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You do not need an empty room, an hour a day or a perfectly still mind to taste real quiet. Chan Mindset: Short Meditations for Long Days shows how to touch that quiet in the middle of school runs, inbox floods and late-night washing up. Drawing on the grounded traditions of chan meditation and Zen, it offers practical ways to work with posture, breath and plain attention in the life you already have.
This is not another grand programme; it is a handbook of five minute meditation sessions, one-sentence reflections and everyday experiments. You will learn the one breath reset for those moments when you are about to snap, discreet micro-sits you can do at your desk, walking mindfulness for crowded pavements, and even dishwashing meditation that turns piles of plates into islands of presence. Clear guidance on thought labelling practice and brief compassion meditation helps you meet busy thoughts and strong feelings without being pulled under.
Designed for people who feel they have no time to meditate, the book offers gentle structure and mindfulness consistency tricks that can survive real schedules. Short evening practices support evening reflection practice so you can set the day down rather than carry it into the night. Whether you are new to meditation or returning after many false starts, Chan Mindset invites you to treat attention as something you can train in five minutes, again and again, until quiet begins to thread through even your longest days.

Chan Mindset

SKU: 9789376556830
$31.99 Regular Price
$23.29Sale Price
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  • Hanae Tsukari writes for people who long for a quieter mind but live in the middle of crowded days. She has spent many years exploring Chan and Zen teachings while holding the usual mix of jobs, deadlines and family obligations, so her work grows from the friction between cushion and calendar. Rather than presenting meditation as a special talent, she is interested in how small, plain acts of attention can reshape an ordinary Wednesday. Born into a family that told stories of both bustling cities and slow temple courtyards, Hanae has always been curious about how ancient practices survive in modern streets. She has experimented with folding brief sits into commutes, lunch breaks and late-night kitchen tidying, learning what holds up when life is messy. Her writing aims to be a clear, companionable voice that demystifies Chan without diluting its depth. Hanae sees this book as part of a longer conversation that began centuries ago in Chinese and Japanese monasteries and now continues in shared flats, offices and buses. She believes that even one sincere breath, taken in the middle of a noisy day, can quietly change how we move through the world.

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