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Cornerstones to Optimal Wellbeing:  True Rest 

There are several fundamental cornerstones to wellbeing. Our spiritual goal, as Eckhart Tolle tells us in A New Earth, is to awaken or to become conscious and as the Yogi’s believe is to become enlightened.  These abstract concepts of awakening and enlightenment are strangely foreign and believed to be unobtainable to many of us, but broken down in recognizable western concepts the path is not only obtainable but necessary for our overall health and wellbeing. Essentially these concepts are showing us how to become more balanced, to not let our thoughts, our emotions and our egos get in the way of being happy and centered in everyday life, including difficult times, as well as how to feel alive from the inside out.   There are cornerstones or pillars that will enable us to better reach these states within ourselves.  These pillars are:

All of these are important pieces to the puzzle and can be broken down into further concepts around health, spirituality and science.  I have learned personally as well as seen with those around me that rest is absolutely essential to health, regardless of what else you may be doing.  Rest is our internal stress management tool and it is accessible to everyone, although we may need help in finding it, as I have.  The beautiful and promising part of rest, as I have defined, is that once you start to tap into your internal rest mechanism, you start to instinctively access it in your daily life, as needed, even just for fleeting moments which in turn revitalize you in your busy life bringing more balance and joy.  Without rest, even if you are eating pure foods, exercising, volunteering or helping others, and even meditating, you may still feel unhappy, unhealthy and un- whatever.  I want to clarify what I mean by rest: 

I also want to clarify what true rest is not.  For example, there have been many times in my life that I have been lying there in bed or sitting comfortably in a chair, perceiving to be resting, but my muscles were tense and my mind was incessantly thinking, and possibly stirring up emotions too, therefore I was not truly resting.   Additionally, when we watch TV, play video games, and even listen to lively music, we may believe we are relaxing, and in a sense we are, but this is NOT a state of true rest.  These circumstances create thoughts, emotions and reactions on their own.  It is important to understand that just because are bodies are not moving, does not mean we are in a state of true rest.

All of these cornerstones are imperative for optimal health, and whatever order you address these cornerstones, whether one at a time or all at once, you will be moving in a positive direction. 

      A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step. 

      Lao-tzu, The Way of Lao-tzu 

Resources for finding True Rest.  Here are some effective, yet easy and affordable resources. 

If interested, please follow future articles pertaining to these cornerstones, including pure foods and movement.

Namaste,

Stacy Ruse

Written by Stacy Ruse

Find more by Stacy at www.EaseintoGreen.com, www.ShareitLiveit.org, and on her personal Blog http://inspiredwellbeing.blogspot.com.

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