Meditation has many scientifically proven benefits. Here are a few:
• Meditation has shown a 48% reduction in symptoms of depression.
• People who meditate have 47% fewer heart attacks.
• 75% of long-term insomniacs who have been trained in meditation can fall asleep within 20 minutes of going to bed.
• People who meditate show an 8% to 15% decrease in the risk of stroke.
• Sufferers of anxiety who meditate show a 60% improvement in anxiety levels after only 8 weeks of practice.
• Meditation can slow aging. A study found that people who had been meditating for more than five years were physiologically 12 to 15 years younger than non-meditators.
• The chance of getting cancer has been shown in studies to reduce by 55% in those who meditate regularly.
• Regular meditators experience a 10-20 point drop in blood pressure compared to the general population.
This tells us that meditation clearly is a self help program that works. It has a very broad impact on our bodies. The reason for this is that whether it is high blood pressure, heart attacks or cancer, the initiation and progression of illness is something that happens outside our realm of conscious living. If you actually felt your blood vessels tensing – as they do in hypertension - or your arteries narrowing – as they do before heart attacks - or your cells abnormally proliferating – as they do in cancer – then no illness would ever take it’s grip. We’d be able to stop it before it got out of control. The problem is that none of these things can be seen or felt. They creep up inside us until, often, we reach a point of catastrophe.
Where modern medicine provides treatment, it is by trying to reverse the process once it has reached a point of detection, which is often quite an advanced stage. An earlier solution, however, would be to increase our awareness of our body generally throughout our lives. By doing this, we could prevent – or at least inhibit - the build up of disease processes. It is like letting a little sunlight in, the sunlight of awareness.
When you meditate you’re not exactly aware of arteries narrowing or cells abnormally proliferating, but you become more aware of the feelings, motions and pains in your body generally and in a non-specific sense. This very experience of awareness helps keep the diverse array of systems within the body out in the open, shielding them from the darkness that enables illness to, all too commonly, lurk and even flourish.
Now that’s a self help program worth taking.
Tuesday, 13 April 2010
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