Meditation is a consciousness-changing set of techniques intended to encourage a heightened state of awareness and focused attention.

These techniques have been shown to have a wide range of benefits.

BENEFITS OF MEDITATIVE PRACTICE

Meditation is a practice that can be done daily in the comfort of your own home and brought into your daily life. It can support other therapies, both psychological therapies or therapies aiming to resolve trauma, and therapies aimed at bringing resolution of physical symptoms.

STRESS

Health problems often have several underlying drivers, stress in particular being a trigger in chronic physical conditions such as heart disease, diabetes, obesity and metabolic syndrome, Alzheimer’s disease, osteoporosis, autoimmune disease and poor immune function.

Since meditation can reduce stress, there are benefits which can help in many chronic physical conditions including:

  • Insomnia
  • Chronic pain
  • Fibromyalgia
  • Irritable Bowel Syndrome
  • Prevention of heart disease
  • Chronic inflammation
  • Prevention of acute respiratory infections such as the common cold
  • High blood pressure
  • Inflammatory Bowel Disease
  • Psoriasis
  • Addiction

There is also strong research indicating that meditation benefits depression and anxiety.

MEDITATION – WHAT GOES ON IN YOUR BRAIN?

An extract taken from a scholarly article by Tom Sokolowski* examines awareness from a neurological perspective and as it applies to the practice of meditation aiming to enhance the many promises that it embodies.

“Meditative therapies may enhance not only the creation of new neuronal networks but also stimulate the corresponding creation of new dimensions of awareness, both quantitative and qualitative.

Neuronal circuitry is activated in meditation, yet, one other network is needed to make this happen, and wilfulness is this essential ingredient. Gentle sustained wilfulness activates neuronal circuitry, which is highly developed in humans and mainly resides in the brain’s frontal lobes and its connections. The partnership and synergism linking these two networks form the crux of meditation’s contribution to awareness expansion.

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN MEDITATION IS CONSISTENTLY PRACTISED?

In light of the discovery showing the capacity of neuronal generation, is it possible to incite awareness’ neuronal networks to expand its brain demographics? Can the voluntary arousal of awareness, as in meditation, increase the neurone population, the sum total of its connectivity and therefore the energetic output of awareness neurons?

Research shows that meditation can indeed alter the morphology of selected brain components.

WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS?

Can mental mechanisms engage awareness networks, stimulate neuronal connectivity, or even neurogenesis?(the process by which new neurons are formed in the brain).What happens to the experiencing of awareness when its physical components are transformed through meditation?

The term meditation therapies implies that techniques in meditation have the capacity to redress disharmonies of wellbeing. Indeed, this is so. Numerous studies have reported on meditation’s therapeutic actions in a spectrum of psychological conditions. Meditation therapies also show beneficial influence on the body’s functioning. Of particular interest are meditative studies of cardiac reactivity, the tendency of the cardiovascular system to become nefariously activated in response to stress. This type of research is, in essence, symbolic of the calming effects of meditation on autonomic nervous system networks. Meditation therapies address dysphoric symptomatology. (A person with dysphoria often experiences profound uneasiness and dissatisfaction with life, followed by depression, anxiety and agitation).

Symptoms relative to anxiety, in the anxiety/apprehension/fear/worry spectrum, are the first to be mollified. The meditator is often surprised that formerly gripping anxieties gradually dispel and that new vistas of relaxation are revealed. Learnt experientially is that relaxation has many subjective layers. Seemingly limitless in their reach. Also assuaged by meditation therapies is the irritability/anger/aggression spectrum. Angers can be dissolved with consistent meditation as are the unfortunate sequelae that derive from them. New landscapes of peacefulness are opened. Also bolstered by meditation is the self-esteem/self-image/self-confidence dimension. Distressing feelings that connect to this dimension have to do with the mind’s tendency to compare self with others. Feelings of inadequacy give way to new perceptions of personal centredness and social equipoise.

Especially pertinent to meditation therapies is their capacity to highlight the immediacy of life. The empathy/sensitivity/love spectrum is involved. Meditators find themselves with new capabilities to capture the intensity of interpersonal contact, to resonate with others emotionally and project expressions of goodwill, friendship, and love. In the context of meditation there often begins an awakening to the fact that awareness of one’s awareness is a reckoning of the existence of fundamental life energy, and with it, a revelation that this energy and conceptually, spirit – is not only always positive but also profoundly immutable. Revelations often feature the fact that awareness nature is ever more fundamental than awareness content. Meditation therapies invite the development of dimensions of the psyche that correspond to higher, if not the highest of personal aspirations. They open portals to experiencing states of mind that ordinarily surpass us, belonging to the domains of the ‘over self’.

CONCLUSION ABOUT CONSTANT MEDITATION

Techniques that develop heightened awareness between mind and body can easily complement contemporary psychotherapies. In fact, to be maximally effective, psychotherapies need to be integrated into the body’s networks. Meditation is a generic term for a variety of techniques that centre on the activation of awareness. Sustained priming of awareness independently leads positive personal transformations, in the psychological, the psychosomatic, and the transcendent dimension of being.

Research has shown that consistent meditation correlates with action and measurable physical modifications in the nervous system. In turn, awareness tends to shift towards relaxation, psychological harmony, organ balance, and importantly, towards states of experiencing that, like a staircase ascending, invite novel realisations of the self.”

* Tom Sokolowski is a specialist in gut complaints, cognitive function, psychological health and neurodegenerative conditions, cardiometabolic health, autoimmune disease, chronic fatigue, toxicity and fertility.

 

Claudia, your BioMed Health Care Professional, as part of her newly developed Fatigue Recovery Formula, has created  a module on mindfulness which offers a wide range of meditation techniques. Please follow the LINK

 

 

 

 

 

 

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