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mindfulness can be a great discipline & foundation for other work. but orgs who fetishize it as a main practice, especially w/t regard for the fact that people experience it differently depending on things like trauma history, JUST might be keeping you frozen.
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mindfulness is a completely unregulated industry at this point, and i reject the idea that it is a student's fault for not vetting a teacher enough, especially when teacher bios can be cobbled together from absolute nonsense that will never get verified
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Yeah. It's a mess on every end. I usually hate "cultural appropriation" as a term, but Mindfulness(tm) really is theft. And not only do you have legit unqualified, inexperienced people teaching this stuff, but the actual traditions are far too esoteric for normies to evaluate.
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Right? Every solely mindfulness-oriented practitioner I've talked to who was any good has run into Serious Shit that no weekend coach could help with. "You're seeing what in this room? You have completely overwhelming outbursts of which emotions? You're -depersonalizing-???"
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i didn't really realize how potentially dangerous that was (as someone who was taught 'it's not like you're going to break anyone's brain' in teacher training) until I took a trauma-informed yoga teacher training and was like, ohhhh, this is not at all how I learned to guide ppl
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