The Benefits of
Meditation: Tips and Techniques
Meditation is healthy, safe
and affordable. In fact it’s free. The only expense you’ll
have is a meditation mat, which isn’t especially necessary-at
least from my experience. Meditation has been around for 5,000
years, and was originally a spiritual component of yoga.
Through the years non-yogis adopted it, intuitively sensing
and connecting the practice with greater peace of mind.
Personally, I can’t say enough good things about meditation.
Its use has rewarded me with less worry and much more energy.
But I’ve never been one for anecdotal evidence. Let’s get to
the science…
Transcendental Meditation
Recently, there’s an
incredible amount of science tied into the benefits of
meditation. The studies are endless and cover a variety of
meditative practices. On Transcendental Meditation
alone (mantra repetition) there are over 500 studies. Some are
more noteworthy that others. A study in the Japanese
Journal of Public Health found that through Transcendental
Meditation, industrial workers sleep improved and their
smoking decreased. Another study conducted at the MERU
Research Institute, in Buckinghamshire, England found that
the length of time practicing the Transcendental Meditation
and TM-Sidhi program correlated with younger biological age
and younger functional age.
Mindfulness Meditation
Mindfulness
meditation, which asks us to focus
on our breath to facilitate awareness of the present moment,
is another widely studied meditation technique. After studying
the effects of 8-weeks of mindfulness meditation on
participants, a 2003 report in the Journal of Psychosomatic
Medicine concluded: “A short program in mindfulness
meditation produces demonstrable effects on brain and immune
function.” Impressive, but fairly vague. To get a more
committed response to the benefits of meditation we have to
turn to Taiwan. In 2002 their journal Chang Gung Medicine
reported that “training in MM may be a medically superior and
cost-effective alternative to pain medication for the control
of headaches with no underlying organic causes in highly
motivated patients.”
Stress Reduction and
Meditation
What causes these positive
physical changes? To answer this, other research has looked at
the specifics of what happens in the body during meditation. .
Researchers at the Maharishi School of Management in
Fairfield, Iowa, found that meditation has an enormous impact
on stress reduction. When they examined a group who had
meditated for four months they saw that they produced less of
the stress hormone cortisol. They were therefore better able
to adapt to stress in their lives, no matter what their
circumstances were.
Having balanced cortisol
levels is essential to mental and emotional health. Notice I
say balanced rather than none. We don’t want to completely
eliminate cortisol. If we did we’d be dead. Even low cortisol
levels can be dangerous. Not enough cortisol is the
identifying trait of Addison’s disease. John F. Kennedy had
this condition, which he denied passionately during his
presidency. Yet during his term he regulated his levels
through hydrocortisone (synthetic cortisol). The reverse of
JFK’s condition is called Cushings Syndrome.
The five most common and
noticeable changes of this condition include; red face and
puffy cheeks; excess fat surrounding the collar bones, muscle
weakness, and hypertension. But we don’t have to have
Cushing’s Syndrome to be damaged by extra cortisol. The
changes we experience may be subtle variations of these. Plus,
the changes caused by excess cortisol are age dependent. Young
people may stop growing and teenagers can develop acne. The
mature among us aren’t safe either. Since excess cortisol
damages bone-tissue those over age 60 may develop fractures
related to osteoporosis. So it’s evident that if we can
regulate cortisol, especially through a natural process, we
owe it to ourselves to try.
Other Benefits of
Meditation
Regina Drueding, MD, is a
meditation instructor at Life Circles in Utah, USA. She quotes
the benefits of meditation as follows: “more energy, improved
quality of sleep, decreased anxiety, lessened chronological
aging, improved concentration, improved visual acuity,
increased alertness and heightened immunity.” She writes:
“Besides the benefits mentioned earlier, meditation results in
improvement of hypertension, sleep disorders, headaches,
heartrhythm disturbances, chronic pain – pain due to cancer,
infertility and irritable bowel syndrome. Following
meditation, mental and physical refreshment result – and
benefits are cumulative with regular practice.”
How to Meditate
Meditation is both simple and
complex. It’s like defining the color orange: When you see it
you know it. Similarly, the experience of meditation is best,
well…experienced. In an article in New View magazine,
Shippensburg University’s Dr. C. George Boeree describes the
basics of Buddhist meditation. In summary, the
beginner’s technique is as follows:
1. Sit or kneel comfortably.
2. The hands are loose and
open with the palms up, one atop the other and thumbs lightly
touching.
3. Head is upright. Eyes may
be closed or open. If open they should focus on your hands or
a spot nearby.
4. Beginning meditators
should count upwards to ten on each exhale. Breathe in a
relaxed and natural way. Then begin again at one and repeat.
Continue to breathe naturally.
5. Continue for 15 minutes.
In my personal experience, I
don’t find that the specific length of time is as important as
repetition and persistence. To paraphrase, 10 minutes daily
beats 15 minutes once a week. This brings me to another point:
We all have different personalities and as such, different
meditation approaches suit some more than others. Thankfully
there are many varieties of meditation. Some varieties have
sub-varieties.
Mindfulness
meditation is one of these versatile
practices. Perhaps it’s because its essence-awareness of the
present moment-is so versatile. Mindfulness in our daily life
can be practiced by slowing down and attending to our
surroundings. What are our 5 senses telling us? We can use
mindfulness in the middle of a hectic day, such as paying
attention to our breathing when stopped at a traffic light. We
can also use other everyday events as triggers for
mindfulness. Buckling your seatbelt? Make this a reminder to
return to the present. Really think about what you’re doing
and the details of the experience.
The more traditional may
benefit from a more formal mindfulness practice. You may sit
in the identical form as in traditional Buddhist meditation-
on a chair or kneeling. However, you may also sit with your
legs crossed. Your eyes are closed and your posture is both
straight and relaxed while your head remains upright. Focus on
your breath and allow mental chatter to float by without
regard. Thoughts, emotions and sensations will come, but don’t
be influenced by them. Keep focused on your breath. If you are
getting involved with your thoughts don’t worry-your efforts
aren’t destroyed. The key thing is to bring your attention
back to breathing and continue. This can go on for 5 minutes
to 5 hours. It’s up to you.
Transcendental
Meditation is another popular form
of meditation. Generally, this type is practiced twice daily
for a period of 15-20 minutes. Again, this technique involves
sitting comfortably. Yet in contrast to basic Buddhist the
eyes stay closed. Each student is given a mantra and is
instructed to induce relaxation through use of this mantra.
Since many of either can’t or won’t go to a formal TM class, a
no-fail mantra I recommend is the classic OM. In The Heart of
Yoga, T.K.V Desikachar writes that repetition of "OM" enables
us to maintain mental and emotional calmness, overcome
obstacles and enable understanding. It is the shortest of the
mantras, and is said to be suggestive of God. If you’re
uncomfortable with the religious aspects of OM I suggest a
word that has positive meaning for you, such as love, calm or
peace. Calm is an ideal substitute, since vocally it resembles
OM.
Final Word
You may never, ever choose to
meditate. Yet if this is your choice it may be valuable to
question why. For a long time I was reluctant because of
images of the dropout hippie 60’s. Yet when I tried it the
experience overcame my reservations. If you try it the same
may happen to you. If it doesn’t you haven’t lost any money,
and you’ve gained a new experience.
Galina Pembroke
Resources:
-Getting in the Gap: Making Conscious Contact with God Through
Meditation (Hay House
Inc., 2003)
-The Miracle of Mindfulness by Thich Nhat Hanh (Beacon Press,
1975)
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