4.4 • 1.9K Ratings
🗓️ 25 August 2022
⏱️ 11 minutes
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When was the last time you thought about your ancestors? This guided meditation by indigenous scholar Yuria Celidwen will help you connect to your heritage and reap the potent benefits of remembering your roots.
How to Do This Practice:
Bring your attention to the center of your chest, allow the chest to open, and relax.
Notice an open space in your chest when you breathe in. Pause before exhaling, resting your awareness in the space between breaths, then breathe out. Contemplate the pause that connects the constant flow between openings and returning.
In that pause, contemplate your lineage. Think about the origin stories of your elders, their own elders, and their own elders, moving back in time.
Think about those elders and the lands that touched their feet. Imagine bringing that land into the center of your chest, into the pause between breaths.
Today’s Happiness Break host:
Dr. Yuria Celidwen is an Indigenous scholar of Nahua and Maya descent. She also works at the United Nations to advance the rights of Indigenous peoples and environmental sustainability.
Learn more about Dr. Celidwen: https://www.yuriacelidwen.com/
More resources from The Greater Good Science Center:
Listen to Dr. Yuria Celidwen on The Science of Happiness episode about listening to your elders: https://tinyurl.com/ykn8euhc
Try the grounding practice led by Dr. Yuria Celidwen from Happiness Break: https://tinyurl.com/24kdurc4
Why Telling Our Own Story Is So Powerful for Black Americans: https://tinyurl.com/2nvcxpam
We love hearing from you! Tell us how connecting to your ancestors made you feel. Email us at [email protected] or using the hashtag #happinesspod.
Find us on Amazon Music: https://tinyurl.com/28hcdfsd
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Leave us a 5-star review and copy and share this link: pod.link/1340505607
We're living through a mental health crisis. Between the stress, anxiety, depression, loneliness, burnout — we all could use a break to feel better. That's where Happiness Break comes in. In each biweekly podcast episode, instructors guide you through research-backed practices and meditations that you can do in real-time. These relaxing and uplifting practices have been shown in a lab to help you cultivate calm, compassion, connection, mindfulness, and more — what the latest science says will directly support your well-being. All in less than ten minutes. A little break in your day.
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0:00.0 | We know from countless studies that family connection is so important to our happiness and longevity. |
0:11.0 | So today we're going to be led in a practice to connect with our families, |
0:15.0 | but not the ones with us now. We're going to visit ancestors. |
0:19.0 | I'm Dacker Keltner, welcome to Happiness Break, a series by the Science of Happiness |
0:24.0 | that provides research-backed practices to give you a boost in your day, all in under 10 minutes. |
0:29.0 | Just thinking about your ancestors for five minutes can make you feel smarter and more capable. |
0:35.0 | That's based on research from the University of Gratz in Austria. |
0:39.0 | Leading this meditation is my dear colleague, Dr. Yuria Seledwin. |
0:44.0 | Yuria is an indigenous contemplative study scholar of Nawa and Maya descent from Chiapas, Mexico. |
0:50.0 | And Chi also works towards developing a more sustainable planet with the United Nations. |
0:55.0 | Yuria begins by first speaking her indigenous Maya telltale language |
0:59.0 | as a way to create an awareness of the massive cultural extinctions |
1:03.0 | and biocultural loss we're experiencing at a global level. |
1:25.0 | Lektale Sheh and Maya Yesh, Bintia Winalik, |
1:30.0 | who on Harbin Yuria Seledwin, who on Hattumbalon Maya took Maya. |
1:35.0 | Nawa took Maya and took the story of her else's canal Chiapas. |
1:39.0 | With her work all our life, you went to the bar behind the cup and you went to Tala Sheh. |
1:44.0 | Haki Chhtemuktilum Kinal, you went to Koshinalik, Khuitshin, or Lani Tebanti Ayone. |
1:52.0 | Haki Chhtemuktilum Kushlehal, Tezbabikh Makhthati Ke, |
1:57.0 | Sok, Yakichi Tamukkushkushinalik, Te Maja Kushinalik Mikushette, |
2:02.0 | Yati Ke, Sok Spachel Chabéhe, Tebanti Yasbasik Kinsventa Kolejati Ke, |
2:08.0 | Sok Lekil Kushlejati Ke. |
... |
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