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Lots of schools across the country have started to teach students about mindfulness.

Maybe your child has come home and spoken about it and you want to know more. Or maybe you've heard about it in the news and want to know how it might help your child.

To show how mindfulness might be a good habit for your child to get into 鈥 and how it could help you as a parent - Parents鈥 Toolkit has produced the two animations below to help explain.

We've spoken to Faiy Rushton at the Mindfulness in Schools Project and Willem Kuyken, Ritblat Professor of Mindfulness and Psychological Science at University of Oxford and author of Mindfulness for Life, to explain the concept of mindfulness and how children and adults could both use it in their lives.

Understanding mindfulness

Mindfulness may seem quite abstract and a bit difficult to get your head round. But in essence it鈥檚 a technique that you can learn to help you be present in the moment.

Faiy says that a good way to explain mindfulness can be to think about a time you鈥檝e felt disconnected from where you are, 鈥淗ave you ever been somewhere with a beautiful view, you鈥檙e really enjoying the experience when suddenly a work deadline pops into your head? Before you know it, you are mentally back at work.鈥

Through mindfulness, you can keep focused on what is going on in the current moment, explains Faiy, 鈥淲e can choose to bring ourselves back to awareness of the present moment by reconnecting with the body, which is always in the present. Perhaps through our senses; taking in what we can see, hear, touch, taste, smell and before we know it, we are fully connecting again with the here and now.鈥

Mindfulness as we talk about it today came about as a way to help people coping with chronic pain. Parts of mindfulness have roots in cultures across the world but the term we use today comes from the late 1970s when Professor Jon Kabat-Zinn introduced Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction. He adapted the traditional practices for his modern-day patients, transforming some of their lives.

Mindfulness techniques

There are a variety of different mindfulness techniques, some of which are explained in these videos. One of them is mindful breathing. This technique encourages you to pay attention to your breath, using it as an anchor to ground yourself in the present moment.

鈥淲e might choose to focus on the place in the body where we can feel the sensation of breathing the strongest; often at the nose, or the back of the throat, in the chest or the stomach, and bring attention to the movement of breath coming into and out of the body,鈥 explains Faiy, 鈥淭he breath is used as an anchor point because it is always there and it鈥檚 not something we have to choose to do, it鈥檚 happening automatically. When we notice our attention move away from this focus or anchor point, we invite our attention back to the breath.鈥

Mindful breathing is not the best technique for everyone, explains Faiy, 鈥淪ometimes people who have experienced trauma might find it difficult to bring attention to the breath. It can be triggering and reactivate the trauma experience. For this reason, mindfulness teachers will, alongside options for focusing on the breath, also give options for the anchor or focus point to be somewhere else in the body or will offer focus options outside the body - like something the person can see or hear instead.鈥

Young girl sits attentively in a field as she looks at buttercups

Body scanning is another technique. 鈥淭he body scan involves being guided to explore the sensations you are noticing in different parts of the body,鈥 says Faiy, 鈥淚t tends to begin at the feet and then slowly moves up the body until we eventually reach the head - then attention is widened out to the whole body. If someone notices that their attention has moved away from the place in the body that鈥檚 being explored, they are encouraged to reconnect to that part of the body again and the sensations they are noticing there.鈥

Benefits of mindfulness

So, why should you bother to try mindfulness out? Well, . And Professor Kuyken believes that there are other benefits that can come from mindfulness too.

We use our body and mind every moment of our life, for the whole of our life. In this sense, training the mind can potentially benefit every aspect of our lives.

鈥淭here are many different mindfulness practices that can be used for different purposes - to steady the mind, to develop control of our attention, to cultivate attitudes such as kindness, and to uncover values.鈥

Various studies have shown that mindfulness can help improve:

  • athletic performance
  • attention
  • blood pressure
  • sleep

However, it is important to highlight that mindfulness isn鈥檛 right for everyone all of the time as Faiy Rushton explains: 鈥淚t is not recommended for people who are currently experiencing an active episode of mental ill health, currently depressed or experiencing extreme anxiety or other mental illnesses.

"Just as we might generally say to people that it would be beneficial to go to the gym and keep fit, we might not say that that would be true for someone who had just broken their leg. If someone is experiencing mental illness or an episode of poor mental health, then that probably isn鈥檛 the right time for them to learn mindfulness.鈥

Adults and mindfulness

Mindfulness isn鈥檛 just for children - it鈥檚 something that adults can do too. 鈥淭he benefits of mindfulness are not age restricted, they can help everyone,鈥 says Faiy, 鈥淚t can help you in your work and home life with the same things it might help your child with; coping with difficulty better and being present and noticing the good things more often.鈥

There is research that shows that just one person practising mindfulness in a family can have a positive impact on the wellbeing of everyone in that family.

You trying out mindfulness could help your children to learn more about it, 鈥淭here is good evidence that children learn many of the dimensions of mindfulness indirectly, through the climate and culture of their home, school and friends,鈥 explains Professor Kuyken, 鈥淧roviding a home climate which values attention, attitudes of curiosity, kindness and care and develops values, is a great way of teaching mindfulness.鈥

Next time your child mentions mindfulness to you, hopefully you will be able to have a conversation about it and maybe it can be something that you can try to add to your lives.

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Further help

Children鈥檚 mental health specialist Dr Pooky Knightsmith shares 10 ways to help your child work through their worries.

As children鈥檚 emotions develop, there are bound to be ups and downs for both them and you as a parent. Here are some tips for how to help children understand their emotions.

If you would like some activity ideas to do with your child to help them express their emotions, try making a feelings tree, playing the emotion face game or you could talk about feelings with toys.

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