THE CRYSTAL LOTUS MEDITATION & WELLNESS CENTER
  • Home
  • Meditation
    • What is Meditation?
    • How to Meditate
    • Group Classes
    • Meditation Private Instruction & Coaching
    • Free Guided Meditations
  • Reiki & Sound Therapies
    • Reiki
    • Reiki Training
    • Lyran Light™ Sound Healing
    • Axiatonal Alignment
  • Online Courses
    • Raise Your Vibration with Crystals Course
  • Online Sessions
  • Book Now
  • Calendar
  • Amethyst BioMat
  • About Wendy
  • Contact
  • Testimonials
  • Blog
  • Articles & Research
  • Privacy Policy
The Science of Meditation
Meditation may help squash anxiety. The practice brings about dramatic effects in as little as a 10-minute session.
By Cary Barbor, published May 1, 2001 - last reviewed on June 9, 2016
​Psychology Today

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.
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.
Meditation: What is It?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."

The original source of this document can be found at: http://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/200105/the-science-meditation

​Crystal Lotus
Meditation & Wellness
10 Resolute Lane, Suite 202, Mount Pleasant, SC 29464
Disclaimer: The services, classes and workshops offered by Wendy Koreyva, Lyran Light™ Healing, Crystal Lotus™, LLC and all its visiting practitioners and teachers do not take the place of medical care.  It is highly recommended that you see a licensed physician or health care professional for any physical or psychological ailment you may have.
Copyright© 2022-2024 The Crystal Lotus™, LLC, Lyran Light​™ Sound Healing and Sansaree.com™.  All rights reserved.
  • Home
  • Meditation
    • What is Meditation?
    • How to Meditate
    • Group Classes
    • Meditation Private Instruction & Coaching
    • Free Guided Meditations
  • Reiki & Sound Therapies
    • Reiki
    • Reiki Training
    • Lyran Light™ Sound Healing
    • Axiatonal Alignment
  • Online Courses
    • Raise Your Vibration with Crystals Course
  • Online Sessions
  • Book Now
  • Calendar
  • Amethyst BioMat
  • About Wendy
  • Contact
  • Testimonials
  • Blog
  • Articles & Research
  • Privacy Policy