Techniques for Stress Reduction
Meditation And Enlightenment
August 28, 2012
For thousands of years meditation has
been known to benefit human beings in many ways. Meditation and deep
breathing can still the mind, relax the body, help one focus the mind
when making important decisions, and open one for an encounter with
the Divine, whatever one might consider the Divine. Lately,
scientific study has provided us with the evidence to support these
very ancient understandings about meditation. Research has shown
that meditation and deep breathing actually do relieve stress, lower
blood pressure, and causes a physical reaction to take place in the
pre-frontal lobe of the brain so that one becomes more responsible
and proactive in their responses to stimuli, instead of reactive. In
other words, one learns to choose his or her reactions wisely,
instead of just acting out.
In our world today, which is full of
stress, and where many of our models for appropriate behavior on
television act out first, instead of acting responsibly, and
constantly bend the rules to the point of breaking, there is a
greater need for meditation. Much of the internal meditation has
been done away with in various western traditions, and replaced with
external forms of prayer that don't really get down deep into what is
happening to the inner self. This is slowly changing as the public
learns about the methods of the monastic movements who dedicated
their lives to contemplation and meditation.
As a result of these changes there are
thousands of books, videos, and CDs telling us all how to meditation
and what we should expect when we meditate. This is something that
really isn't new. The speed at which they are created and
distributed, however, is new. It is very important because of this,
to take all of them with a grain of salt, understanding that
different people react differently to various meditation techniques,
and that your path on the road to enlightenment and growth is just
that, your path.
My suggestion is that you find the type
of meditation that suits you best. It can be counting, or watching
your breath, observing the thoughts as they arise and letting them
go, imagining the circulation of energy until you can feel it
actually moving in and out of your body, and many other techniques.
The one thing that ties all of them together is creating awareness.
It is necessary to become aware of what is going on inside and all
around you. When one becomes aware from moment to moment, living in
the moment fully, and making the necessary choices in one's life for
that very moment, one has arrived. One becomes a master of his or
her own fate and the creator of his or her life.
If you are interesting in meditating, I
would suggest that you find a method that suits you. The next thing
is to meditate. It is to do it. Meditation is a practice. One can
learn all that one can about meditation, but there is no benefit
until one does it over and over again and attains the results for
which he or she is looking. These results can vary from stress
reduction to peace of mind, or from focusing the mind intently to
reaching a full state of merger with the Divine. The correct
technique is to just do it. It is to just be there. When one is
there fully, and completely present on ones seat or meditation
cushion for the time they are meditating, that is enough. It is all
about awareness. As awareness increases one can use whatever method
one likes and it will all end up being the same. The major goal is
to attain the awareness and the capability to live in the present.
Om Prakash (John Gilmore) is a writer,
spiritual life coach, and licensed bodyworker in the state of PA.
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