Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction for Our Time: A Curriculum that is up to the Task.

Rebecca S Crane, Robert Callen-Davies, Aesha Francis, Dean Francis, Pauline Gibbs, Beth Mulligan, Bridgette O'Neill, Nana Korantemah Pierce Williams, Michael Waupoose, Zayda Vallejo
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Abstract

There is current heightened public consciousness of the intersecting challenges of social and racial injustice, other forms of inequity, and the climate and biodiversity crisis. We examine how these current realities influence how we engage as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and Mindfulness-Based Program (MBP) teachers and researchers. Although Kabat-Zinn developed MBSR as a vehicle to enable engagement with both the individual and the collective drivers of distress and flourishing, predominant research and practice trends within the MBP field have prioritised individual wellbeing, and have not been accessible to the full societal demographic. Furthermore, there is increasing recognition that the systemic social inequities that influence access to public services have not been addressed in the MBP field. In response, there is now an increasing trend exploring how MBP participation can influence 'bigger than self' concerns, with research, practice and theory suggesting that the inner personal transformation that mindfulness practice enables, supports individuals to compassionately reconnect to self, other and the natural world in ways that foster prosocial behaviour change, and enables awareness building of personal bias and conditioning. In this paper we present perspectives on ways of both retaining fidelity to the existing MBSR program, and simultaneously embracing anti-oppression teaching methods and content, and an inclusive recognition of the micro, meso and macro causes and conditions that drive distress and flourishing. We are a group of racially diverse MBP teachers and trainers from both sides of the Atlantic, who are engaged in training initiatives with people from Black, Latinex, Indigenous, Asian, and People of Color communities.

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为我们的时间正念减压:一个符合任务的课程。
目前,公众对社会和种族不公正、其他形式的不平等以及气候和生物多样性危机等相互交织的挑战的认识有所提高。我们研究了这些现实是如何影响我们作为正念减压(MBSR)和正念减压项目(MBP)教师和研究人员的。尽管Kabat-Zinn将正念减压作为一种工具,使人们能够与个人和集体的痛苦和繁荣驱动因素进行接触,但在正念减压领域,主要的研究和实践趋势还是优先考虑了个人的幸福,而且还没有被整个社会人口所接受。此外,人们日益认识到,影响获得公共服务机会的系统性社会不平等现象在妇幼保健领域尚未得到解决。作为回应,现在有一个越来越多的趋势是探索MBP参与如何影响“大于自我”的关注,研究、实践和理论表明,正念练习所带来的个人内在转变,支持个人以同情的方式与自我、他人和自然世界重新建立联系,从而促进亲社会行为的改变,并使个人偏见和条件的意识建设成为可能。在本文中,我们提出了一些观点,既要保持对现有正念减压课程的忠诚,又要同时采用反压迫的教学方法和内容,并包容性地认识到导致痛苦和繁荣的微观、中观和宏观原因和条件。我们是一群来自大西洋两岸的不同种族的MBP教师和培训师,他们与来自黑人、拉丁裔、土著、亚洲和有色人种社区的人们一起开展培训活动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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