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Mindfulness Mode

Sand and Salt Escapes; Max Schneider

Mindfulness Mode

Bruce Langford

Health & Fitness, Health & Fitness:alternative Health, Religion & Spirituality, Education, Spirituality, Self-improvement, Alternative Health

4.8 • 541 Ratings

🗓️ 14 November 2024

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Max Schneider uses sand and salt escapes to help his clients avoid burnout. After burning out from a decade in consulting, Max sought healing through a transformative surf and yoga retreat in Costa Rica, where he finally found the clarity and calm he'd been seeking. Inspired, he created “sand and salt” retreats to offer others the same renewal. Max's experiences enable him to design personalized, small-group retreats that calm the nervous system and help high-achieving professionals recharge. His team is dedicated to curating escapes that leave clients feeling refreshed, balanced, and ready to thrive in their lives and careers. Listen & Subscribe on: iTunes / Stitcher / Podbean / Overcast / Spotify Contact Info Website: www.sandandsaltescapes.com Most Influential Person Sam Mallick, a friend who runs a company called Notable Effect on Emotions While growing up I think a lot of us are taught to pull ourselves up by the bootstraps. Through mindfulness, I've learned that those emotions are stored in the body and you can't run from them. Those emotions will come out. It could be in the form of shingles and anxiety attacks which I've had. You can't run from that kind of stuff. It stays in there. It Will metastasize cells into skin cancer. We've seen that happen twice actually with my wife. Stress and those emotions don't run away. Thoughts on Breathing The reason why in meditation we focus on our breath blew my mind when I first started practicing meditation. We focus on our breath because the only place that we can breathe is in the present moment. If we're trying to cultivate presence through meditation, all we have to do is focus on our breath. Close your eyes, feel your chest move in and out. When I first learned that, it was the biggest aha moment for me. Suggested Resources Book: No Mud, No Lotus by Thich Nhat Hanh App: n/a Bullying Story My first job after graduation was in outside sales for a manufacturing company. I was sent to Boston with no cost-of-living adjustment and just two weeks of PTO. During the holidays, I asked my manager if I could work from our home office to spend more time with family. He yelled, questioning why I thought I was special. I pushed back aggressively, feeling cornered. Looking back, I cringe. If I’d practiced mindfulness, I’d have responded with more compassion—for myself and for him—and likely managed the situation better. Related Episodes The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times; Katherine May A Vipasana Retreat May Be Your Greatest Mindfulness Experience The Wind Through the Trees

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Mindfulness mode, episode 113.

0:03.5

Biting it off in small chunks and going one step at a time and then allowing yourself grace

0:09.2

in knowing that it's not a linear process.

0:12.5

Hey, Mindful Tribe, welcome back to another episode.

0:16.2

And today we're talking about preventing burnout.

0:20.1

And you definitely want to do that before you get

0:23.2

too close to the experience of burnout. You know, if you're feeling stress, if you're feeling like,

0:29.1

hey, you know, things just don't feel right in my life. And maybe, maybe I'm going to work day

0:35.7

after day just feeling like I can hardly bring myself to do it

0:40.5

day after day. Well today you are in luck because you are listening to the exactly the perfect

0:48.4

episode for you today because today I'm here with Max Schneider. Max, are you in mindfulness mode today?

0:55.6

I am in mindfulness mode right here with you, Bruce.

0:59.0

That's awesome.

1:00.1

So what does mindfulness mean to you, Max?

1:02.6

Yep.

1:03.1

Mindfulness is just the ability to observe the present moment absent any judgment.

1:08.4

And that can take three different forms that can be observing our internal experience,

1:13.7

our thoughts, our emotions, our physical sensations, our external experience,

1:18.5

the environment around us, the things that we're seeing, the things we're hearing,

1:22.4

everything that's going on around us.

1:24.2

And then it can also be with life and how we are aligning with life itself. So

1:32.1

that is the definition that I like to use as it comes to mindfulness. Yeah, I totally agree. And

...

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