عمومی | Stanford University

Stanford encourages campus community to enjoy the ‘power of the pause’

During the 2018 Contemplation by Design Summit , which opens Tuesday, members of the Stanford community will have many opportunities to quiet their minds, engage their senses, relax their bodies and replenish their spirits through contemplative concerts, interactive workshops, talks by faculty members and guided meditations.

During the 2018 Contemplation by Design Summit, facilitators will lead walks of the labyrinth at Windhover, a contemplative center on the west side of campus, to demonstrate how the rhythm and simplicity of following a clear path can quiet the mind, restore balance, encourage prayer, and facilitate meditation, insight and celebration. (Image credit: The Labyrinth at Windhover Contemplative Center)

All sessions of the summit, which will take place Oct. 30 through Nov. 8, are free. For more information and to register for individual sessions, visit the program’s website .

The summit will open at noon Tuesday with a workshop on practical, evidence-based contemplative skills taught by Tia Rich, director of Stanford’s Contemplation by Design , a campus-wide, multidisciplinary program designed to encourage all members of the Stanford community to enjoy “the power of the pause.”

“The summit sessions were designed to help people to pause from their extraordinary level of productivity and innovation to connect to their deepest humanity,” she said. “Faculty, staff, students and community members who participate in the summit will learn practical skills for resting, reflecting, renewing – and thus sustaining – whole-hearted, purposeful engagement in learning, teaching, research and service.”

The summit’s major events include:

The summit program will feature talks by faculty, including Blakey Vermeule, a professor of English and co-author of the new book, Action vs. Contemplation: Why an Ancient Debate Still Matters , Manish Saggar , assistant professor (research) of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, will talk about the neuroscience of contemplative practices, and Ronald Tyler , a professor of law, will discuss “Justice, Compassion and Self-Care.”

In a workshop on the opening day of the summit, Jonah Willihnganz, director of the Stanford Storytelling Project , will lead a workshop exploring how to use fiction and poetry to reflect deeply and create more intimacy in relationships.

The summit will also include a book discussion led by Alex Soojung-Kim Pang, author of Rest: Why You Get More Done When You Work Less , and a session on the playful gift of improvisation led by Dan Klein , a lecturer in the Department of Theater and Performing Arts and at Stanford Graduate School of Business.

During the summit, participants are also invited to engage in Daoist breathwork, in a meditative “sound bath” to the sound vibrations of singing bowls, gongs and chimes, and in yoga at Memorial Church and the Windhover contemplative center.

The Rev. Joanne Sanders, associate dean for religious life at Stanford, will facilitate several sessions, including Contemplation and Compline – an evening candlelit service of chanted song – at Memorial Church and a Walking Meditation and Contemplation of the Memorial Church Inscriptions. The inscriptions, carved into the sandstone walls of Memorial Church, were selected by Jane Stanford to provide enduring inspiration to the Stanford community.