English, asked by ramsmedicine, 7 days ago

story writing about mindfulness 250 words

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Answered by cshainee2009
2

Answer:

Being present, focusing on images, appreciating goodness: these are the foundations of mindful writing. Writing for mindfulness is a skill that any writer can develop, helping you to sharpen your language and keep it succinct.

What are the foundations of mindful writing? Let’s explore what writing for mindfulness means in depth.

What “Mindful Writing” Means

I’m very influenced by the simple instructions of Padmasambhava, the Indian meditation master who established tantric Buddhism in Tibet: “Don’t recall the past, don’t anticipate the future, remain in the present, leave your mind alone.”

That sentiment—leave your mind alone—defines the essence of mindful writing: it’s a process of documenting, rather than reining or controlling, the mind.

Mindfulness: leave your mind alone.

Mindfulness contrasts another approach, that of the academic poets that tend to end up in The New Yorker. These writers polish, polish, polish, so that there’s very little sign of that original graph of the mind moving.

How Mindfulness Combats the Inner Critic

Writing for mindfulness really helps us get out of our own way. It’s a safer way to suspend the inner critic than what was often the tradition, which was to get drunk or high.

Writing for mindfulness really helps us get out of our own way. It’s a safer way to suspend the inner critic.

When there’s a mechanical thing—when you’re sitting down to meditate or to write—you no longer sit down saying, “Gee, I hope I write something really mind-blowing. I’m feeling inspired.”

William Burroughs once said, “When I’m feeling inspired when I’m writing, I throw it away.” I don’t know if he did that, but there’s something to that. The feeling of inspiration really has little to do with what appears on the page. I often don’t know whether I’ve written a good poem until a month later.

Without that sort of excessive criticism, internal or external, I think we find more joy in the writing process—rather than hunting some sort of success, which doesn’t really seem to have much to do with the haiku moments of existence (the real pleasures).

Answered by vaishalikale1501
2

Answer:

A long years ago,there was a priest who prays his lord religiously.Once he thought about going to pilgrimage for the religious work but didn't had enough money to go. He was an inferior (lower in rank) but he tried his best after a hard effort he got some money and went to the pilgrimage. He was a very disciplined priest. After 5 months hard work he got his pilgrim place but he had not enough money to survive. So he decided to work hard and earn money to survive on that place. He worked as a labour in in a jamindar's farm. Because he was a disciplined priest he never cheated his owner. After a long time he got enough money to survive and live happily in that place with joy.

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