Mindfulness, Reimagined In Cancun

I’ve always carried a bit of judgment around mindfulness.
Whenever people talked about “being mindful,” I heard be calm, peaceful, more zen-like. My old story, that i was too loud, too much, too reactive – so should be more mindful. So I wasn’t as excited about mindfulness as many others.

That changed.

At a recent Dr. Joe Dispenza retreat, I had the privilege of hearing Ellen Langer—the pioneer of mindfulness research and the force behind so much of our modern interest in it. She completely rocked my understanding.

First, she defined mindfulness in the simplest, most liberating way:
mindful = not mindless.
Not checked out. Not running predictable habits. Not assuming.
But questioning, noticing, and being awake in the moment.

Then she introduced another shift that landed deeply for me:
mind–body unity, not mind–body connection.

That one word—unity—changes everything.

The old framing is still dualistic: mind and body, as if one leads and the other follows. Work on the body. Then work on the mind. As if they’re two separate systems talking across a gap.

Mind–body unity aligns with what I’ve believed and taught for years:
consciousness is both energy and matter, always.
We are physical and energetic—thought and heart, sensation and meaning—an integrated field expressing itself through form.

Ellen shared stories that reminded me of the many people in my own life who’ve taught me versions of these lessons. One example stuck hard:

Two people take an IQ test. One scores a 70. One scores a 69.
The 69 is labeled “cognitively impaired.”
The 70 is not. And that one point—one tiny point—shapes entirely different life paths.

That’s the power of language. Labels. Meaning.
How we name things becomes how we live them.

And this brings me back to Me + We.

We aren’t isolated parts trying to become whole.
We are wholeness in every part—each individual an expression of a deeper, unified field.
Me lives inside We.
We lives inside Me.

And here’s the real clincher: we have choice.

Mindfulness—true mindfulness—is not about being calm or zen.
It’s about remembering that in any moment, we get to choose how we engage.

Choice in how we see.
Choice in how we respond.
Choice in how we influence the living matrix we’re part of.

We are not victims of our wiring, our history, or even our wholeness.
Wholeness isn’t a fixed state—it’s a field.
A shimmering, responsive, alive field that changes the moment awareness touches it.

When we meet this moment without judgment—
with heart, curiosity, and presence—
the field reorganizes.
The energy moves.
Possibility opens.

This, to me, is mindfulness:
Not managing yourself into stillness,
but entering life awake enough to influence the field you are part of.
Me affecting We.
We informing Me.
Wholeness alive in every part, reshaped through presence.

That’s the power.
That’s the invitation—
in any moment, with whatever stands in front of you.

Shine On

Shining On – long after the light is gone.

Leona and Me – the Satir Planter – seemed the perfect spot.

So much.

October began with a circle of remarkable women here in Montana for Find Your Mojo. Then Haven and Couple’s Alive.
Closing with the final morning of a vibrant, vulnerable, alive Come Alive.

November arrived with a plan for a Team Alive
and then reality invited us into another kind of circle.
Rather than follow a structure, we followed the living system in front of us —
allowing the work to emerge from what was needed in the moment.
Adaptive, relational, alive.

There was beauty in it all.
And it was messy. Joyful. Deep. Tender.
Wild. Juicy. Heavy.
Utterly alive.

Now, back home, I feel the integration moving through my cells—
spirit-filled and whole.
A little raw. A little tender.
Grieving the letting-go of each pop-up community,
while knowing the WE continues to carry us as we go our separate ways.

A song hums through me:

Shine on
Long after the light is gone
I will shine on
Shine on…

Yes.
We shine on—long after the closing circle.
That is the miracle of this work.

I find so much hope and purpose in every circle.

Couples devoted to discovering their ME inside a WE.
Individuals from every stage and shape of life, arriving as strangers,
fracturing at times,
drawing close again—
sharing meals, stories, silence—
holding space for each voice, each heart, each shining.

And a team who arrived torn, unsure,
carrying responsibility for the wellness of their community.
Stepping into the unknown, trusting the process,
doing the work—together.
We worked.
They worked.
And something new emerged.

Now I return home to a country that feels fractured and tender too.
And still—I choose to shine.
I believe others will too.

It is, indeed, a strange time to be alive.

And I am listening.

And shining on.