Loading Courses

Stanford’s 6-week Mindful Self Compassion course

Lakiba Pittman

February 10, 2022 @ 12:00 pm - March 17, 2022 @ 1:30 pm

|Recurring Course (See all)

An event every week that begins at 12:00 pm on Thursday, repeating until March 17, 2022

Course Navigation

Most of us feel compassion for our close friends when they are struggling. What would it be like to receive the same caring attention from yourself when you needed it most? All that’s required is a shift in attention – recognizing that as a human being, you, too, are a worthy recipient of compassion.

This 6-session online engagement course draws on the skills of mindfulness and focuses on developing the resource of self-compassion to enhance our capacity for emotional well-being. Burgeoning research shows that self-compassion is strongly associated with emotional well-being, coping with life’s challenges, lower levels of anxiety and depression, healthy habits such as diet and exercise, and more satisfying personal relationships. It is an inner strength that enables us to be more fully human – more fully ourselves.

You will be provided with essential tools for treating yourself in a kind, compassionate way whenever you suffer, fail, or feel inadequate. Program activities include short talks, experiential exercises, group discussion, and home practices. All are welcome. No previous experience with mindfulness or meditation is required.

Mindful Self-Compassion is an empirically supported training program designed to cultivate the skill of self-compassion. Based on the ground-breaking research of Dr. Kristen Neff and the clinical expertise of Dr. Christopher Germer, it teaches us how to treat ourselves with kindness, care, and understanding.

Details

Start:
February 10, 2022 @ 12:00 pm
End:
March 17, 2022 @ 1:30 pm
Register:
https://healthyliving.stanford.edu/classes/register/hipClasses.php?t=1cce34dfd3cbss383d348a508b1be48cc821&cc=msc-40

Teacher

Lakiba Pittman
Phone:
650.862.9548
Email:
Contact Via Email
Website:
View Organizer Website

Notes