The Zen Diarist

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Habits – when and how to manage them

January 5, 2020 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Forming habits, now there’s a thing. Someone told me once that it takes three weeks to form or break a habit. I’m not sure where that came from or whether there is any evidence to support it. Nevertheless, the turn of each new year has features editors of newspapers and magazines publishing articles on the new habits we urgently need to acquire or lose. Is that a habit of theirs they could safely shed, I wonder?

Habits don’t like awareness

We all know that new year resolutions generally fail before the end of January. Except the one not to make any, which I find works well and lasts all year! Old habits die hard, so the adage runs, and in any event it would be silly to suggest that we should have no habits all. Many are very useful, like washing our hands after we have been to the bathroom. If only everyone did. The problem comes when our repetitive thinking and behaviour (which is what habits are) have a negative impact on ourselves and on others. Then there is something we can, and should, do.

Just observe and break the chain

The key to change for the better is not self-flagellation, dieting, running up mountains or taking ice baths, interesting and challenging though such activities may be. Rather it is to become aware of what we are doing and why we are doing it. Simple awareness can work wonders because it is the portal for our innate intelligence. Try it sometimes; better still, often. Before doing anything, pause and observe. Break the chain of one automatic response after another. Starve the habit of oxygen. Those few moments of comparative silence allow something rather good to happen. What it is, though, you must discover for yourself.


Do less to accomplish more – read my book The Art of Not Doing – How to Achieve Inner Peace and a Clear Mind

Free guided meditations

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Filed Under: The Art of Not Doing Tagged With: attachment, bliss, cause and effect, consciousness, detox, energy, fulfilment, happiness, health, letting go, peace, self-realisation, tranquillity, well-being, wellbeing, zen

Stale energy: how to stop it killing you

August 24, 2019 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Stale energy in our bodies is probably something we don’t like to think about very much. It has connotations of something old, smelly and going off. There’s more than a hint of decay in the expression “stale energy” that’s far worse than a mouldy piece of bread, say, or a biscuit that’s gone a bit soft. Yet we all have it in us and it can be responsible for aches, pains, illnesses and even an early death.

Stale energy is pathogenic

Xie Qi, or Pathogenic Qi, is energy that is stagnant or even stuck. For good health, our Qi needs to circulate easily and freely through the body. It does this mainly through energy channels, informing the body as it circulates. Energy patterns that are poor or out of  balance have a corresponding effect on the body. A major influence on the internal flow is consciousness – the way we think, feel and experience impacts on our energy enormously. If we resent something, for instance, or are frustrated, the flow of energy will suffer.

Move it to lose it

Stale energy can be the result of experiences from long ago, from our current lifestyle or from a mixture of causes. Fortunately, we don’t need to analyse the reasons. However, we do need to learn how to shift the Pathogenic Qi and expel it from our system. Usually this requires a combination of movement and specific intent, something we shall be learning at our next workshop. We can also learn a practice such as Dao Yin or seek advice from a practitioner of Traditional Chinese Medicine or some other discipline of our choice. Whatever we do, though, it is imperative to keep moving.


Our next Staffordshire workshop, Healing with Qi is on Monday 16th September 2019. Details here.

Books available here.

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Filed Under: Health Tagged With: ageing, body, breath, detox, energy, happiness, healing, health, mindfulness, qi, qigong, rejuvenation, wellbeing, yoga

Stop the world? You can’t, but you can stop yourself

March 2, 2019 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Stop thinking “Stop the world, I want to get off!” Most of us probably feel like that from time to time. The world does indeed seem mad, so it’s perfectly understandable to want to escape. But what we see isn’t so much “out there”. It’s what the mind makes of all the information we take in. The pictures we have are inside, the result of a meandering mind that conjures up all sorts of images and conclusions. In the process, it takes our vitality with it. So perhaps it’s not the world that needs to stop – we do.

Stop thinking – or stop over-thinking?

Stop thinking? It’s not a bad idea but the mind is in an almost perpetual state of motion. It is not used to being in a state of “not doing”. It will engage itself in almost anything, so long as it doesn’t have to stop and become aware of itself. Perhaps we are afraid of stopping because if there is nothing to think about and nothing to focus on, what is left? Most of us have a fear of the unknown and of having nothing to cling onto, so we busy ourselves in the practice of chronic avoidance. That needs to change.

Don’t keep spinning the wheel because it’s not going anywhere

The mind is like a wheel that is always spinning. If we want the mind to slow down, we have to stop feeding it rubbish. When the mind is whirling from one thing to another, it seems impossible to do anything about it. But we can learn to pause – and we must if we want to reconnect with our true state of being. Stopping is more than a matter of preserving health. A pause gives us time to breathe and to appreciate everything we have. When we appreciate and feel grateful for life, we value and respect ourselves and others. The world then seems a better place, and maybe we don’t need to jump off after all.

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Filed Under: The Art of Not Doing Tagged With: attachment, breath, cause and effect, choice, consciousness, detox, ego, emotions, happiness, healing, identity, letting go, mindfulness, spirituality, tranquillity, wellbeing, world peace

Motivation: how using Nature’s power can change your life

February 9, 2019 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Motivation Motivation? We just can’t do without it. It is the driving force of change, whether for good or bad. The current chaos in society is caused by conflicting pressures from those with vested interests, political or otherwise. The one thing they all have in common is motivation. As individuals, we become driven by pressure, too – when we feel strongly that something in us needs to change.

Motivation for good

Some people are very good at self-motivation. Others, like me, need to work at it. However, the best type of motivation is not something we should need to think about very much. Rather, it comes from within. Most of the things that drive us to action are desires for the pleasures and necessities of life. At one level or another, we seek satisfaction. Once we have found it, we soon look elsewhere for fulfilment. But if we let the mind become calm and open, the fripperies of life lose their attraction. Then all motivation for action comes from inside, from what some call the soul or inner spirit. What term we use doesn’t matter. What does matter is that we start to reconnect with our true nature and, in turn, Nature’s power grid.

Motivation nature power

The source of boundless energy and intelligence

When we become still, through relaxation and meditation, we become more open. Our natural state is one of openness, where intuition rather than calculation has its home. Instead of thinking, “I want to be like this,” or “I ought to do that,” we simply know the right thing to do. As a result, we stop wasting energy on things that don’t matter and have plenty for those that do. Nature provides us with the energy we need and our boundless field of intelligence, consciousness, gives us all necessary motivation. It really is a life-changer. And all we have to do is stop – just stop and be still.


Releasing the things that hold us back is the subject of our next evening workshop, Letting Go, on the 11th March 2019. More details and booking.

My third book, The Art of Not Doing shows how we can re-train our minds to find clarity and inner peace.

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Filed Under: The Art of Not Doing Tagged With: bliss, cause and effect, change, choice, consciousness, detox, diet, energy, forgiveness, happiness, humanity, karma, kindness, letting go, meditation, mindfulness, peace, power, release, spirituality, tranquillity, well-being, wellbeing, world peace, zen

Movement: why listening to our body is vital for health

January 14, 2019 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Movement exerciseMovement and exercise feature heavily in magazines, newspapers and most other forms of media at this time of year. As soon as New Year festivities are over, out comes every piece of advice we’ve probably heard a hundred and one times before. Photos of svelte figures performing near-impossible postures or muscly ones with abs like washboards appear everywhere. Are they meant to inspire us or to drive home the message that we are hopeless cases? Either way, they can fascinate us because, deep down, we know that movement is a natural expression of life.

Movement – harmful or life-enhancing?

We undertake all manner of movement, even when we are sitting, but the modern advice that a sedentary lifestyle can cause harm seems irrefutable. Even if we are chair-bound, there are exercises to help us maintain or improve health. That makes good sense because we know that when the body isn’t moving much, energy cannot circulate well. If this is prolonged, the muscles and tissues weaken. But before we don our running shoes or head off to the gym, how do we know what level or amount of exercise is appropriate for our body? Indeed, perhaps something like tai chi would be better for us than pounding pavements or pumping iron.

Movement weight

Balancing yin and yang

When we are inactive, the body tends to be more yin, whilst exercise increases yang qualities. One should balance the other – gradually. By the application of yang through movement, we convert sluggishness into something lighter and more vibrant. How much is enough, though? It is easy to become over-enthusiastic and then strain can put us out of action altogether.

Movement child

The sweet spot

If we want to be healthy and balanced, we need to find our sweet spot. This is the optimum point between rest and activity. The sweet spot changes from season to season, and even with different times of day, as well as with age. It is different for everyone as body types and constitutions vary. As we increase our capacity for activity, it will change, too. There is no common prescription that suits everyone so we need to listen to our body. Intuitively, we can sense when we need to do more and likewise when the body has had enough. Increasing movement may generally be good for us but to get it right, listening to the body’s intelligence is absolutely essential.


For balance in life, there is a wealth of information in The Great Little Book of Happiness

Free guided meditations


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Filed Under: Happiness, Health Tagged With: ageing, body, Christmas, comfort zones, detox, diet, health, qigong, rejuvenation, tai chi, taiji, wellbeing, yoga

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