Submission Type
General Submission
Abstract
In the pandemic- and post-pandemic era, new as well as exacerbated work-life stressors have led academia to recognize the vital role wellness plays in teaching and learning. While most institutional and pedagogical response has understandably focused on students’ holistic health, this essay promotes increased instructor self-care as a necessary complement to supporting learners in higher education. By practicing meditative exercises drawn from contemplative pedagogy, faculty and instructional staff can create synergy between mindfulness strategies that we might invite students to try and our own attention to the whole self outside class. As the essay’s case study shows, labyrinth walking in particular embodies a flexible way to find stability and harmony within constraints, offering a form of mindful meditation that resonates with the complex, demanding embeddedness instructors experience on and off campus. Such meditative self-care can also generate greater care for educators as a community, while helping sustain our collective efforts to support students and others in professional, domestic, and civic spheres. Expanding the discourse on academic well-being to focus on instructors too thus shifts academic culture toward more fully realizing its emphasis on transformative holism in teaching as well as in learning.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Mera Ford, Natalie
(2025)
"Labyrinthine Routes to Meditation: Contemplative Pedagogy and Instructor Self-Care,"
Journal of Contemplative and Holistic Education: Vol. 2:
Iss.
2, Article 4.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25035/jche.02.02.04
Available at:
https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/jche/vol2/iss2/4
Included in
Contemplative Education Commons, Holistic Education Commons, Humane Education Commons, International and Comparative Education Commons