Waking Up While Awake: Lucid Dreaming and the Illusion of Separation
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

Waking Up While Awake: Lucid Dreaming and the Illusion of Separation

Waking up is like lucid dreaming, What do I mean by that? Well, you know lucid dreaming. That's when your dreamed character is wandering through a dream and then realizes, I'm actually in a dream. Well, waking up while you're awake is like that, Waking up while you're awake is like realizing, I've been wandering around in delusion. What is the nature of that

dreamy-like delusion? The delusion is that I am somehow separate from all of this. That I am somehow over here and that is over there and there's no connection. There's a boundary between this here and that over there and my person and your person. That's illusory. Everything we know from the deep spiritual traditions and from 21st century physics

everything we know says that's nonsense. There is no boundary between you and anything else and anybody else. And so waking up is like that realization that, I'm dreaming. When you wake up, there's a whole new set of capacities that are available to you, just like when the dream character realizes that he or she

is actually a dream character within a dream. When we wake up in this reality, all of a sudden we have a freedom and a peace that's unavailable to us when we think that we're separate from all of this. So wake up from the dream to the fundamental reality that we are, that we are all of this. We are not separate from the one being.

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Meditate to connect to your eternal Self
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

Meditate to connect to your eternal Self

It's my belief that lurking beneath all of the major meditative practices is one objective. And that is to rest in that part of ourselves that has always been there. I think about it. There was a piece of you at your fourth birthday eating that chocolate cake or whatever you were doing on your fourth birthday that's still here, no matter how old you are.

because there's a continuity of experience throughout your life. Even though that four year old is radically different than who you are today. But there was that part of you that witnessed life through the lens of the four year old that is still here witnessing your life through the lens of however old you are now, through the lens of this being.

So no matter what kind of meditative practice you might be engaged in, underneath it, whether it's a stated intention of the practice or not, there is this hidden secret that really what we're tapping into, hopefully, is that eternal part of ourselves. So see if you can notice that next time you meditate.

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Argue less while still being heard
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

Argue less while still being heard

Do you have too many arguments in your life? I would say most of us do. So I want to give you a quick little tip on how not to have arguments:

Don't say anything that is arguable.

How can you do that in a conversation with, let's say, your partner or your teenage son? How can you avoid saying things that are arguable? Two quick little tips.

  • First of all, agree upon the facts in question. And if you can't agree upon the facts in question, then they may not be facts. They may just be your perception of the facts. So it requires a bit of humility. So when you're in a conversation with your partner, make sure you're talking about the same set of facts before you go any further.

  • And then once you have a set of facts that you agree on, speak only about your experience. Speak only about your experience because your experience is inarguable. Don't draw conclusions about their experience or who they are or what's going on in their head.

    So two steps. Speak only agreed upon facts and share only your experience.

    You still get to be heard, but there’s nothing to argue about!

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Satisfaction as a Meditation
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

Satisfaction as a Meditation

It has been said that the source of all of our suffering is essentially our dissatisfaction. We're clinging to that which we don't want to let go of, and we're avoiding that which we don't want. So in a way, the relief of suffering is actually a constant state of satisfaction. A constant state of, "I'm satisfied!" And now that I think about it that way, I'm reminded of a friend of mine, his name was Jerry Jud.

He lived to be just shy of a hundred years old. And one thing he used to say all the time was, "I'm satisfied, Lord, I'm satisfied." And in retrospect, I think that was one of his meditation practices, his constant assertion of satisfaction with whatever was going on. "I'm satisfied. I'm satisfied." It's a pretty good meditation.

I'm gonna give it a shot today, why don't you?

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Meditation can be anything, so long as it’s the only thing
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

Meditation can be anything, so long as it’s the only thing

Meditation can be just about anything, so long as it's the only thing. What do I mean by that? Meditation can be walking, so long as when you're walking, you're walking, and nothing else. Meditation can be chopping carrots, so long as when you're doing that, you're just chopping the carrots. Meditation can be staring at the ocean.

So long as when you're staring at the ocean, you're just staring at the ocean.

So try it. See if you can weave meditation throughout the day, even if it's just for little moments. You know, maybe while you're cooking dinner tonight with your partner, the first part of the preparation is just meditative. And then you can break into conversation. That's what practice is. It's moments of focusing on just one thing.

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The Key to Developing a Unique Self Meditation Practice
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

The Key to Developing a Unique Self Meditation Practice

I teach a workshop online that I call Designing Your Unique Meditation Practice. Well, why should we have a unique meditation practice? Isn't there like one basic practice that everybody should do? No.

You are a unique being. Why should you do exactly the same meditation practices that everybody else does? So in order for you to develop your own unique meditation practice, you have to dive deeply into clarifying who you are as unique being. And that is part of the process we explore in the Designing Your Unique Meditation Practice Workshop, clarifying your notion of your unique self, so that when you do come up with a meditation practice, it fits you like a glove.

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The simplest meditation: Here-Now
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

The simplest meditation: Here-Now

In all my years of teaching meditation, the most common question I get asked is, what is the most basic, simplest way for me to meditate? I was thinking about that this morning. It occurs to me that about the most direct way to meditate is simply this. On the inhalation, imagine the word here, and on the exhalation, imagine the word now. And

without actually saying those words in your head, just here, now.

And then...

Any thought that occurs to you that is not consistent with either of those notions of here and now, just let it drift away.

What'll happen is all of those control strategies to try to deal with your fears about tomorrow just vanish. Just focus on here and now. Everything else is irrelevant. Try it.

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Meditation rescues us from our delusions about time
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

Meditation rescues us from our delusions about time

Free Yourself from the Delusions of Time Through Meditation

In this insightful blog post, explore how meditation offers an escape from the mental traps of past regrets and future fantasies. Through the practice of mindfulness, we can release ourselves from the weight of "if only" and the endless projections of what may come. Discover how grounding yourself in the present moment through meditation can restore clarity and peace, freeing you from the illusion of time. Learn why letting go of these delusions can help you live more fully, in reality, and find balance in a fast-paced world. Dive into the practice and take the first step towards a more centered life.

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Meditation as deep rest
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

Meditation as deep rest

I've taught a lot of people meditation and mindfulness practices for a lot of years. And almost invariably, when I ask the folks I've taught a particular meditation to how it went and how they feel after it, almost invariably they say, “I feel rested” or “relieved” or somehow “restored”. I hear “restored a lot”.

Why do you suppose that is? Regardless of what I've taught them, regardless of what meditation they've done, whether it's breath counting or something more elaborate, meditation is restorative.

Why is that, you might ask?

Here's one theory. I believe we are all or most of us are weary at some level. What are we weary from? We're weary from carrying the burden, the weight of all of these various roles we play. I'll just take myself for example. CEO, psychologist, concerned citizen, dutiful, loving partner, caring parent, responsible citizen, man — all of these roles can carry a certain weight to them. Most of my thoughts are related to needing to do something in one or more of these roles. Meditation of so many sorts allows us to put down these roles, to put down these identities, and take a deep rest, even if only for a few minutes or an hour.

To just take a deep rest and not have to be one of these things that we've taken on.

Treat yourself to a deep rest.

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What’s stuck in your body?
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

What’s stuck in your body?

What’s stuck in your body? As it turns out, what’s stuck is countless blockages of energy, emotions that you didn’t fully process when they arose and that you stored away for later processing. These blockages operate outside of your conscious awareness to limit your possibilities and keep you from being the person you yearn to be.

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Navigating Fog
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

Navigating Fog

Fog is a given. Mastery is in navigating the fog.

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The Cosmic Feedback Loop
Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP Tom Ronen Goddard, PhD, CCEP

The Cosmic Feedback Loop

In each moment, Reality is giving each of us and all of us its feedback. Can we receive it? We fail to receive it at our own risk.

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