Interest in meditation, mindfulness, and contemplation has grown exponentially in recent years. Rather than being seen as mystical practices from ancient Buddhism or esoteric philosophy, they are increasingly seen as technologies rooted in evidence from psychology and neuroscience. Mindfulness has become the basis for numerous therapeutic interventions, both as a treatment in healthcare and as a means of enhancing well-being and happiness. For millions around the world, mindfulness has become a life-style choice, enhancing and enriching everyday experience. Mindfulness is big business.
But, what actually is mindfulness? Is it really good for you? Can anyone learn it? How can you recognize charlatans? Would you want to live in a mindful society, and would it smell like sandalwood? What does it feel like to be mindful? Are you mindful already, and how would you know?
Evolving from the popular Honours Academy course at Leiden University, this innovative course combines conventional scholarly inquiry from multiple disciplines (ranging from psychology, through philosophy, to politics) with experiential learning (including specially designed ‘meditation labs,’ in which you’ll get chance to practice and analyze mindfulness on yourself). In the end, the course aims to provide a responsible, comprehensive, and inclusive education about (and in) mindfulness as a contemporary phenomenon.
During the production of this course, we have been supported by Willem Kuyken, Director of the University of Oxford Mindfulness Centre, and Stephen Batchelor, co-founder of Bodhi College. And we gratefully acknowledge the contributions made by Mark Williams, co-developer of Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT), and Rebecca Crane, Director of the Centre for Mindfulness Research and Practice at the University of Bangor. We have recently added expert advice from Dawn Scott (Spirit Rock & Barre Centre for Buddhist Studies), Sydney Spears (University of Kansa), Elisabeth Stanley (Georgetown University), Susan Woods (Centre for Mindfulness Studies), Patricia Rockman (University of Toronto) and Jeff Corntassel (University of Victoria).
"A deep and profound dive into the ethical, social, psychological, and philosophical implications of modern-day mindfulness practice. The course is not for the faint of heart, perhaps, but it is also full of practical, guided exercises for the uninitiated! Thank you for redefining my relationship to Mindfulness in a completely new and thought-provoking way" 28 april 2021
"The course enabled me to explore the mindfulness construct at its deeper lever from philosophical, psychological and political lenses. The mindfulness labs were very useful in practicing the skills of being mindful." 23 nov 2018
"i took this course after a period of time when I was trying to practice mindfulness and meditation, but with doubtful success. The course answered many questions to me, and I needed that to keep me motivated. It really helped me understand the origins and, more importantly, benefits of mindfulness practice and made me persist in my attempts. I'm really glad I took the course, I find it interesting, well taught and very useful for all those seeking deeper explanation in why trying mindfulness." 9 Oct 2018
"I have taken other courses in other online platforms. However, this has been one of the best courses I have found online." 3 Oct 2018
"I really like the invitation to us, the learners, to rethink our preconceptions and beliefs, and then make our own judgement about mindfulness. The overall tone was very friendly and open, resources very useful." 12 Dec 2017
People come to the study of Mindfulness for all kinds of reasons; I’m curious to know what brings you here. Perhaps you’re someone who already has a Mindfulness practice and you’re keen to know more about it? Perhaps you’re someone who has heard a lot about this mysterious thing called ‘Mindfulness,’ but you’re suspicious or skeptical about it, so you want to see what all the fuss is about? Is it really something real? Just a fad or fashion? Does it really cure all our ills? Perhaps you’re a student of psychology, or philosophy, or politics, or you’re an entrepreneur or a therapist? Whoever you are, and whyever you’re here, you’re very welcome. I look forward to learning about and from you as we embark on this adventure together.
'De-Mystifying Mindfulness' was first launched in 2016 and, since that time, it has been honoured by the participation of about 200,000 people on Coursera. During these years, we have listened carefully to the views, feedback, and needs of the participants, which have prompted us to make a series of changes and additions to the course. Thanks to the generosity of our donors (through our voluntary 'dana' box), we had the resources we needed to make the additions. So, as well as some minor changes, we've launched 2 major rounds of updates, including adding extra materials about sitting with difficulties and about the challenges of teaching mindfulness in 2019. We also added some extra audio files with meditation guidance for participants who requested these in the voice of Chris Goto-Jones. Then, in 2021, we added two entire new modules (Mindfulness, Trauma & Social Justice; Mindfulness, Nature and the Land), both of which included additional video and audio sessions. This 2021 update also included a new group of interviews with leading figures in the fields of the practice and study of Mindfulness. The result of these updates, we hope, is a responsive and relatively comprehensive guide to de-mystifying mindfulness; a side-effect might be that the style of presentation might sometimes seem a little inconsistent -- we hope that isn't too disconcerting for you.
Good luck with the course, and best wishes for your new adventure!
Discover The World at Leiden University [video]•2 minutes
Introduction to Mindfulness
Module 2•6 hours to complete
Module details
In this first module, we’re going to explore the foundational question of what Mindfulness actually is! This module has been designed to approach this question by considering a series of preconceptions about Mindfulness in contemporary societies. Hence, here we meet the characters who will help and guide us through the rest of the course: the scientist, the monk, the ninja, the zombie, and the hippie. I hope you find these to be worthwhile companions on our journey. In the end, we’ll discover that these preconceptions are not without merit, but that they are only partial pictures of the whole. We’ll also engage in our first Meditation Lab so that we can begin to weigh these preconceptions against our own experiences. Begin working on the week's Meditation Lab exercises at the beginning of each week. Be prepared to set aside time each day for the exercises in the Meditation Labs. The exercises can range from just a few minutes to nearly an hour, as indicated on each of the guided meditation recordings.
Batchelor: what draws others to mindfulness?•2 minutes
Scott: The journey to Mindfulness – self•11 minutes
Scott: The journey to Mindfulness - others•3 minutes
Spears: The journey to Mindfulness•3 minutes
Spears: Representations of Mindfulness•4 minutes
Spears: How did you find Mindfulness?•4 minutes
Stanley: The journey to Mindfulness•6 minutes
Woods & Rockman: Representations of Mindfulness, pt.1•10 minutes
Woods & Rockman: Representations of Mindfulness, pt.2•18 minutes
6 readings•Total 68 minutes
Med Lab 1: Exercises•5 minutes
Bio of Dawn Scott•10 minutes
Bio Sydney Spears•10 minutes
Bio Elisabeth Stanley•3 minutes
Bio Susan Woods & Patricia Rockman•10 minutes
What is this thing called Mindfulness?•30 minutes
2 assignments•Total 50 minutes
Check your knowledge•30 minutes
Journal after Meditation Lab 1•20 minutes
1 peer review•Total 60 minutes
Considering preconceptions•60 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 60 minutes
What is Mindfulness for you?•20 minutes
What did that practice feel like?•40 minutes
Psychology of/& Mindfulness
Module 3•6 hours to complete
Module details
One of the most significant developments in the field of Mindfulness in recent years has been the development of ‘construct Mindfulness’ as a therapeutic tool and as a scientific technology. Both of these rest upon (and produce) bodies of scientific evidence about the effects and correlates of Mindfulness practice, both in terms of therapy and neurophysiology. In this second module, then, we’re going to explore some of implications and elaborations of these approaches. We’ll see what happens to the idea of Mindfulness when we make it into something that can be measured, and then we’ll investigate some of the most popular (and effective) Mindfulness-based Interventions, such as MBSR and MBCT. In the end, we’ll also ask whether this operationalized approach to Mindfulness actually hides deeper philosophical, religious, and existential questions, to which we’ll turn in the next module.
Common principles in mindfulness interventions•10 minutes
Summary•6 minutes
Meditation lab II•7 minutes
Kuyken: encountering difficulty•4 minutes
Kuyken: assessing teaching•2 minutes
Kuyken: science and Buddhism•3 minutes
Kuyken: who should teach?•5 minutes
Kuyken: 8 weeks later?•5 minutes
Batchelor: mindfulness teachers•3 minutes
Batchelor: mindfulness qualifications•3 minutes
2 readings•Total 65 minutes
Med Lab 2: Exercises•5 minutes
Psychology of/& Mindfulness•60 minutes
3 assignments•Total 90 minutes
How stressed are you?•30 minutes
Check your knowledge•30 minutes
Journal after Meditation Lab 2•30 minutes
6 discussion prompts•Total 115 minutes
Have you encountered MBIs?•20 minutes
Do you have ease of being?•25 minutes
Are you stressed?•20 minutes
How did that practice feel for you?•20 minutes
Poetic reflection•15 minutes
Mindful space•15 minutes
Philosophy of/& Mindfulness
Module 4•7 hours to complete
Module details
One of the great debates in the field of Mindfulness revolves around the question of the nature of its relationship with Buddhism. In this module, we consider some of the ways in which this relationship can be understood, including by paying attention to the fact that Buddhism is a diverse and multivocal tradition. Going even further, we explore the possibility that traditions of thought other than Buddhism might provide valuable insights into Mindfulness, ranging from Daoism through Stoicism to contemporary American philosophy.
Stanley: Does Mindfulness need Buddhism?•3 minutes
2 readings•Total 60 minutes
Med Lab 3: Exercises•5 minutes
Philosophy of/& Mindfulness•55 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Journal after Meditation Lab 3•30 minutes
1 peer review•Total 60 minutes
Different traditions•60 minutes
7 discussion prompts•Total 110 minutes
Real mindfulness?•10 minutes
Are you a Buddhist?•20 minutes
Philosophical framework•20 minutes
How did that practice feel for you?•20 minutes
Poetic reflection•10 minutes
Mindful walk•10 minutes
Mindful space•20 minutes
Politics of/& Mindfulness
Module 5•6 hours to complete
Module details
It is commonly assumed that Mindfulness is a solitary pursuit, and yet there is also often talk of a ‘Mindfulness Revolution,’ as though Mindfulness is also a social movement. In this module we’ll explore some of the ways in which the practice of Mindfulness might impact on ethical, social, and political issues today. We’ll ask questions about whether a Mindful society would really be a utopia, or whether it would be a nightmare. We’ll investigate the significance of Mindfulness in the military and in education, and finally we’ll attempt to engage with the meaning and significance of the commercialization of Mindfulness in capitalist societies.
MANIFESTO! - Don't just do something, sit there!•10 minutes
Mindful utopias and distopias•12 minutes
Martial mindfulness•11 minutes
Mindfulness in education•11 minutes
The mindfulness industry•11 minutes
Summary•9 minutes
Meditation lab IV•5 minutes
Kuyken: mindfulness in society•4 minutes
Batchelor: mindfulness in society•5 minutes
Batchelor: commercialism and mindfulness•3 minutes
Mindfulness and society•3 minutes
2 readings•Total 80 minutes
Med Lab 4: Exercises•5 minutes
Politics of/& Mindfulness•75 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Journal after Meditation Lab 4•30 minutes
1 peer review•Total 60 minutes
Commercial mindfulness•60 minutes
4 discussion prompts•Total 80 minutes
The mindful apocalypse•20 minutes
Extreme Mindfulness•20 minutes
How did that practice feel for you?•20 minutes
Mindful space•20 minutes
Extra 2021: Mindfulness, Trauma and Social Justice
Module 6•3 hours to complete
Module details
While there is a tendency today to view mindfulness as somehow sealed off from the rest of society, like a kind of ‘clean space’ or refuge in which we might sit to shelter from the social, political, economic, and cultural turmoil around us, mindfulness is actually just as entangled in these forces as anything else. Over the last few years, an increasing body of research has started to explore some of the ways in which these social forces and personal histories impact on the experience of mindfulness practice. Such research shows that the field of mindfulness cannot assume that everyone sits onto the same cushion in the same room. And some people just might not have a cushion at all. Hence, this module explores the intersections between mindfulness and trauma, as well as mindfulness, privilege, prejudice, and oppression. Here we see that mindfulness is not free of concerns about racism, sexism, ableism or other forms of systemic discrimination. Nonetheless, perhaps mindfulness contains some seeds to help us confront these social ills?
We are fortunate to be able to include in this module a trauma-sensitive guided meditation by Elizabeth Stanley.
Scott: Is access to Mindfulness equal for everyone?•7 minutes
Scott: Can meditation be dark?•6 minutes
Spears: Adverse experiences and trauma in Mindfulness•9 minutes
Spears: Uneven access to Mindfulness•7 minutes
Stanley: Adverse experiences and ethics•5 minutes
Stanley: Diversity, inclusion, and trauma-sensitivity•2 minutes
Stanley: Mindfulness for police and military•9 minutes
Woods & Rockman: Mindfulness, Society, and Diversity, pt.1•8 minutes
Woods & Rockman: Mindfulness, Society, and Diversity, pt.2•9 minutes
Corntassel: Mindfulness and Inclusivity•4 minutes
Corntassel: Other ways of knowing Mindfulness•2 minutes
3 readings•Total 30 minutes
Socially Engaged Mindfulness •10 minutes
Trauma sensitive meditation by Elisabeth Stanley•10 minutes
Mindfulness, Trauma and Social Justice•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Reflection exercises•30 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 20 minutes
Safe Anchor?•10 minutes
Safety of place•10 minutes
Extra 2021: Mindfulness and Nature & Land
Module 7•3 hours to complete
Module details
One feature of contemporary mindfulness is that it is increasingly practiced in urban environments, in small rooms in big cities. This tendency has contributed to a form of romanticization of mindfulness in nature, as though practicing in a beautiful natural setting is somehow better or more ‘pure.’ We will see that this romantic view is not new at all, and also that it hides a much more complicated and subtle form of relationship between mindfulness and the natural world. In this module, we’ll explore some of the pros and cons of practicing in nature, as well as some of the myths about it. We’ll even learn a new meditation that is specifically designed to help us feel our place in nature. At the same time, as soon as we accept that the practice of mindfulness takes place in real locations (on particular territories or pieces of the earth), then we’ll see that we also have to accept that mindfulness is not free of questions of land politics and colonialism. What does it mean to practice mindfulness in a way that respects the land?
Wherever you go, the land is already there•3 minutes
Where ever you sit, the land is already there•4 minutes
Practices that honour the land•6 minutes
Healthy Working Habits: The Mindful Garden & Urban Jungle•3 minutes
5 readings•Total 70 minutes
Guided Meditation by Dawn Scott - the Four Elements•30 minutes
The Mindful Garden Project Brief•10 minutes
Podcast Urban Green Spaces•10 minutes
Creating your own urban green space•10 minutes
Mindfulness and Nature & Land•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Reflection exercises•30 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 20 minutes
Mindfulness of the elements•10 minutes
Acknowledgement•10 minutes
1 plugin•Total 2 minutes
Building the Mindful Garden [video]•2 minutes
Mindfulness into the Future
Module 8•6 hours to complete
Module details
In this last module, we’ll spend some time reflecting on the path we have travelled to get to this point. There is the additional content that learners requested and the community graciously financed. We’ll also consider some of the main challenges that we might have encountered, and also give some thought to what might come next for those of us who want to keep a Mindfulness practice in their lives.
PODCAST: Meditation Goto-Jones Sitting with Adversity•17 minutes
Meditation Lab V•4 minutes
Willem Kuyken: Parting advice•1 minute
Dawn Scott: Parting advice•2 minutes
Sydney Spears: Parting advice on practice•5 minutes
Elizabeth Stanley: Parting advice for students and teachers•4 minutes
Susan Woods: Parting advice on practice•2 minutes
Patricia Rockman: Parting advice on practice•4 minutes
1 reading•Total 4 minutes
Med Lab 5: Exercises•4 minutes
2 assignments•Total 60 minutes
How mindful are you now?•30 minutes
Letter to Self•30 minutes
3 discussion prompts•Total 60 minutes
Do you feel mindful?•20 minutes
How did that practice feel for you?•20 minutes
What next?•20 minutes
Honours Project
Module 9•4 hours to complete
Module details
Having come to the end of the regular programme, you might already be considering what you can do to continue the process of de-mystifying mindfulness for the world today. Perhaps you've identified a practice that really challenges you, or an idea that inspires you into action? Perhaps you're wondering whether your experiences and insights might also be valuable to other people; you're thinking of ways to test them or share them or both? This 'Honours Module' provides you with the opportunity to build on the knowledge we've accumulated and constructed over the previous weeks by creating original, new projects of your own. Successful completion of this project will mean that you will earn 'honours' on your certificate - the highest quality stamp available. More than that, your projects might make genuine and important contributions to our mission: building knowledge for a more mindful world.
Leiden University is one of Europe's foremost research universities. This prominent position gives our graduates a leading edge and prepares them for careers both within and outside of academia. Leiden University is the oldest university in the Netherlands, founded in 1575. Our motto is: Praesidium Libertatis (Bastion of Liberty) - Freedom of spirit, thought and expression. Leiden University has a campus in Leiden and The Hague, with 7 faculties, 47 Bachelor Programmes, 79 Master Programmes and nearly 30,000 students.
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A course that will open your mind and heart. I thoroughly enjoyed it and learnt so much about Mindfulness and how I want to incorporate it into my daily life, relationships and personality. Thank you!
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A truly outstanding course for those that seek to better understand themselves and find an improved sense of contentment within themselves and the world in which we live.
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Reviewed on Jul 6, 2020
An incredible course. Well set out. The videos and teaching are excellent. The practical component is pitched just right. Truly a course that everyone can understand and derive benefit from.
It is very wise to consider whether you need support for your participation in this course. You will spend quite a lot of time working on yourself, so it is possible that issues will emerge that disturb you. So, before you start the course, consider telling a good friend or family member that you intend to take this course and ask them to be available for you if you need some support during the course. Perhaps they will even want to take the course with you. You can also make use of the community of students and teachers around this course to seek support and answers to your questions. You will probably discover very quickly that many of us share similar issues, and that talking with your peers about them will help. Finally though, do not be afraid to seek more professional help if issues arise with which you feel unable to cope. Remember, this course is not itself a programme of therapy. In the end, if it feels too much, you should be willing to reconsider whether this is the right time for you to take this course -- do not feel pressured or obliged to continue it. You can leave and rejoin at any time, as feels comfortable to you.
When will I have access to the lectures and assignments?
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What will I get if I purchase the Certificate?
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Yes. In select learning programs, you can apply for financial aid or a scholarship if you can’t afford the enrollment fee. If fin aid or scholarship is available for your learning program selection, you’ll find a link to apply on the description page.