More Benefits of Meditation

December 10, 2003  ·  Category: Buddhism, Health, Meditation, Mindfulness

Marshall Sontag writes to point out a Psychology Today article about meditation that’s worth reading if you’ve been debating whether to take up meditation.

I’ve written before about the benefits of meditation. Here are a few choice paragraphs from their article:

More new research offers additional encouragement. In a study published last year in the journal Stroke, 60 African-Americans with atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, practiced meditation for six to nine months. (African-Americans are twice as likely to die from cardiovascular disease as are whites.) The meditators showed a marked decrease in the thickness of their artery walls, while the nonmeditators actually showed an increase. The change for the meditation group could potentially bring about an 11% decrease in the risk of heart attack and an 8% to 15% decrease in the risk of stroke.

A second study, published last year in Psychosomatic Medicine, taught a randomized group of 90 cancer patients mindful meditation (another type of practice). After seven weeks, those who had meditated reported that they were significantly less depressed, anxious, angry and confused than the control group, which hadn’t practiced meditation. The meditators also had more energy and fewer heart and gastrointestinal problems than did the other group.

Other recent research has looked at precisely what happens during meditation that allows it to cause these positive physical changes. Researchers at the Maharishi School of Management in Fairfield, Iowa, found that meditation has a pervasive effect on stress. They looked at a group of people who had meditated for four months and found 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.

Diana Adile Kirschner, Ph.D., a Philadelphia-area clinical psychologist, sometimes refers her clients to learn meditation and has seen firsthand how helpful it can be. “Not only is meditation an absolutely marvelous destressor, it helps people better relate to one another,” she says. “I can tell when clients are following through with meditation. For instance, I had a couple who consistently bickered. After they started meditating, they came in less angry, more self-reflective and more loving.”

Kathy and I have experienced this together. It fascinates me, and I’m thinking of researching it for my dissertation, how mindfulness affects relationship satisfaction.

So why aren’t more people taking up the practice? “Because it puts us in the middle of ourselves, which is not always where we want to be,” suggests Thomson. “Often, we want to fix things rather than accept them the way they are. Many of us feel as though we can’t afford the time and energy to meditate, when in fact we can’t afford not to.”

Well put. We often need meditation most during times when we’re least disposed to invest the energy.

By Joshua Zader  ·  Trackback URL  ·  Link
 
One Response to “More Benefits of Meditation”
  • i quite agree with you but i do need to ask you a question , taking into consideration when do you think is the best time to meditate?

    Jan 24, 2004 at 9:04 am  ·  Permalink

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