David Masters
Meditation improves the immune system, reduces blood pressure, and even sharpens the mind, according to research.
The practice of meditation has entered the mainstream as people try to find ways to combat stress and improve their quality of life.
Now new research suggests that mindfulness meditation can have benefits for health and performance, including improved immune function, reduced blood pressure, and enhanced cognitive function.
The study, published in the latest issue of the journal Perspectives on Psychological Science, draws on existing scientific literature to attempt to explain the positive effects.
The goal of this work, according to author Britta Hazel, of Justus Liebig University and Harvard Medical School, is to "unveil the conceptual and mechanistic complexity of mindfulness, providing the big picture by arranging many findings like the pieces of a mosaic."
The authors specifically identify four key components of "mindfulness" - the state of meditation - that may account for its effects: attention regulation, body awareness, emotion regulation, and sense of self.
Together, these help us deal with the results of stress. Dr. Hazel said the components are closely intertwined, so an improvement in attention regulation, for example, may improve our awareness of our physiological state.
"This difference...creates a chemistry that will alter the way your mind and soul deal with life."
Body awareness, in turn, helps us to recognize the emotions we are experiencing.
She said, "Understanding the relationships between these components, and the brain mechanisms that underlie them, will allow clinicians to better tailor mindfulness interventions for their patients."
However, the framework underscores the point that mindfulness is not a vague cure-all. Active mindfulness meditation requires training and practice, and it has distinct measurable effects on our subjective experiences, our behavior, and our brain function.
Dr. Hazel said: "We hope that further research on this topic will enable a much broader spectrum of individuals to utilize mindfulness meditation as a versatile tool to facilitate change both in psychotherapy and in everyday life."
Meditation is vital to your health, to your future happiness – and to your very existence.
Back in the nineteen fifties Roy Masters discovered that a simple exercise that evolved from his work at the Institute of Hypnosis could cause amazing results in some of his patients.
Working with a variety of people with psychological addictions and emotional fixations, he standardized his technique and reduced it to a recording by the early sixties.
He described it as a meditation although he discouraged any attempt at controlling your exercise. This is contrary to all the other methods of meditation or mindfulness that have been practiced throughout the world.
This difference, he has maintained for his whole lifetime, creates a chemistry that will alter the way your mind and soul deal with life.
Link to Telegraph UK Perspectives on Psychological Science Article