The Zen Diarist

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Stillness and clarity: here’s how they can save your life

August 5, 2017 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Stillness truly is remarkable. Nothing can go wrong in stillness. When the mind is truly peaceful, we are safe. Even when we are ill, if we are at peace, there is nothing to fear, not even death. From the deepest level of our being, we know that everything is all right. It is a remarkable way to live but when life is so busy, is it really possible?

Stillness zen garden
Zen meditation garden

Stillness or worry – which is better?

Worry may be exceedingly unpleasant but it is unusual for someone to be completely free of it. As a society, we are addicted to it. Commerce and the media thrive on making us worry – generating incipient fear that we will lose out if we don’t buy goods or subscribe to services that we didn’t know we needed. Once, it was okay and even good to age gracefully but now wrinkles and less-than-pure-white teeth are things to avoid, they say. This is all a far cry from stillness. As is the pressure to be up-to-date with the latest story. Well, here’s some breaking news: we don’t need breaking news.

Discover what you don’t need and be free

Whenever I think of stillness, the image of a Zen monk comes to mind. I don’t know why. Perhaps there is something about simplicity that is inherently attractive. Life is so complex now. There used to be a choice of tea, coffee or water; now you almost need encyclopaedic knowledge to make a decision. That’s not a bad thing, necessarily, but it makes for a busy mind in even the most mundane things.

The antidote is to drop the clutter from our minds. When you find yourself chasing after something, just stop for a moment. Ask yourself, “Do I really need this?” Take a breath or two and feel the tension in the body. Ask the question again and feel the reaction in yourself. More often than not, the answer will be a no and you can let go.

Clarity switches the light on

If we stop thinking about trivia, cease our worrying and end our chasing after rainbows (or unicorns now, I’m told), we begin to relax and let our energy settle. We start to enjoy greater clarity and feel more alert. Light enters the mind.

When we practise taiji, we begin by standing still to do just that. It is as though we have a glass of muddy water. The mud starts to settle. The water gradually clears as a result of the non-movement. If we can then move without stirring up the muddy sediment, we have learned the skill of stillness in action.

You don’t need to learn taiji to experience this. Just sit or stand. Be still. Breathe. And enjoy being alive. There – you’ve saved your life!


Cutting down on too much thinking and doing is tremendously powerful. Read more in my book The Art of Not Doing .

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  1. Taking refuge can give us what we really want
  2. Time: why keeping an eye on the clock shortens your life
  3. Rest or be busy? 5 essential tips for restoring balance
  4. Can we let go of needing to know?

Filed Under: The Art of Not Doing Tagged With: ageing, attachment, breath, consciousness, death, energy, health, inner peace, mind, mindfulness, release, stress, tai chi, tranquillity

Guts, bugs and zen: how and why they can change your life

July 22, 2017 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Guts are not a frequent topic of conversation but they have been very much on my mind this week. There is an enormous variety of bacteria that thrive in our guts which are a major factor in our quality of life. There is a very convincing argument that our modern way of life can have a serious impact on the bacteria – the biome. The health implications are extraordinary.

Your brain is in your gutsguts zen brain

Practitioners of qigong may have heard the euphemism of the guts being our second brain. I first came across this years ago in Embryonic Breathing by Dr Yang Jwing Ming. In The Spark in the Machine Dr Daniel Keown clearly refers to it, too. According to Dr Michael Mosley in The Clever Guts Diet, there are indeed brain cells lining the whole length of the gut. If put together, they would be larger than the brain of a cat. Gosh. These are linked to the cerebral brain and there is constant communication between these two centres.

Guts and zen

The subject of the biome and its influence is very complex. It is the subject of an enormous amount of research by some very great minds. But it strikes my quite simple mind that if microbial secretions in our guts can strongly influence our moods and desires, then our view of life – how we see ourselves and everyone/everything else – might also be significantly affected by little lives we cannot see. Another gosh – are bugs playing with our zen? And maybe not only bugs?

What we need to do

The popular media is full of alarmist headlines. Their sole motive is to make us take a look at the latest story. But as you read this, you are still breathing, as am I as I write it. We’re okay, then, in spite of all. What we really need to do is stop chasing information and clear the head. Allow ourselves to become a little still. Then we can gradually become more aware.

Zen and the art of not doing

zen guts

If we feel the body as it is, it will often deliver up the information we need to put things right. The intuition is brilliant if we let it percolate through.

Sometimes we will know that a certain food is not good for us, for example. We may intuit that we need more, less or a different type of exercise. If we really listen, we will know when we need fresh air, a change of environment or no change at all.

None of this is a replacement for professional medical help, of course. Nevertheless, we can learn a great deal if we allow our awareness to settle and expand before reaching for a remedy or phoning a therapist.

This is part of the art of not doing. Discomfort and bugs need not interfere with a zen approach to life. Indeed, they, and our guts, can teach us a great deal.


A zen approach to life is explored in The Art of Not Doing 

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Filed Under: Health, The Art of Not Doing Tagged With: body, chi kung, detox, healing, health, mindfulness, purify, qigong, wellbeing, zen

Perfection: 6 reasons why striving for it can seriously damage your health

July 7, 2017 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Perfection is okay, isn’t it? If we aim for perfection we are bound to bring about some improvement. That’s the logic and it’s difficult to argue against it. But is striving for it really the best thing to do? Or can it cause more harm than good?

Perfection is illusory – you’d do better looking for a herd of unicorns

perfection herd
You may as well look for a herd of unicorns

What is perfection, anyway? When we look for it, we can’t actually find it. In spite of what many self-styled, self-improvement gurus might tell you, there is no end product that is the perfect you. If you think there is, do please define it and let me know.

When we labour under the illusion that there is such a thing as perfection, we carry a burden of believing that we are less than. Less than what? Less than what we “should be” and that inevitably creates a feeling, no matter how slight, of self-dissatisfaction. Could do better may be an echo from old school reports but we often apply it to ourselves as adults.

So let me be good at something

As a boost to self-esteem, which is of course important, some people pursue an interest and seek perfection in that. Or they want to be the best at work. Many recognisable achievements result from this approach. Striving for the ultimate in a given field, though, doesn’t necessarily create a better human being. In fact, it can make us a pain in the bum so far as other people are concerned. Just ask your friends. Wanting to be perfect can often turn into an ego-trip and we have to be really honest with ourselves to avoid that.

But that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t change

I love to play tai chi. Apart from being very good for mental and physical health, it can be very fulfilling. A key principle to tai chi is balance – neither too much nor too little of anything. If we gently try to improve our practice, we are most likely to enjoy it and will reap great benefit. Trying too hard, though, results in strain and creates tension – too yang. But by doing too little, we become sloppy – too yin. That’s one reason why teachers tell their students that it takes at least thirty years to master the art. There’s no rush.

The same applies, I think, to life in general. Gradual improvement is good and healthy. But if we try to be perfect human beings, we won’t make it and certainly won’t enjoy life. We’ll just rush through everything in our vain attempt to be the best.

How pursuing perfection can seriously harm your health

  1. Striving to be the best, or to be perfect, necessarily results in mental and emotional tension. Instead of our awareness being relaxed and expansive, it focuses on one or a number of points to the exclusion of others.
  2. Maintaining mental and emotional tension builds up hypertension, which is harmful for cardiovascular health.
  3. The flow of qi or vital energy through the body becomes restricted and chaotic. Instead of being settled and free-flowing, it tends to rise into the chest and head.
  4. The internal organs are vital for good health and, according to oriental medicine, are directly affected by the flow of qi. When there is tension, the organs do not get their full supply of qi.
  5. As the blood is influenced by qi, that can be constricted, too, resulting in congestion.
  6. Amongst other things, the digestion is often affected. If the power of the digestion, digestive fire, as it is sometimes called in the oriental systems, is weak, we fail to extract all the nutrients from our food. Toxins are said to build up from the incomplete process, and that affects our vitality and wellbeing.

Be happy instead

On the other hand, being happy is said to be good for health. That sounds a far better option to me. That doesn’t mean we just wander through life but we can, and ought to, reduce the intensity sometimes. As Thich Nhat Hanh says, we are not going somewhere else – we are already here. We have arrived but just don’t realise it.


If you like this, you may also like my books on happiness and mindfulness.

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Filed Under: Happiness, Health Tagged With: body, change, chi, choice, emotions, health, peace, stress, tai chi, wellbeing

Chaos: How using the breath can rescue us and restore stability

June 17, 2017 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Chaos seems to be everywhere today. Humanity is very adept at creating disorder. It gets itself into a fine mess and then makes the mess worse. The most powerful nation on Earth elected to the most powerful position on Earth a man whose mission is, apparently, to create chaos. British prime ministers are far from exempt, as recent events show. From everywhere, reports of human tragedy, much caused by other people, continually reach our eyes and ears.

chaos breath

News of chaos creates inner disturbance

Reading about disturbing events, or watching or listening to reports about them, can very easily upset our equilibrium. Unless we have a very thick skin, we cannot completely isolate ourselves from what is going on in the world. Compassion for the suffering others are enduring is natural and right. But chaos can stir up all manner of other feelings, too. We may feel horror, indignation, anger and disgust. Without denying those feelings, we must find a way to restore our inner stability.

Breathe in calmness and let go of chaos

Breathing is one of the simplest remedies. When we are agitated, the breath tends to become shallow and a little faster. Tension in the abdominal muscles prevents deeper inhalation and so the chest does most of the work. This makes us feel ill at ease. Our qi or energy dissipates as the stress response works through the body. Chaos is inside as well as out. (See the previous post for discussion on inside and outside.)

Fortunately, we can reverse this. By training ourselves to breathe more slowly and a little more deeply, we can initiate a calming response.

A simple technique

Here is a simple technique. There are others but this is delightfully easy and works quickly.

  1. Place one hand flat on your abdomen at the navel then move it down about an inch (a couple of centimetres) and rest the other hand on top – palm to back of hand.
  2. Breathe gently, feeling the rise and fall through your hands. If your abdomen pushes against your hands as you inhale, this is good – it means your diaphragm is helping to draw air into the bottom of the lungs.
  3. As you inhale, imagine drawing in calmness from your surroundings. As you exhale, let go of chaos. Imagine it being absorbed into the earth.

If we practise this for a minute or two, and maybe two or three times a day, we will soon notice that the way we breathe affects how we feel. Events in the big wide world may still continue but inside chaos will quickly subside.


Books and ebooks available.

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Filed Under: Health, News Tagged With: breath, chi, compassion, emotions, health, inner peace, letting go, news, wellbeing

Time: why keeping an eye on the clock shortens your life

May 6, 2017 by Andrew Marshall Leave a Comment

Time is a bit of a bugbear, isn’t it? There is either not enough of it or ittime life passes too slowly. Time rules our lives – something has to be done by a particular date or a certain hour. We go about life with one eye on the clock or our watch, or perhaps more these days on our phone. Does this near-obsession improve our quality of life? Of course it doesn’t, and in fact it leaches the quality right out of it.

But surely we need time to organise our lives?

It would be very naive to suggest we could live without time altogether. Once, people lived according to natural rhythms and cycles, as animals and plants do. But modern society has to organise itself, so calendars, schedules, clocks and appointments will probably always be with us. Unfortunately, they can also put us under pressure and it is that – our attitude to the passing minutes, hours and days – that is the problem.

The more we do, and the faster we do it, the less happy we are

Quality of life is not about having or doing more but about satisfaction and fulfilment. The more deeply we experience life, the more fulfilling it is. We may get a temporary buzz from the achievement of doing a lot of things in a short space of time, but in terms of consciousness, it is very shallow.

Do I allow myself time to appreciate drinking a cup of tea or do I take quick sips from my mug while doing something else? Time management might suggest the latter is more efficient, and that may well be our habit. But in doing two or more things at once, we lose the precious gift that those moments are offering us. Instead of gaining, we literally rob ourselves of time.

Take a step back – out of time

Our natural state of consciousness is free and rather like space without any boundaries. It is beyond all concepts, including time. It is simply presence.

Consciousness is like a screen onto which the appearances of daily life, together with our thoughts and emotions, are all projected like a film show or a movie. When we get drawn into them, as we usually do, the concept of time appears. But with presence, time stands still. Fully conscious, we step out of time.

So if I’m fully present, I’ll live longer? Maybe, but that isn’t the point

It is generally recognised that high levels of stress can reduce life expectancy. When we live with full awareness, our stress levels drop immensely. That may or may not affect the length of life in the conventional sense. Quality of life will improve immensely, though.

But should we consider our lifespan anyway? As soon as we think in terms of “how long will I live?”, we have lost our presence. Let’s face it, there are just too many other factors, such as general health, the quality of the air we breathe and so on.

With full awareness, there is no concept of long or short. Lifespan ceases to matter. We simply are. Life just is, and life is full. No matter what, we are free. Unless we keep our eye on the clock, that is.


Thanks for reading this. This subject is explored in greater depth in my book The Art of Not Doing

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Related posts:

  1. Taking refuge can give us what we really want
  2. Mortality: why our own impermanence is such a wonderful gift
  3. Thinking too much? Why it can make you ill
  4. Can we let go of needing to know?

Filed Under: The Art of Not Doing Tagged With: ageing, consciousness, emptiness, happiness, health, inner peace, joy, karma, living, mind, mindfulness, tranquillity, wellbeing

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