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Glossary›Relational Mindfulness

Glossary

Relational Mindfulness

The practice of bringing mindful awareness to interpersonal interactions, cultivating presence, empathy, and compassion in relationships with others.

What is Relational Mindfulness?

Relational mindfulness is the practice of cultivating mindful awareness within interpersonal interactions and relationships. While traditional mindfulness focuses on internal experience—observing one’s thoughts, emotions, and bodily sensations—relational mindfulness extends this attention to the dynamic, intersubjective space between individuals. It involves being fully present, conscious, and aware during person-to-person engagement, while simultaneously maintaining awareness of one’s internal states and observing how one’s words and behaviors affect others.

The practice addresses a tension many meditators encounter: the difficulty of maintaining mindful presence when engaging with other people. Where solitary meditation may cultivate calm and clarity, social interactions can trigger reactivity, anxiety, and habitual patterns. Relational mindfulness offers a framework for taking mindfulness “off the cushion” and into the relational field, where most of life unfolds.

Origins & Lineage

Relational mindfulness emerged as a distinct concept within Western mindfulness communities in the early 21st century, though its roots reach into both Buddhist contemplative traditions and contemporary psychology. The term gained prominence as practitioners and researchers recognized that mainstream mindfulness interventions—particularly Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), developed by Jon Kabat-Zinn in 1979—emphasized individual practice while largely neglecting interpersonal dimensions.

Several streams contributed to its development. UCLA’s Mindful Awareness Research Center (MARC), founded within the Jane and Terry Semel Institute, integrated relational practices into its curriculum, with teachers like Marvin Belzer pioneering dyadic and group mindfulness exercises for students who didn’t connect with solitary meditation. The concept received academic attention through a 2012 paper in the Asian Journal of Psychiatry titled “Relational mindfulness, spirituality, and the therapeutic bond,” which examined how interpersonal aspects of mindfulness could enhance psychotherapeutic relationships.

Deborah Eden Tull, a Zen teacher who trained for seven-and-a-half years as a monastic in a silent Zen monastery, published Relational Mindfulness: A Handbook for Deepening Our Connection with Ourselves, Each Other, and the Planet in 2018 through Wisdom Publications. Tull’s work, influenced by her time teaching for UCLA’s Mindful Awareness Research Center and studying Joanna Macy’s Work That Reconnects, articulated nine principles of relational mindfulness grounded in Buddhist teachings on interdependence. She drew on the concept of “interdependent co-arising” (pratītyasamutpāda in Sanskrit), emphasizing that all phenomena arise in relationship rather than in isolation.

Parallel developments occurred in academic settings. In 2020, the academic volume Relational Mindfulness: Fundamentals and Applications, edited by researchers in Europe, proposed a social constructionist approach to mindfulness that challenged individualistic paradigms. This scholarship argued that mindfulness practice had been overly focused on the “delimited self” and called for a relational perspective based on dialogue and intersubjectivity.

How It’s Practiced

Relational mindfulness involves several core practices. Deep listening serves as a foundational skill—attending fully to another person without planning one’s response, judging, or problem-solving. Practitioners cultivate awareness of their own internal experience (thoughts, emotions, bodily sensations) while simultaneously remaining present to the other person.

Mindful speaking complements deep listening: speaking with intention, clarity, and kindness while noticing impulses to interrupt, defend, or perform. Some approaches emphasize moving from “first consciousness”—reactive, conditioned responses rooted in early attachment patterns—to “second consciousness”—cultivated, thoughtful responses that emerge from present-moment awareness.

Structured formats include dyadic practices, where pairs take turns speaking and listening within timed intervals, and mindful dialogue exercises in small groups. UCLA’s Mindful Awareness Research Center incorporates relational practices into its six-week Mindful Awareness Practices (MAPs) program. Psychotherapists use relational mindfulness to enhance the therapeutic alliance, attending to the intersubjective field between therapist and client.

Practitioners work with challenging relational moments—conflict, reactivity, disconnection—as opportunities for awareness rather than as problems to solve. The practice includes noticing when one has left the present moment, when separation and defensiveness arise, and cultivating compassion for both self and other when patterns are revealed.

Relational Mindfulness Today

Relational mindfulness is encountered in diverse settings: therapy offices, educational institutions, workplace trainings, and retreat centers. UCLA’s Mindful Awareness Research Center offers courses and teacher training that include relational components. The British Psychological Society has promoted mindful dialogue practices for psychologists. Educational programs integrate relational mindfulness to support social-emotional learning, with research suggesting it helps students who find solitary meditation inaccessible due to restlessness or neurodivergent processing styles.

Online platforms adapted relational practices during the COVID-19 pandemic, using video conferencing for dyadic exercises and group circles. The Authentic Relating movement, which emerged from men’s groups and personal development communities, incorporates relational mindfulness principles alongside other communication practices.

Deborah Eden Tull offers retreats, online courses, and consultations through her organization Mindful Living Revolution. Academic programs at universities increasingly include relational mindfulness in contemplative studies curricula. Organizations apply it in conflict resolution, diversity and inclusion work, and leadership development contexts.

Common Misconceptions

Relational mindfulness is not simply “being nice” or avoiding conflict. The practice involves staying present with discomfort, difference, and disagreement rather than defaulting to pleasantness or conflict avoidance. It does not guarantee pleasant feelings or harmonious outcomes; rather, it cultivates capacity to remain aware during difficulty.

It is not a communication technique or a set of conversational scripts. While it may improve communication, the emphasis is on quality of presence rather than tactical skill. Relational mindfulness is not a substitute for boundary-setting or assertiveness; presence includes the ability to say no, to end interactions, and to protect one’s well-being.

The practice is not exclusively about romantic relationships or therapy. It applies equally to interactions with colleagues, strangers, family members, and communities. It is not a new age invention disconnected from traditional practice; its foundations rest in Buddhist teachings on interdependence, compassion, and right speech, though it has been adapted for secular contexts.

Some scholars debate whether the emphasis on relational dimensions risks diluting mindfulness training or whether it represents a necessary evolution that addresses the limitations of individualistic paradigms prevalent in Western adaptations.

How to Begin

Beginners can start with basic practices. During a conversation, try bringing attention to your breath while listening, noticing when the mind wanders to planning a response. Practice one conversation per day where you commit to not interrupting and to pausing before speaking.

Deborah Eden Tull’s Relational Mindfulness: A Handbook for Deepening Our Connection with Ourselves, Each Other, and the Planet (Wisdom Publications, 2018) provides structured exercises and inquiry prompts. UCLA’s Mindful Awareness Research Center offers recorded meditations and courses that include relational practices. The British Psychological Society offers resources on mindful dialogue.

For those with an established meditation practice, consider attending a retreat or workshop that includes dyadic or group practices. The Authentic Relating network hosts events focused on relational presence. Psychotherapy with a mindfulness-informed practitioner can provide direct experience of relational mindfulness within the therapeutic relationship.

Simple daily practices include: bringing full presence to one routine interaction (morning greeting, checkout clerk, phone call); noticing the impulse to check one’s phone during conversations; experimenting with maintaining soft eye contact; and observing the felt sense in one’s body when with different people, without trying to change the experience.

Related terms

mindfulnessloving kindness meditationdeep listeningnonviolent communicationauthentic relatingmindful dialogue
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