About Jerome Stone

Jerome Stone is a Registered Nurse and the author of the book Minding The Bedside: Nursing from the Heart of the Awakened Mind. He also has over thirty years in a variety of health-care settings and is a long-time practitioner in meditation, with an emphasis in the study and practice of Tibetan Buddhism and Christian and Kabbalistic Contemplation. More About Author Jerome Stone - More About The Mission of Minding The Bedside

Simple Meditation Methods to Help with Insomnia

According to an article (download here) by Thomas Roth, PhD in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine titled, Insomnia: Definition, Prevalence, Etiology, and Consequences, up to 30% of the adult population in the United States suffer from some form of insomnia or sleep disturbance. That's 90-million people just in our country who don't sleep well! A common question that I'm asked is whether meditation can cure insomnia. As an avid practitioner of meditation – and insomnia! – I can attest to the fact that meditation and mindfulness practices can help to alleviate insomnia. I'm not sure about cure, since underlying factors [...]

2011-05-19T21:29:17-06:00By |Meditation|15 Comments

When Do You Allow Thinking During Meditation?

When Do You Allow Thinking During Meditation? There are a lot of beliefs about meditation, including that one needs to be a monk or away from society, that one needs to chant a mantra or special phrase, or that one needs to hold one's hands in a particular shape, touching the thumb and middle finger. While these are aspects of particular meditation techniques, they aren’t necessary to meditate and to learn to work with the mind. Meditation, in its basic and most simply profound level, is a state of non-distraction. Distraction can be caused my many things, thoughts, emotions, different [...]

2011-07-19T12:27:36-06:00By |Meditation|0 Comments

Welcome to Minding the Bedside – Nursing from the heart of the Awakened Mind

is a book about mindfulness, meditation and compassion practices, written specifically for nurses. However, it can be read and bring benefit to anyone who would like to learn to work with their mind and heart in being more present in their daily life. This site is dedicated to the creation of a community of people whose focus is on bringing mindfulness, meditation, and compassion practices into their life and in sharing their experience –successes as well as failures – in applying these practices. click here for the free download!

2012-12-06T20:43:39-07:00By |Uncategorized|1 Comment

(In Meditation) Where Are Our Thoughts Anyway?

Can Meditation Practice Affect How We View Our World? A Series of Articles Part Six – Where Are Our Thoughts Anyway? In this series, we've covered using the breath as an anchor for our attention and meditation practice. We've also discussed how to get some distance from the immediacy of thoughts, viewing them "from a distance" instead of getting caught up in their incessant murmur. Additionally, we've discussed how to return to our present state of mind when we're swept away by thoughts and how to remain in a state of present awareness regardless of whatever arises within our mind. [...]

2014-09-08T10:53:00-06:00By |Meditation|1 Comment

Resting (in Meditation) in Whatever Arises

  Can Meditation Practice Affect How We View Our World? A Series of Articles   Part Five – Resting in Whatever Arises   In the last post, I wrote that, "Meditation is about getting used to not being distracted. Or, inversely, meditation is about being in the state of non-distraction and getting used to that state." That is, meditation is a process of getting used to meditating. And getting used to it means getting used to practicing even as thoughts and emotions arise. And, in this series of posts, we’ve touched on how to use our breath as an anchor [...]

Getting Swept Away (from meditation) and Coming Back Again

Can Meditation Practice Affect How We View Our World? A Series of Articles Part Four – Getting Swept Away and Coming Back Again Meditation is about getting used to not being distracted. Or, to put it another way, meditation is about being in the state of non-distraction and getting used to that state. When we begin the practice of meditation, we can become pretty disheartened to learn that our mind is everywhere else but on the object of our meditation. Even after years of working with these methods, there are times when instead of meditating, I find myself caught up [...]

2015-01-20T15:10:48-07:00By |Meditation|4 Comments

How to Meditate: Viewing Your Thoughts from a Distance

Can Meditation Practice Affect How We View Our World? A Series of Articles Part Three – Viewing Your Thoughts from a Distance In this series, “Can Meditation Practice Affect How We View Our World?” we've discussed how emotions may not be due to what "causes" our reaction. What this means is that when an emotion or thought to arise within our mind, for example a desire for something or an angry thought about something that is said, we catch ourselves and realize that whatever triggered the arising is not its cause. Viewed this way, we can begin to change our [...]

2014-09-08T10:55:02-06:00By |Meditation|3 Comments

Anchoring the Awareness of Emotions in the Breath While Meditating

Can Awareness and Meditation Practice Affect How We View Our World? A Series of Articles Part Two – Anchoring the Awareness of Emotions in the Breath When confronted with strong emotions or sensations, there are many options for awareness and what we can do and how we'll deal with whatever arises. Because strong emotions are so powerful in their ability to distract us from the present, plummeting us into a space of unconscious patterns, we need to have tools to bring our mind into a state of (relative) ease, where we won’t react to the circumstance, and then react to [...]

2012-12-06T19:31:25-07:00By |Meditation|13 Comments
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