Meditating can have an almost instant effect on reducing stress, researchers have found.
They say three consecutive days of 25 minute sessions can have a dramatic effect.
Researchers
studied 'mindful meditation' - a technique developed in the 1970s,
which is even available online via websites such as calm.com
Meditating can have an almost instant effect on
reducing stress, researchers have found - and say it could take just
three days of 25 minute sessions before you feel better
WHAT IS MINDFUL MEDITATION?
Inspired by ancient Buddhist meditation, mindfulness courses were developed in the late 1970s by US doctors to combat stress.
The guiding principle is to live more ‘in the moment’, spending less time going over past stresses and worrying about future problems.
Techniques include moving the focus of attention around the body and observing sensations that arise – the so-called ‘body scan’.
A secular practice, it is said to help people recognise and overcome negative thoughts while noticing small pleasures.
The guiding principle is to live more ‘in the moment’, spending less time going over past stresses and worrying about future problems.
Techniques include moving the focus of attention around the body and observing sensations that arise – the so-called ‘body scan’.
A secular practice, it is said to help people recognise and overcome negative thoughts while noticing small pleasures.
'More and
more people report using meditation practices for stress reduction, but
we know very little about how much you need to do for stress reduction
and health benefits,' said lead author J. David Creswell, associate
professor of psychology in the Dietrich College of Humanities and Social
Sciences.
For
the study, Creswell and his research team had 66 healthy individuals
aged 18-30 years old participate in a three-day experiment.
Some
participants went through a brief mindfulness meditation training
program; for 25 minutes for three consecutive days, the individuals were
given breathing exercises to help them monitor their breath and pay
attention to their present moment experiences.
Published
in the journal 'Psychoneuroendocrinology,' the study investigates how
mindfulness meditation affects people's ability to be resilient under
stress.
Inspired by ancient Buddhist meditation, mindfulness courses were developed in the late 1970s by US doctors to combat stress.
A
second group of participants completed a matched three-day cognitive
training program in which they were asked to critically analyze poetry
in an effort to enhance problem-solving skills.
Following
the final training activity, all participants were asked to complete
stressful speech and math tasks in front of stern-faced evaluators.
Each
individual reported their stress levels in response to stressful speech
and math performance stress tasks, and provided saliva samples for
measurement of cortisol, commonly referred to as the stress hormone.
The
participants who received the brief mindfulness meditation training
reported reduced stress perceptions to the speech and math tasks,
indicating that the mindfulness meditation fostered psychological stress
resilience.
More interestingly, on the biological side, the mindfulness meditation participants showed greater cortisol reactivity.
Websites such as calm.com can even guide people through mindful meditation sessions from their desk
'When
you initially learn mindfulness mediation practices, you have to
cognitively work at it — especially during a stressful task,' said
Creswell.
'And,
these active cognitive efforts may result in the task feeling less
stressful, but they may also have physiological costs with higher
cortisol production."
Creswell's
group is now testing the possibility that mindfulness can become more
automatic and easy to use with long-term mindfulness meditation
training, which may result in reduced cortisol reactivity.
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