Enlightenment in 2 Minutes: How Micro-Moments Can Transform Your Life

22/02/2025 25 min Episodio 141
Enlightenment in 2 Minutes: How Micro-Moments Can Transform Your Life

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Links to Steven Webb's podcast and how you can support his work.Donate paypal.me/stevenwebb or Coffee stevenwebb.ukSteven's courses, podcasts and links: stevenwebb.ukWhat if enlightenment isn’t about hours of meditation or decades of study, but tiny moments of awareness you can practice anywhere, anytime? After paralysis, heartbreak, and a battle with intrusive thoughts, Steven Webb discovered that awakening thrives in life’s margins—in stolen seconds between tasks, breaths during chaos, and pauses before reactions. In this episode, he shares:How to turn traffic jams, work stress, and even arguments into portals of peaceWhy 2-minute practices work better than marathon meditation sessions (and how to start)The science-backed power of "enlightened micro-moments" to rewire your brainWhy This Episode Will Help You⏱️ "Enlightenment for the time-poor" – Transform洗碗, commuting, or waiting in line into spiritual practice🧠 Neuroplasticity hack – How micro-moments of awareness compound into lasting change🚫 No altar/incense required – Stephen’s "30-second reset" for panic attacks, overwhelm, or decision fatigue💥 Breakthrough for meditation quitters – Why short bursts beat "perfect" sessions (and how to avoid self-judgment)🌱 Grow peace incrementally – Trackable daily wins vs. vague spiritual goalsKey Quotes from the Episode“You don’t need 30 minutes—steal 30 seconds. A deep breath while the microwave spins? That’s a revolution.”“I’m dyslexic, paralyzed, and once thought enlightenment was for gurus. Now I find it staring at my ceiling fan.”“An enlightened moment isn’t when you stop feeling anger—it’s the half-second where you notice you’re angry. That’s the crack where light gets in.”“Ten 2-minute practices scattered through your day? That’s 20 minutes of awareness—without sitting cross-legged once.”“I didn’t change my life in a cave. I changed it waiting for caregivers, between sips of tea, in the silence after a text notification.”