

Mindfulness Mode
Bruce Langford
Increase your calm, focus and happiness so you can be more relaxed, contented and satisfied with your life. For business, entrepreneurs, educators, parents. Hosted by Bruce Langford.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Aug 22, 2016 • 33min
136 Don't Let The Demons In and You'll Do Really Well Says Five Minute Bark Host Dennis Langlais
Dennis Langlais is an inspiration to thousands. Since he was five
years old he wanted to build teams, be a speaker and motivate people. At
the age of 16 he became a professional Free Style BMX Bike Rider,
travelling the world to compete. In 1991 he started his first business
called Perfection on Wheels, successfully presenting over 7000
live shows. He is now well known as host of The Five Minute Bark
Podcast where he continues to inspire listeners across the world.
Contact InfoWebsite: codiedog.com
Youtube: Five Minute Bark
Twitter: @DennisLanglais
Facebook: Dennis Langlais
Most Influential PersonTony Robbins
Effect on EmotionsIt's
a good way to recheck where you're at because, we live in this massive
world and when we get in a situation where we're down and out or not
focused, we then put ourselves in a small little box, right now I'm
visualizing it as this 8 by 8 square box that we stick ourselves in, and
we forget that the whole world is out there.
Thoughts on BreathingBreathing
is just... you're tensed up, I don't know if people know about, cancer
happens and disease happens more from tenseness, stress. It's a drug you
should be taking every day. You should breath as much as you can, you
hear a lot about it these days, drinking water and breathing. I remind
myself because I have friends who are stressed out to no end about their
businesses and themselves and I see them not breathing and I see them
not focusing on breath and it reminds me to do it.
Suggested ResourcesBook: The Science of Getting Rich by Wallace Wattles
App: The Cody Dog Inspirational Tools for Success Platform
Advice for Newbie
You've
got a thousand things you've got to get done, you've got to take one
little thing and get it done one little thing, and get it done. Just
chip away one little piece at a time because if you keep looking at the
big picture, you're just never going to get anything done. It's
something I always struggle with. I have to reconnect myself to get one
little thing done, today I'm just going to get these three automated
emails done. Today I'm just going to get these podcasts done. So you got
to chip away at these things in little pieces. You're going to get
distracted constantly about the big picture, but the big picture is much
more important.
Free BonusDownload your
five free guided meditations by Bruce Langford called Fine Tune Your
Focus. Watch and listen, or close your eyes to listen. Enter your name
and email. Click here: www.MindfulnessMode.com/focus

Aug 20, 2016 • 9min
135 A Real Estate Sale & Mindfulness Weekends With Bruce Langford
You’re listening to Mindfulness Weekends with Bruce Langford. Today
I’m talking about confidence. I think confidence is like a tide going in
and out, in and out. This is how I used to feel anyway. Some days
pumped up, ready to go, feeling like the world was mine, other days, a
lot more on the opposite side. More like, a little discouragement
creeping in, a little frustration. You get the picture.
As
human beings, that voice in our head can do surprising things to our
emotions. In the last few years, I realize that more and more, and now
I’m ready for it. I’m in charge.
As I sat down just
now, I had a confidence flash. What I mean is, I thought of the word
confidence and a precise moment in time popped into my head. It was a
few years ago. I was in real estate. Not much was selling because the
interest rates at the time were high. I can tell you; I went through
some discouraging days in that profession. But I stuck with it, for
awhile anyway and I did my thing. One day a woman called the office, and
it was my turn to the take the call. She was calling about a specific
home. She’d noticed the ‘for sale’ sign went on the lawn, so she phoned
in right away. I chatted with her and made an appointment to show the
house on the following Saturday. After the call, I did my research. I
set up a time to show her the home, which was modest side split in a
pleasant area of town, not far from the west end subdivision of
Westmount, which was a highly desired area at the time. I also found two
other homes to show her, which in my opinion were quite comparable.
The
day came, and I realized I had some nervous excitement happening. I
wasn’t familiar with the term mindfulness back, then, I don’t even know
if it was used much, but I did know I wanted to be calm and collected
when I showed the properties. I remember sitting in my car when I
arrived at the office and deciding to take five minutes or so to close
my eyes, take some quiet breaths and think about good things. Thinking
back, I likely visualized this woman, buying the house, but after this
number of years, I’m not totally sure whether I was into visualizing or
not. I know I listened to a lot of sales training talks on cassette
tapes, and I learned a lot of strategies that I didn’t know till later,
would be considered mindfulness.
Anyway, I showed the
lady the houses, and the one she had originally called me about was the
third one. She was a quiet woman, with brown hair, kind of softly
flowing around her face. She explained to me that she had inherited some
money and had decided she loved this area, and it was in her price
range. She had seen a number of houses with an agent in another company,
but, she told me, she really didn’t feel comfortable with that
particular agent.
She walked around the home, casually
looking around in the various rooms. She said, I just like to get the
feel of the place. She’d go to the center of a room, give herself a
little shake, close her eyes and smile a bit. It was like she was
absorbing the vibes of the house. She told me, “This feels right. I want
to buy it. Can you fill out the papers for me?”
We
talked about an offer price and right then and there, I completed the
paperwork; she signed, and off she went with a big smile on her face.
“I’m so happy she said.” And you’re just the right kind of real estate agent for me. Not too pushy. You get me,” she explained.
I
had no idea a sale could be this easy. I felt an immediate rush of
confidence, joy, and satisfaction. She drove away, I gathered up my
papers and picked up my briefcase. I was so ecstatic; I felt light on my
feet as I walked down the driveway. Seeing that no cars were coming, I
started to run across the street to my car.
Right now I
can taste that exact moment in my mind. Suddenly, I was jolted into
reality. My briefcase went flying and landed on the pavement. I was
still holding the handle; it had broken off the case, and I was standing
there feeling a little sheepish, a little embarrassed. I quickly looked
around to see if anyone was watching and I didn’t see anybody. I
scooped up the case and held it tight under my arms as I continued to
walk to my car.
I was so glad it hadn’t burst open.
Somehow I immediately thought this was a lesson to me. I had been
feeling maybe a little too confident, or too proud, and it was like I
was being given a lesson when that case came flying through the air, me
standing there holding the handle in surprise. I didn’t think of it in
terms of, ‘the universe’ sending me a lesson at that time, I just
remember thinking, somehow this was a lesson.
“Bruce,
you need to act more like a professional, more like how a real estate
agent is supposed to act. Imagine what someone would have thought if
they had seen you, a real estate agent, just having sold a house, acting
like a kid, gleefully running across the street? Totally unacceptable.”
Now
I know this was my inner voice scolding me. I was certainly well aware
of the message I was getting from that inner voice, or I wouldn’t be
sitting her right now, remembering this event in such detail. I mean
there are some details I don’t remember very well, but so much of its
crystal clear.
Maybe I was mindful back then. Maybe my
mindset was in the right place, and I simply allowed this whole event to
happen, without stressing about it, without worrying what might happen
if she didn’t buy the house. Hard to believe this was twenty-nine years
ago.
Anyway, Mindful Tribe, I hope you can take this
little event of mine, and use it to help yourself, as I say, reach new
heights of calm, focus, and happiness. Stay in the mode.
Send me an email, bruce@mindfulnessmode.com and tell me an activity you did in the past which made you a more mindful person.
Bye now.
Quotes:Confidence is like a tide going in and out. - Bruce Langford
Books:
Wherever You Go There You Are by Jon Kabat-Zinn
Thank You Bonus:
Would
you like to help your children become more mindful? This book contains
simple exercises related to the senses. Fun for you, fun for your
children. Download the book for free right here:
21 Ways To Practice Mindfulness With Your Child Every Day For 7 Minutes by Bruce Langford

Aug 18, 2016 • 40min
134 Lose Massive Weight By Listening To Your Body Mindfully Suggests Cassie Crossley
Cassie Crossley is a Paleo Diet success story! She has lost over 130
pounds (59 kg) after adopting the Paleo Lifestyle. Cassie is a
technology executive in an international company which keeps her
traveling 75% of the time around the world. Paleo has not only given her
tremendous weight loss but also incredible improvements in all her health markers.
Contact InfoCompany:
Website:ilovemyjobpodcast.com
Blog:
Podcast:
email: cassie@cassiecrossley.com
Most Influential PersonMy husband
Effect on EmotionsI
think I've mentioned it quite a bit, but the anger is gone. I still get
angry, I mean, everybody get angry, but I used to... I'm sure my blood
pressure would go through the roof. It was like the coyote off of the
road runner series. I would be just a burst of frustration and stuff.
And now, I think of it more of a gradual increase or a frustration. It's
a big difference.
Thoughts on BreathingThat's
actually how I focus on my meditation. I focus on the breathing in and
the breathing out. If I stray off, which happens every few seconds, I
refocus on the breathing so it is important and I'd listen to that
breath so I don't always use ocean sounds as I'm meditating but I do
always focus on the breathing.
Suggested ResourcesBook: The Primal Blueprint by Mark Sisson
App: Brain Wave
Advice for Newbie
I
would like those people to not worry about being perfect at it. Even if
you can just do two minutes a day and just start and increase it, and
that's what I did. I started very short on the meditation but it was
pretty easy for me to come up to a longer time. I could go longer than
eight minutes but I usually find that that is the point where I can
continue to focus and I don't want to go and do something else. The
other thing that I would recommend is they not only focus on meditation.
It's not only that time, It's how they're treating their whole life.

Aug 14, 2016 • 35min
133 Connect With What Is Bigger Than Ourselves Suggests Conscious Millionaire Author JV Crum III
J V Crum III helps established entrepreneurs create a Big Impact and Big Profits by growing businesses that make a difference in the world. He is a speaker, coach, Huffington Post Columnist, and #1 best-selling author of “Conscious Millionaire: Grow Your Business by Making a Difference.” J V hosts the top-ranked “Conscious Millionaire Show Podcast.” He is the Founder CEO of ConsciousMillionaire.com, global coaching and entrepreneur training business. J V holds an MBA, JD, Masters in Psychology, and has built and sold successful companies, and is featured in the upcoming movie, RiseUP.
Contact InfoWebsite: ConsciousMillionaire.com
Podcast: Conscious Millionaire
Most Influential PersonCarol Yencar
Effect on EmotionsMuch more equanimous from meditation, from focusing on being conscious and mindful, I react so much less and reflect much more and I'm also much more frequently in a state of just acceptance of who I am and the moment that I'm in which makes for a much smoother ride through life.
Thoughts on Breathing
It's very much part of my mindfulness practice because the meditation I do is Vipassana meditation. I've lived at a Buddhist monastery for seven weeks at a closed retreat and focused just on learning to meditate. There were days where we just did 12 hours of meditation in silence. People would go, Oh, that's horrible, you definitely encounter yourself but I loved it and the whole meditation that I do is focusing on the breath and realizing that's the real life force. The difference between a human that's alive and a human that's dead is whether they're breathing.
Suggested ResourcesBook: Practicing Peace by Pema Chodron
Book: The Heart of the Buddha's Teaching by Thich Nhat Hanh
App: No App
Advice for Newbie
Well, I'm going to recommend another book. Thich Nhat Hanh, I love Thich Nhat Hanh and there is a book, it's fifty seven pages long, it's red, I think I have it memorized. I've read it so many times and given it to so many people, and it's his explanation of the Heart Sutra. The Heart Sutra's about a page and a half long, but he really explains in such a beautiful way about how everything is interconnected and to me, that's the heart of mindfulness. It is realizing that who we are and everything around us is all interconnected and that we are on this journey together.

Aug 13, 2016 • 8min
132 Hay And Mindfulness Weekends With Bruce Langford
This week’s weather has been hot and sticky, just the kind of weather
you’d expect in a dripping wet rain forest with the heat turned up.
This
hot weather has me thinking about the farm work we did in the summers.
Going back to when I was twelve, at home on the farm. Any day that
looked warm and sunny was usually a hay day.
My dad would say,
‘sure hope the hay won’t be too green to bale’. That meant he hoped the
hay would be dry enough. Once it was cut, it needed to dry in the hot
sun for a day or two. Then he’d put it into windrows.
The wind
rower would pull behind the tractor and would grab the hay and spin it
into a nice even, fluffy pile of hay in the form of a long row, like a
never ending fluffy snake. A day or two later, when the hay ‘wasn’t too
green’ 3 or 4 of us would go out with the baler and hay wagon and bale
the hay. The 3 or 4 would be me, my dad, my brother Max, and maybe one
of my other brothers too.
The smell of the hay is still as clear
in my nostrils as it was then. Something dry and crispy about the smell,
like wafts of weedy dryness with the sweet mixture of clover and
alphalpha.
I would usually be pegged to drive the tractor. This
was a job I did not enjoy because it forced me to stare at the row of
hay and keep the front right wheel of the tractor exactly to the left of
the row of hay as I drove. Even straying one way by a few inches would
mean the baler would miss a little bit of hay, and there’d be a yell
from the hay wagon. That would be my dad’s voice, booming over the roar
of the tractor and the clanging, repetitive sound of the baler,
repeatedly banging out 50 pound rectangular bales of hay.
Now that
I think back, I realize I had to be totally mindful, forcing myself to
keep my brain on one thing for an extended period of time. Ummmm. Maybe
that’s why I’m good at meditating today.
Once I got into the swing
of driving the tractor, I usually didn’t mind it so much. After all, as
long as I kept the wheel of the tractor exactly where it was supposed
to be, I was free. I was free to think of anything else I wanted. I
could sing a song in my head. I could imagine where I’d be in ten years
from now. I could think about the book I read last night, under the
covers with a flashlight till 2:33 in the morning. I was free. Wow, what
a feeling.
Woops, keep that wheel in the right place. Oh, there
goes a field mouse, frantically racing out from under the windrow.
Looking back at the wagon, I’d make sure Max and my dad were keeping up
with the bales, repeatedly spitting out of the baler, onto the hay
wagon.
Looking ahead at the field, I’d realize I’d better get
ready for the end of the row. That was the most stressful part. I was
supposed to know where to go. Right, left. Which new row to choose? I
wanted to do it right. I didn’t want to get yelled at; that’s for sure. I
was supposed to still gather as much hay as I could in the headlands
and then turn down the row my dad wanted me to. I’d stare at him; try to
read his body language. Maybe he’ll give me a clue, I thought, so I
don’t feel stupid. Hmmmmm. How am I supposed to know, I’d wonder?
Eventually,
the hay wagon would be piled high, like a rectangular tower of solid
bricks. My dad and brothers were always proud of how high they could
build the load and still keep it solidly on the wagon. The wagon only
had a rack on the back, the sides and front had no racks or supports, so
the way the load was built, was what kept it together. One by one,
every bale was put in its place, each one was important to holding it
all in place.
Focusing on that one thing was my lesson. I had to
learn to ignore the hot sun, the ear-shattering clanging of the baler,
the obnoxious, burning hot diesel fumes pouring out of the tractor, the
sharp, angry yells from my dad. I was practicing mindfulness even then,
even before I knew what the word meant.
How do you practice mindfulness in your day?
Send me an email, bruce@mindfulnessmode.com and tell me an activity you did in the past which made you a more mindful person.
Till next time mindful tribe, use what we’ve learned today to reach new heights of calm, focus, and happiness. Stay in the mode.
Quotes:Focusing on that one thing was my lesson. - Bruce Langford
Books:
The One Thing by Gary Keller and Jay Papasan
Thank You Bonus:
Would
you like to help your children become more mindful? This book contains
simple exercises related to the senses. Fun for you, fun for your
children. Download the book for free right here:
21 Ways To Practice Mindfulness With Your Child Every Day For 7 Minutes by Bruce Langford

Aug 11, 2016 • 21min
131 Is Pokemon Go A Terrible Game? Hear The Answer From Gym Leader Falkner aka Dylan Mead
Pokemon Go is a terrible game, according to some critics. Others say
it has great features and can bring out the best in people. Does Pokemon
Go have an aspect of mindfulness? Can it help us live in the moment and
move our anxieties to the back burner? Recently, I attended a Gaming
Event with my son called ConBravo which was billed as The Celebration Of Everything Geek. It was for gamers, movie, TV and Cosplay enthusiasts and others too.
Dylan
Mead was one of those passionate gamers and Cosplayers. In case you
didn't know, Cosplay means dressing up like a character from a game,
movie or even as a character you've created. Dylan loves Pokemon Go and
was even dressed as a Gym Leader from the original world of Pokemon.
Today I interview Dylan about the Mindfulness of Pokemon Go. We talk
about how the game works, the general concept and challenges and what
people like and don't like about it. When you stop to think about it, a
game like Pokemon Go can be a positive mindful experience for people
everywhere. Hope you enjoy the show.
Contact InfoCompany: Nintendo
Website: Download Pokemon Go from the App Store on your device.
Most Influential PersonPokemon
Go has influenced many people. Some say it's in good ways, others would
say the opposite. How has Pokemon Go affected your life?
Effect on EmotionsHelps
many people become more focused and grounded. If you are playing
Pokemon Go with awareness of the moment and a sense of mindfulness, you
will probably become more mindful of your emotions. Making good choices
as to how to react to your emotions can help us feel more balanced and
in control.
Thoughts on BreathingPokemon
Gyms and Gym Leaders are an important part of Pokemon. Do you think of
deep, healthy breathing when you think of a gym or when you decide to go
to the gym? Considering your breathing habits can be a positive way to
improve your health.
Suggested ResourcesBook: 21 Ways To Practice Mindfulness With Your Child Every Day For 7 Minutes by Bruce Langford
App: Pokemon Go is available for download on IOS or Android.
Advice for Newbie
BE
CAREFUL when you play Pokemon Go. Be mindful of your surroundings and
be mindful of other people. Be safe and respectful while you play.
Pokemon Go can be lots of fun and it can even help you live in the
moment and enjoy time with family and friends. As in other aspects of
life, remember to live mindfully and not be judgmental about others. Put
yourself into the shoes of the other person and be a great role model.
Thank You Bonus:
Would you like to help your children become more mindful? Get this book for free right here:
21 Ways To Practice Mindfulness With Your Child Every Day For 7 Minutes by Bruce Langford

Aug 8, 2016 • 29min
130 Ditch Your Emotional Obesity and Deal With Your Anger Says Laura Coe
Laura Coe is an entrepreneur, author, and certified life coach
working to help you find fulfillment one day at a time through daily
emotional workout routines, emotional nutrition, and other tools and
insights. She co-founded Litholink Corporation, a healthcare company
serving over 350,000 patients per month nationally. When it sold to a
Fortune 500 company, she left corporate America to pursue lifelong
passions. Now she helps break down monumental life-changing philosophy
and ancient wisdom in a way that everyone can apply to their own lives.
Contact Info
Website: LauraCoe.com / EmotionalObesity.com
Most Influential Person
Pema Chodron (Author of Start Where You Are and Don’t Bite The Hook)
Effect on Emotions
It’s been the most important piece because it allows me to have the
awareness and then to recognize that to be human is to have emotions and
to not judge those emotions. Just to allow them to have a life force of
their own. I think the mindfulness practices, the ancient ideas that
have been around for thousands of years, they really have figured this
out.
Thoughts on Breathing
I teach pranayama to my coaching clients sometimes. We breathe at
the top of our chest. When I learned from my yoga teacher that our lungs
are actually around our whole rib cage, and in your back. Breathing is
one of the most incredible experiences. To take a deep breath, all the
way from the base of your belly, all the way through your chest, into
your back. It can get rid of so much emotional stress, it’s amazing.
Suggested Resources
Book: Emotional Obesity: A Philosophical Guide to Lighten Your Life by Laura Coe
Book: Start Where You Are by Pema Chodron
App: Headspace
App: 10%Happier
Advice for Newbie
The most important thing I can say is, let go of these
ideas that you find on the internet that you have to go to India on a
mountaintop or check yourself into some kind of month long program. Just
start with anything. There’s a new app out there called 10%Happier.
Just start with something. Take 3 minutes to meditate. Just closing your
eyes can be enough for you. My real advice is to just do anything,
because anything is better than nothing.
Thank You Bonus:
As a thank you for listening, download your Calm Your Busy Mind
Infographic. It focuses on breathing, exercise and mantras. Please leave
your name and email you’ll receive your infographic in your inbox right
away. Download It here.

Aug 6, 2016 • 13min
129 Voiceover Acting and Mindfulness Weekends With Bruce Langford
Voice Acting and Mindfulness. I recently attended an event called
ConBravo where gamers, movie and tv enthusiasts and others gathered
together to learn, share and network. It was referred to as the Annual
Festival of Everything Geek. There I met Mylez who is a voice actor,
devoted to building his voice acting business to a new level. He was
inspired by his friend, who voiced for Sonic The Hedgehog. Mylez went on
to become a voice actor in his own right, having now been in the
profession for seven years.
I asked him the question, ‘as a voice actor, how do you use mindfulness to stay focused?
He
explained that he makes it a practice to focus on the task at hand, and
nothing else at the given time. He does his homework, thinking of what
he needs to do to prepare for playing the role.
He says it is vital
to do the homework and be totally prepared. He says he writes out what
he needs to do to be that character. He writes out how he will endeavour
to get into the character he’s playing.
He referred to the Great Uta Hagen’s Nine Questions:
Who am I?
What time is it?
Where am I?
What surrounds me?
What are the given circumstances?
What are my relationships?
What do I want?
What is in my way?
What do I do to get what I want?
Utah
Hagen has had a powerful influence on Twentieth Century actors. She is
known for her role in Anton Chekov’s The Seagull in 1938. She also
played the original Martha in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? After that
she taught budding actors in New York City at the Berghof studio. She
wrote two well-known books for actors, Respect for Acting and A
Challenge for the Actor. She also taught such famous actors as Jack
Lemmon, Matthew Broderick and Al Pacino.
Mylez continued to say that he delves into all the questions an actor would ask himself before getting into character.
Mylez is also an audio editor. He does production for demo reels for up and coming actors.
Depending
on what they need, he creates a script, has them voice the character
and then mixes it together with music and sound effects to make it sound
like it’s an actual scene from a movie. Actors can then use this sample
reel to promote themselves to agents.
Mylez ended by mentioning
the great Latin quote, lamento mori explaining that it means you should
celebrate life every day until it’s your last day on earth, so that you
can have a great life and never have any regrets.
Quotes:You
should celebrate life every day until it’s your last day on earth, so
that you can have a great life and never have any regrets.
Books:
Respect for Acting by Utah Hagen
A Challenge for the Actor by Utah Hagen
Thank You Bonus:
Would
you like to help your children become more mindful? This book contains
simple exercises related to the senses. Children love them. Download the
book for free right here:
21 Ways To Practice Mindfulness With Your Child Every Day For 7 Minutes by Bruce Langford

Aug 4, 2016 • 40min
128 The Healthy Way To Process Grief Is To Honestly Feel Your Emotions Explains Ramona Rice
Ramona Rice is a Sports kinda girl. At least that’s how she is known
and loved by thousands of her followers. It wasn’t always that way
though. Sports was of minimal interest in her life until she met James.
James was a big guy, and a big time sports fan, and Ramona’s passion
for James stoked a deep passion in Ramona for all things sports. Ramona
even started her own Sports podcast called, The Sports Gal Pal.
Then
the unimaginable happened. With a young marriage and two high energy
children referred to by Ramona as her Tiny Humans, James suddenly died
of a stroke. This was only six months ago. Ramona’s strength, her
support team, mindfulness abilities combined with her writing and online
content creation skills, have given Ramona the words to share her
journey of grief so you can learn from her experience.
Contact InfoCompany: Podcast Websites (Ramona is the Community Manager there) www.PodcastWebsites.com
Podcast: We Should Not Be Friends (www.weshouldnot.com) Note: Rated R Not Suitable For Children
Podcast: SportsGalPal (www.SportsGalPal.com)
Twitter: @SportsGalPal
Most Influential PersonMy children. The way they handle their grief and their joy; their focus on today, they don't worry about today or yesterday.
Effect on EmotionsMindfulness
helps me see what are truly emotions versus what is really happening.
It gives you a clear-cut filter of what you're feeling and what is
happening.
Thoughts on BreathingMy
therapist and I work on this. When I go in, he forces me to do
breathing exercises so I calm down. It does help just to take a quick
before you react. Just take 10 seconds. Do some deep Lamaze breathing,
deep yoga breathing, where you breathe into the belly. It's amazing how
much stress that relieves.
Suggested ResourcesBook: The Shack by William P. Young
Book: Why Bad Things Happen To Good People by Harold Kushner
App: Brainwave 32 (It plays pulsating waves which keep me focused)
Advice for Newbie
Start
small, baby steps. Just pick one activity each day to be mindful for
and a small amount of time. Whether you chose to follow a guided
meditation or you chose to actively pray where you're actually focused
on the prayer. Or you do devotional time, journalling. Even if it's
something as simple as, I'm going to mindfully wash the dishes and not
let my mind race off, but be clear in the present washing the dishes.

Aug 1, 2016 • 31min
127 Become A Champion By Mindfully Focusing On The Process With Business Coach Greg Faxon
Greg Faxon is a coach who works with high-achieving entrepreneurs and
converts them into champions. He believes these individuals are the
multipliers of society. Greg has a background as an athlete, first a
wrestler and then Obstacle Course Racing where mud and trail runs
present
mental and physical challenges. Greg is intent on changing how the
world tackles poverty, so he’s making his own difference through a
non-profit organization called Acumen. Greg’s goal is bold; he says: “By
the end of my life, I want to have helped more people unleash their
full potential than any other person in the world.
Contact InfoWebsite: www. GregFaxon.com
Most Influential PersonTara Brach
Effect on EmotionsI
think it's helped me with that roller coaster that we mentioned. It's
helped me create less high highs and less low lows, and have them be not
so dependent on outside circumstances. Have me be the agent of how
those emotions play out. For example, in the past, I would get really
excited if I got a new great client and really bummed out if someone
said no, but now there's no attachment, emotionally, to that process.
I'm good ether way emotionally. There's maybe things strategically that I
can change or improve, but I think that's been one of the biggest ways,
helping me have not such big fluctuations in them.
Thoughts on BreathingI
really do mindful meditation, so it's all focused on the breathing. I
don't do mantra based stuff so I think it's all through breath. To me,
breathing is huge, breathing is the center of everything.
Suggested ResourcesBook: Radical Acceptance by Tara Brach
Book: Don't Let the Fear Win by Greg Faxon
App: Insight Timer
Advice for Newbie
I
would say, to do the 60 second thing for a week. Set a really low bar
for yourself. 60 seconds, focus on your breathing, count your breath.
It's like with habit formation, people talk about it, if you want to
form a new flossing habit, just floss your front teeth for a week.
That's so easy, you have to do it. Then eventually you feel, that's
kind of silly, I need to floss more than that and so you've do it on
your own when you have those quick wins. I would say commit to a week of
60 second breathing.


