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Glossary›Mindfulness

Glossary

Mindfulness

Mindfulness is the practice of bringing one's full attention to present-moment experience with openness and without judgment.

What is Mindfulness?

Mindfulness is the deliberate practice of sustaining non-judgmental awareness of present-moment experience—thoughts, sensations, emotions, sounds, and perceptions—as they arise and pass. Rooted in Buddhist meditation traditions, particularly Theravada and Zen lineages, mindfulness trains practitioners to observe the contents of consciousness without grasping, aversion, or habitual reactivity. Unlike concentration practices that focus attention on a single object, mindfulness cultivates a receptive, panoramic awareness that notes whatever appears in the field of experience. The practice rests on the principle that clearer seeing—of how thoughts proliferate, how suffering arises from clinging, how experience is impermanent—gradually loosens the grip of conditioned patterns.

Origins & Lineage

The concept of mindfulness derives from the Pali term sati, meaning “memory” or “recollection,” which in Buddhist psychology refers to the capacity to hold experience in clear, sustained attention. The Buddha, teaching in northern India during the 5th century BCE, outlined mindfulness as the seventh factor of the Noble Eightfold Path and devoted an entire discourse—the Satipatthana Sutta (Foundations of Mindfulness)—to its systematic cultivation. This text delineates four domains of practice: mindfulness of body (breath, posture, physical sensations), feelings (pleasant, unpleasant, neutral tone), mind (mental states and moods), and phenomena (patterns such as the Five Hindrances and Seven Factors of Awakening).

Mindfulness meditation evolved through Southeast Asian Theravada monasteries, Burmese insight (vipassana) lineages associated with Mahasi Sayadaw and U Ba Khin, and Thai forest traditions under Ajahn Chah. In Japan, Zen schools emphasized shikantaza (“just sitting”), a form of open awareness closely aligned with mindfulness. Vietnamese monk Thich Nhat Hanh introduced “engaged mindfulness” in the 1960s, linking meditative awareness to social action and daily life.

How It’s Practiced

Formal mindfulness practice typically begins with seated meditation, anchoring attention on the breath—the sensations of inhalation and exhalation at the nostrils, chest, or abdomen. When the mind wanders, the practitioner notes the distraction (“thinking,” “planning,” “remembering”) and gently returns attention to the breath. Over time, awareness expands to include bodily sensations, sounds, emotions, and thoughts themselves as objects of observation. Walking meditation applies the same principles: slow, deliberate steps paired with attention to lifting, moving, and placing each foot.

Informal practice extends mindfulness into everyday activities—eating, washing dishes, listening to conversation—by bringing full sensory attention to the task at hand. Body scans systematically move awareness through regions of the body, noting tension, temperature, pulsation. Teachers emphasize that mindfulness is not about stopping thoughts or achieving special states but about shifting one’s relationship to experience, observing the mind’s habitual commentary without identification.

Mindfulness Today

Mindfulness entered mainstream Western psychology in 1979 when Jon Kabat-Zinn founded the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, secularizing Buddhist techniques for clinical populations. This eight-week course became a template for applications in healthcare, education, corporate settings, and criminal justice. Insight Meditation Society (IMS) in Massachusetts, founded in 1975 by Jack Kornfield, Joseph Goldstein, and Sharon Salzberg, offers intensive residential retreats in the Theravada tradition. Spirit Rock Meditation Center in California and the Shambhala network provide similar immersion experiences.

Mindfulness apps like Headspace, Calm, and Ten Percent Happier have introduced millions to guided practices. University research—particularly at institutions like Oxford, Harvard, and UCLA—investigates mindfulness’s effects on attention, emotional regulation, and neuroplasticity. The term “mindfulness” now appears in contexts ranging from mindful eating and parenting to corporate wellness programs, sometimes diluted from its original ethical and soteriological framework.

Common Misconceptions

Mindfulness is not about emptying the mind, achieving blissful states, or suppressing difficult emotions. It does not require sitting cross-legged or adopting Buddhist beliefs. The practice is not inherently relaxing—beginners often encounter restlessness, boredom, or intensified awareness of discomfort. Mindfulness is distinct from positive thinking or affirmation; it asks practitioners to see clearly what is present, pleasant or unpleasant, rather than impose a preferred narrative.

Critics note that secularized mindfulness can be co-opted into productivity culture, stripped of its ethical underpinnings (Right Speech, Right Action, Right Livelihood in the Eightfold Path) and its original aim: liberation from suffering. Traditional teachers emphasize that mindfulness alone, without wisdom (prajna) and compassion (karuna), risks becoming mere self-monitoring. The practice is not a panacea for systemic injustice or a substitute for therapy in cases of trauma, where specialized therapeutic modalities may be necessary.

How to Begin

Beginners can start with five to ten minutes of daily seated meditation, focusing on the breath and noting when attention drifts. Thich Nhat Hanh’s The Miracle of Mindfulness offers accessible, poetic guidance. Jon Kabat-Zinn’s Wherever You Go, There You Are introduces MBSR principles. For structured training, seek an eight-week MBSR course at a local hospital or meditation center, or attend a weekend or week-long retreat at IMS or Spirit Rock.

Insight Timer and the Plum Village app provide free guided sessions. Teachers in the Theravada tradition—Gil Fronsdal, Tara Brach, Ajahn Amaro—offer talks and instruction via podcasts and online platforms. Joining a weekly sangha (meditation group) provides communal support. Local Buddhist centers, even those from Zen or Tibetan lineages, often include mindfulness components. The key is consistent, patient practice: mindfulness develops incrementally, revealing subtler layers of awareness over months and years.

Artists & teachers in this practice

Xavier RuddXavier RuddYoga TeacherDeva PremalDeva PremalKirtanAndrew JohnsonAndrew JohnsonMeditation TeacherThich Nhat HanhThich Nhat HanhMindfulness TeacherManoj DiasManoj DiasMeditation TeacherMC YOGIMC YOGIMusicianTomek Wyczesany, Ph.D.Tomek Wyczesany, Ph.D.Meditation TeacherHugh ByrneHugh ByrneMeditation TeacherThe StillPointThe StillPointYoga TeacherAnnemaree RowleyAnnemaree RowleyYoga TeacherChelsea PottengerChelsea PottengerMeditation TeacherChibs OkerekeChibs OkerekeMeditation Teacher

Related terms

vipassanasamathazendharmasanghaprajnakarunasatipatthana
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