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Study Suggests Zen Meditation Can Ease a Turbulent Mind

posted by akornfeld | 5:33pm Tuesday October 7, 2008

Zen Buddhist meditation may help treat depression, attention deficit disorder and anxiety, among other maladies, according to a recent study by Emory University neuroscientists.
Mental illness such as obsessive-compulsive disorder and depression are characterized in part by “excessive rumination” or runaway thoughts, said Giuseppe Pagnoni, a neuroscientist at Emory in Atlanta.
Zen meditators show an enhanced ability to control their mind’s focus, and disentangle it from distracting or harmful preoccupations, Pagnoni argues. His paper, “Thinking about Not-Thinking: Neural Correlates of Conceptual Processing during Zen Meditation,” was published by the online journal PLoS ONE in September.
Unlike other forms of meditation — for example, imagining yourself on a tropical beach — Zen discourages mental vacations and “prescribes a vigilant attitude” toward one’s present surroundings, as Pagnoni says.
By focusing on the here and now, practitioners are less likely to get carried away, according to Buddhist teaching.
Using brain imaging scans, the Emory study compared 12 people with no meditation experience with a dozen who had practiced Zen meditation daily for at least three years. Pagnoni and his team monitored brain activity as the subjects were asked to distinguish between words or nonsensical jumbles of letters that periodically flashed on a screen before them. After the letters disappeared, the subjects were asked to focus on their breath — a common Zen meditation practice — as quickly as possible.
The brain scans showed that Zen meditators were able to stop their minds from wandering and return to focusing on their breathing much quicker than the non-meditators, according to Pagnoni.
“The regular practice of meditation may enhance the capacity to limit the influence of distracting thoughts,” Pagnoni told the online journal LiveScience.com.
Scientific interest in the therapeutic effects of Buddhist meditation has exploded in recent years, especially with the development of cutting-edge machines that can map neural activity.
The National Institutes of Health is financing more than 50 studies testing meditation, or “mindfulness techniques,” according to published reports. Studies suggest daily meditation can alleviate symptoms from hypertension, depression and stress as well as help the immune system fight off disease, according to psychotherapists.
In the last 30 years, Buddhist ideas and techniques have permeated every branch of psychotherapy, said Dr. Mark Epstein, author of “Psychotherapy without the Self: A Buddhist Perspective.”
While meditation is useful in many ways, Epstein said, he rarely assigns it to patients in his New York City practice.
“The more entrenched the condition is — like severe OCD or major depression, the less helpful meditation will be,” Epstein said. “We should not talk about meditation as a panacea for all that stuff because it’s just setting people up for disappointment.”
Still, Epstein said clinical work like Pagnoni’s on the effect of meditation is important.
“It’s been very useful to have it documented in a material way,”
Epstein said, “because that’s what people believe in our culture.”
By Daniel Burke
Religion News Service
Copyright 2008 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission.



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Comments read comments(6)
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sinsonte

posted October 7, 2008 at 6:24 pm


Cannabis can help you to “think about not thinking” and it’s a lot easier on the knees than a full lotus position…. so I’ve been told.



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pagansister

posted October 7, 2008 at 7:03 pm


Whatever works to make folks better. And if this works better than drugs for some people, is good.



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jestrfyl

posted October 8, 2008 at 12:22 am


ANY form of intentional breathing can help focus a person’s thoughts and clarify their mind. It does not have to be from any one particular discipline. Playing a musical instrument or singing, exercise (that does not involve a score), or any sort of meditation – including prayer can do this. I learned to do it long ago as an asthmatic. I taught a few techniques to teens in order to help them with their standardized test prep – and the ones who took it seriously enough to really try say it truly help. I prefer singing and laughing – sometimes both at once – and playing my tuba. But focused breathing seems to be the trick.



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meditator

posted October 8, 2008 at 12:38 pm


interesting stuff… another great article about it here: http://www.miller-mccune.com/article/704



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VICTORBIGISLAND

posted October 12, 2008 at 3:48 pm


YOU ARE ABSOLUTLY RIGHT ABOUT THE USAGE OF MOTHER NATURES GIFT!!
BOTH ZEN N POT GO VERY WELL IN THE SAME MIND!!
LOVE THATS IT!!



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Raven

posted October 17, 2008 at 11:07 am


Mmmmhmmm… Mother Nature, She is Beautiful.
“Concentrate on Shiva, with the sleepy eyes,
As though he had just partaken of the Sacred Flower
of the Ganga Plant.”
—Mahanirvantantra



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