Vipassana Meditation formalizes this to a large extent and is extremely approachable. I would highly recommend anyone looking at guided meditation to give this a try:

https://www.dhamma.org/en-US/index

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raveren ◴[] No.41834964[source]
The single best decision of my life was to attend one.
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1. dataexporter ◴[] No.41843200[source]
Can you provide some additional details? In what ways has it helped you? Would you have gotten the same benefits had you done a immersive meditation session outside of that structure?