This week I learned a lesson over that my mother has always tried to teach us growing up as a child treat people how you want to be treated and what goes around comes around. more or less but on a way deeper level. I practice this all week and I must say my experience with the exercise was good it will be
beneficial once I practice it more and develop it. The only problem I had was
trying to figure out who I love the most and trying to focus on two people was difficult.
I would recommend this to everyone in management to learn this and do it before
every meeting and before every encounter with the employees on the floor. I
think it would help with the communication issues we have.
The concept
of mental exercise is the same as any practice if you must commit to study and
develop your technique. With the mental exercise we need to clearly understand the
practice method that you will be using. Not just closing our eyes and
relaxing but the progressive development of an expanded consciousness and
its healing capacities or we will see a decline in our conditioning.
I enjoyed your blog. I think you're right - everyone who is in management should perform this meditation, or at least a shortened version, prior to a staff meeting. It would be nice to know that management isn't just thinking about the bottom line and that they are actually recognizing their employees as people.
ReplyDeleteGood luck on working with your communication issues. I used to be much worse, but have got better through the years. I still need some work, and I still clam up every now and again, but I chalk it up to a process.
"Treat people the way you want to be treated" is something my mom always said to me as well :) Mainly because of my sisters. My sister and I are both very kind people, but when we were kids we could irritate the poop out of one another! I think we were so nice to everyone else we had to annoy, or be mean to someone ;)
ReplyDeleteFinding one person I love the most would be impossible! I have 3 kids, and a husband who gave them to me; therefore, how could I choose just one person?