Meditation may help squash anxiety. The practice brings
about dramatic effects in as little as a 10-minute session.
In the highlands of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, people look at life differently. Upon entering the local Buddhist monastery, there is a spectacular sculpture the size of a large oak.
The intricate carving of clouds and patterns
are painted in powerful colors. But as soon as winter gives way, this
magnificent work will melt to nothing. The sculpture, in fact, is made of
butter, and it is one of the highland people's symbols of the transient nature
of life.In the highlands of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, people look at life differently. Upon entering the local Buddhist monastery, there is a spectacular sculpture the size of a large oak.
And life here is not easy. Villagers bicycle to work before
dawn and return home long after sunset. Many live with nothing more than dirt
floors and rickety outhouses. Upon entering these modest mud-brick homes,
you'll find no tables or chairs—just a long platform bed, which sleeps a family
of eight. However, when the people invite you in for tea, their smiles are wide
and welcoming. How do they possess such inner calm in conditions we would call
less than ideal?
When villagers cook, sew or plow the fields, they do so in a tranquil state. As an approach to life, weaving meditation seamlessly into almost every action throughout the day seems unfamiliar to Western cultures. Is there something we can glean from this way of life that will improve our own? The romantic notion of quitting everything and joining Tibetan monks on a mountaintop is not the only way to meditate. You don't need to quit your job, give up your possessions and spend 30 years chanting. Recent research indicates that meditating brings about dramatic effects in as little as a 10-minute session. Several studies have demonstrated that subjects who meditated for a short time showed increased alpha waves (the relaxed brain waves) and decreased anxiety and depression.
To explore exactly what part of the brain meditation acts
on, researchers at Harvard Medical School used MRI technology on participants
to monitor brain activity while they meditated. They found that it activates
the sections of the brain in charge of the autonomic nervous system, which
governs the functions in our bodies that we can't control, such as digestion
and blood pressure. These are also the functions that are often compromised by
stress. It makes sense, then, that modulating these functions would help to
ward off stress-related conditions such as heart disease, digestive problems
and infertility.
Aside from determining its physiological effects, defining
the actual act of meditation can be as elusive as imagining the sound of one
hand clapping. In his book, "What is Meditation?" (Shambhala
Publications, 1999), Rob Nairn talks about it as a state of "bare
attention." He explains, "It is a highly alert and skillful state of
mind because it requires one to remain psychologically present and 'with'
whatever happens in and around one without adding to or subtracting from it in
any way."
The physical act of meditation generally consists of simply
sitting quietly, focusing on one's breath, a word or phrase. However, a
meditator may also be walking or standing. It isn't unusual, in fact, to see a
meditating monk in the highlands walking a few steps and then lying prostrate
over and over again until he reaches his destination many miles away.
There are many traditions and countless ways to practice
meditation, and perhaps because of its polymorphous nature new meditators
wonder whether they are doing it correctly. According to Roger Thomson, Ph.D.,
a psychologist in private practice in Chicago and a Zen meditator, there is one
way to know for sure: "If you're feeling better at the end, you are probably
doing it right."
Thomson makes it sound easy, but many people can't seem to
get the hang of it, no matter how often they try. "It can be
difficult," says Steven Hendlin, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist in Irvine,
California. "It may be a struggle to overcome the internal chatter that we
all experience."
Seeking methods for quieting that internal chatter and
reducing stress are what initially attract many people to meditation. "It
is a very effective stress-reducer, which is a way into the practice for many
people," says Thomson, who sometimes refers clients to meditation.
"If someone is struggling with feelings of anxiety, he or she may benefit
from its calming aspects. And it's absolutely facilitative of mental health
because it brings about a higher level of self-acceptance and insight about
oneself."
But greater awareness about oneself can be a double-edged
sword. Mark Epstein, M.D., a New York City psychiatrist in private practice and
a meditation practitioner, extends a caution about one of the ironies of
meditating. "It could actually raise your level of anxiety if there are
certain feelings you are not owning." In other words, there's nowhere to
hide when you're practicing "bare attention." And this, for some
people, is both the good and the bad news.
That's why some experts suggest marrying meditation to
psychotherapy. "Both allow the person to be present for the moment, open
and nondefensive," says Thomson, who explores the complementary nature of
the two in a paper published in the American Journal of Psychotherapy. "In
both meditation and psychotherapy, we are trying not to get caught up in
internal preoccupation, but to be intimately present with what is happening
here and now."
To explain his thoughts on the connection, Thomson compares Zen
to relational psychoanalytical theories. He writes that it "encourages its
practitioners to become aware of the fundamentally distorted aspects of an
overly individualistic view of human experience. Recognizing that the true
nature of all individuals is emphatically non-individual, neither lasting nor
separate, is the wisdom of Zen."
Silence and Science
Certainly anything that helps us fight stress is a welcome
tool. But what else might meditation be doing for us? Since researchers like
Herbert Benson, M.D. began amassing data, many studies have shown that indeed
meditation has not only a mental but a profound physiological effect on the
body. Studies have shown that, among other benefits, meditation can help
reverse heart disease, the number-one killer in the U.S. It can reduce pain and
enhance the body's immune system, enabling it to better fight disease.
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 percent decrease in the risk of heart attack and an 8 percent to 15 percent
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."
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."
Epstein and several other experts feel that meditation's
effectiveness has to do with putting aside attachment to one's ego. As he says,
"When you look directly at a star at night, it's difficult to see. But
when you look away slightly, it comes into focus. I find it to be the same way
with the ego and meditating. When one zeroes in on a sense of self through a
practice of meditation, the self-important ego paradoxically becomes elusive.
You become more aware that you are interconnected with other beings, and you
can better put your own worries into their proper perspective."
A group of elderly Chinese maintain their connection by meeting
every daybreak in the village common in Monterey Park, California. They swoop
their arms and stretch their torsos in graceful harmony, and then stand
absolutely still, simply meditating. Only puffs of warm air flow from their
nostrils. All of them look vibrant and relatively young, when in fact they are
well into their years.
While western scientists are still exploring exactly how and
why meditation works, we already know that it has both physiological and
psychological benefits. And many therapists consider it a valid complement to
more traditional therapies. So perhaps we should simply take Thomson's
advice—and the Tibetans' lead—and do what makes us feel better in the end.
This Article Via: psychologytoday