Meditation Instructors Colorado Springs CO

To start, find a quiet place with minimal distractions where you can sit or lie down with ease. Begin by breathing deeply and emptying the mind of cluttering thoughts. When you are in a relaxed state, start to form a picture of yourself pregnant or holding a baby. What do you see? How do you feel? Are there colors?

Thubten Shadrub Ling
719 447-9880 (message line)
P.O. Box 10566
Colorado Springs, CO
Rocky Mountain Insight
719 634-0566
2525 W. Pikes Peak Ave., Suite A
Colorado Springs, CO
Mountain Stream Sangha
303 545-2266
Colorado Community of Mindful Living
Boulder, CO
Avalokiteshvara Buddhist Centre
303-813 9551
1081 Marion St. Denver
Denver, CO
Colorado Ratnashri Sangha
303-554-6043
3565 Martin Drive
Boulder, CO
The Fireweed Sangha
719 575-0408
3279 El Pomar Rd.
Colorado Springs, CO
Colorado Zen Center, World Zen Fellowship
303-567-2389
1701 Trail Creek Rd.
Idaho Springs, CO
Summit Dharma Center
719 836-0442
PO Box 6333
Breckenridge, CO
Aspen Dharma Study Group
970 923-4090
Box 278
Woody Creek, CO
Fort Collins Shambhala Meditation Center
970-495-3413
309 N. Sunset St.
Fort Collins, CO
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Meditation on Ambivalence

Meditation on Ambivalence


Not sure what you want? Try this visualization for a little clarity.

It’s not unusual to feel conflicted when it comes to thinking about pregnancy and parenthood. Many women coping with fertility issues find they feel better when they examine their feelings about pregnancy, either by meditating, going to therapy, or by joining an infertility support group, especially one that’s mind/body directed. Joel Evans offers this visualization.

To start, find a quiet place with minimal distractions where you can sit or lie down with ease. Begin by breathing deeply and emptying the mind of cluttering thoughts. When you are in a relaxed state, start to form a picture of yourself pregnant or holding a baby. What do you see? How do you feel? Are there colors? What is the light like? Focus on the image, paying close attention to its details and the emotions that come up while it is in your mind’s eye. Are you happy? Sad? Excited? Ambivalent? Tired? Energized?

When you have s strong sense of the image and feelings it inspires, stay with it for a few minutes and then start to come back to the world around you. Take some time to either draw or write down what you saw and felt. Try not to judge yourself or censor your feelings—there are no right or wrong answers, just your experience as it was. This exercise is not about changing anything; it’s about identifying all of your emotions and gaining clarity about what’s important to you at this point in your life.

Reprinted, with permission, from The Whole Pregnancy Handbook by Joel M. Evans, MD, Ob/Gyn with Robin Aronson (Gotham Books, 2005). All rights reserved

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