This program was previously published as Get Some Headspace: How Mindfulness can Change Your Life in Ten Minutes a Day.
Quiet the mind, feel less stressed, less tired, and achieve a new level of calm and fulfillment in just ten minutes a day
Andy Puddicombe, a former Buddhist monk, the Voice of Headspace, and the UK’s foremost mindfulness expert, is on a mission: to get people to take 10 minutes out of their day to sit in the here and now.
Like his readers and students, Andy began his own meditation practice as a normal, busy person with everyday concerns, and he has since designed a program of mindfulness and guided meditation that fits neatly into a jam-packed daily routine―proving that just 10 minutes a day can make a world of difference.
Accessible and portable, The Headspace Guide to Meditation and Mindfulness offers simple but powerful meditation techniques that positively impact every area of physical and mental health: from productivity and focus, to stress and anxiety relief, sleep, weight-loss, personal relationships…the benefits are limitless. The result? More headspace, less stress. Andy brings this ancient practice into the modern world, tailor made for the most time starved among us.
Switch off after work * Fall asleep at night * Feel less anxious, sad, or angry * Control your cravings * Find a healthy weight
Publisher : Macmillan Audio
Publication date : June 5, 2012
Edition : Unabridged
Language : English
Print length : 7 pages
ISBN-10 : 1427221936
ISBN-13 : 978-1427221933
Dimensions : 5.04 x 0.78 x 5.86 inches
9 reviews for Get Some Headspace: How Mindfulness Can Change Your Life in Ten Minutes a Day
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Providential –
Get Some Headspace
Headspace combines a lot of great ideas.Mindfulness. There was a time in America when meditation was the domain of gurus and cults. After a bevy of research proved that meditation has long-term benefits for the brain, many practitioners began using the term mindfulness. Mindfulness is also a specific aspect of meditation which seems to have the most clear benefits. In short, even for the most jaded person who doesn’t understand meditation, you can still see how beneficial it would be for someone to practice sitting still and being quiet for a few minutes a day. Do this every day, perhaps first thing after you wake up, and you’re almost guaranteed to have a better day.A completely friendly approach. The author opens the book with a story about how he escaped by night from a monastic compound because- at that point in his life- silent meditation just wasn’t for him. Keenly aware that other people might have a similar reaction, Headspace first and foremost builds a happy and safe environment for all. Cute animated characters, anecdotes, and self-reinforcement messages are sprinkled here and there to help you stick with this new skill.A lovely voice, and a lovely perspective. Andy Puddicombe has the sort of voice to put anyone to sleep. He’s honed this talent into a relaxed, soft speaking method for guided meditation. I’d highly recommend anyone interested in this book to also download the Headspace app to try a guided meditation directly from the master. It’s really something special. Failing that, there’s plenty in the book to help you understand the ins and outs. I would at least encourage everyone to find a video of Andy speaking online, because reading the book in his voice will certainly make it a more enriching experience.The Headspace book covers it all. The benefits of meditation. The history of meditation. How to get started meditating. Roadblocks you might hit during your meditation- from your first session to your second decade practicing. It’s all here, it’s all friendly, and it exists to benefit you. Give it a try.
Ismael de Leon H. –
A very good and easy-to-follow guide to meditation
I have read several books about meditation and none is as good as this one. It is well explained, easy to read, to-the-point and concise. It is an excellent read that explains what is meditation, mindfulness, their benefits and the way to practice them. I highly recommend it.For many years I have dedicated considerable effort to meditation, with no results that I can be proud of. However, since I was a child I became familiar with those concepts for having read Timothy Gallwey’s books (The Inner Game of Tenis, Golf, etc.). At that time books did not mention the term “mindfulness” as they do now, but I understood the existence of different levels of consciousness, which Gallwey referred to as “egos”, inside our minds. I learned that it was necessary to quiet one of those egos in order to perform better at sports. Quieting that ego was no easy task though, but it was possible with the help of certain mental tools that ended up astounding me when I could perform considerably better than expected, with no effort, much pleasure, as if by magic, as if the performance was done by someone else. Such result is what today is called “being in the zone”.But in spite of this, I could never show such results in other aspects of my life just by practicing meditation. Mindfulness and other techniques helped me in sports, but I cannot say that I had a similar success in my professional or personal life. Up until now, meditation has been to me just another chore.Puddicombe says in his book that he is concerned about some people considering it a chore, but I am concerned about his concern. The great majority of meditation instructors insist on the importance of routinely meditating, time and again for longer periods, in order to get some results, which not always show-up. In fact, there is a section in his book in which he narrates the experience of a monk that invested a long time to improve his patience, just to end up comically showing that he did not succeed. Evidently it is easy to end up practicing many long meditation sessions fruitlessly and that is when meditation becomes a chore.Being deeply aware of life’s simple and not-so-simple experiences (mindfulness) is something that can be intellectually understood and I do have had the opportunity to obtain its benefits in a few occasions, although more frequently in sports. But what is important is to be able to apply meditation and mindfulness concepts to our everyday lives. In other words, we need to be able to export mindfulness tools to our jobs and personal relations in such a way that we can keep a good balance among our performance, learning and enjoyment in every aspect of our lives. To explain these tools and the means to export them is what Puddicombe does so well.Puddicombe says that no book can give you the benefits of mindfulness just by reading it. In fact, that same statement is mentioned in an 80’s movie “The Razor’s Edge”, when a miner hands a book (The Upanishads) to the main character, a monk-to-be. But I do not completely agree. I do have the experience of having consciously read Thureau’s classic, “Walden”, and experienced a profound sense of acceptance of everything, that I am OK and that I do not need anything at all to continue being that way, only by reflecting about the writing and my own past experiences. Even so, I do agree that it must be easier to experience the benefits of mindfulness by practicing it.This is the best book I have read in this subject and made me want to come back to the practice, from a freshly new perspective. I have invested an important amount of time and money in books and apps and even so, I will try it again.
Sarah Tyrrell –
This book demystifies meditation and teaches you an indispensable tool to use in your everyday life.
I have the Headspace app also. I have suffered from depression and anxiety most of my adult life. The app itself has been a great help for both of these issues. However, the book has taken my daily mindfulness meditation to another level and is a great companion to the app or wonderful on its own. I would recommend it to anyone who could use mindfulness and meditation to help with psychological stress is as well as physical stresses and disorders. Learning to relax the mind and turn relaxes the body, and the practice creates a non-judgemental awareness and understanding of how the body reacts to stressful situations. This often releases long-held tension that causes disorders and the physical body.In mindfulness, it is possible to learn self-compassion through the recognition that situations outside ourselves, or out of our control, need not disturb our inner quiet moments. Each mind, no matter how full of clutter, is just waiting for a quiet moment to come into focus.I highly recommend this book due to Andy’s style of Storytelling to help explain abstract ideas on mindfulness meditation. I would recommend downloading the app also.
Walter Riker –
Great Book on Getting Started with Meditation
The beginning is biographical about Andy Puddicombe, and his gaining the knowledge and the benefits of Meditation and Mindfulness. I found this quite interesting. The book is written at a pace which makes it easy to understand and keeps you reading more. I fully enjoyed the book and have recommended it to others who say “my mind just wont’ stop” – this book is a GREAT GUIDE into the area of Meditation & Mindfulness. I have been meditating now for over 40 years and still found this book to be a valuable resource. Not complicated, a pleasant, east read with benefits. Read it, practice it (over and over), and it should benefit your life – it has for me.
Colleen –
This book taught me techniques that brought much needed clarity and calmness to my racing mind. Puddicombe has a powerful storytelling style that will guide you to peace if you allow him.
Boris NB –
Libro que ilustra de la mejor manera las ventajas del minimalismo y vivir una vida siendo consciente de todo y disfrutar el momento actual. Me ha resultado muy sencillo de aprender e implementar.
totalcrazy2011 –
Great book that would help in learning the skill of mindfulness.. especially liked the structured way of introducing mindfulness for beginners..Right from introducing us to the concepts of mindfulness.meditation and headspace to the way of approaching . Practicing and integrating it in our lives to how it is a wonderful skill to have..This book explains it all in very simple language.. a nice easy yet insightful read that would take time to sink into our subconscious as we practice it.. i recommend starting off with the headspace app and using this book to complement that once done with the basic sessions.. that in my opinion would be money..Can’t thank Andy enough for introducing and making all these profound knowledge that he has gained from years of travel , experience and learnings so easily accessible to us. Needless to say, it has made a huge impact and difference and I pursue meditation and mindfulness in general with great interest.
Marco A G –
La compra y envío estuvieron perfectos.La lectura, edición, y desarrollo del libro, es preciso, iluminador, y por mucho el mejor libro de espiritualidad que se pueda encontrar en occidente, sobre todo para un nivel principiante.Recomendaría tener.ñ al menos un conocimiento básico de los fundamentos de la meditación budista previo a la lectura. En mi caso eso lo hizo una lectura más enriquecedora.
Becca –
I loved this book. I am so grateful that Andy’s shares his knowledge in such an approachable way. I have been an on and off meditator for about 2 years and I still learnt so much reading this. It links in so well with the Headspace app too. I love having theories and stories that link to concepts so I can better understand them & that is what this book does.