No danger at all
"You have no idea about all the people out there that have a
biological cause of brain inflammation that meditation won't be enough to help
with. Depression is a biological state of brain inflammation."
There is no proof to support that statement. You also neglect the fact
that meditation can and does reverse depression, anxiety, and a host of other
things.
I've practiced meditation for more than 30 years, an hour or more per
day. I've eliminated clinical depression, PTSD from both childhood,
combat, and another disaster, and found a much richer and rewarding life in the
process. There is no study or advice anywhere that meditation causes
depression.
There are many, many forms of meditation. I use a type where you are in
a normal sitting position with feet flat on the floor and activate my earth
energies, chakras, and kundalini. I don't practice either TM or yoga
meditation. Get in touch with yourself as the spiritual entity that you
are, and you can achieve a lot, including curing depression, bipolar, and
everyday tensions and "problems." (There is no such thing as a
problem, only a perception of a problem.)
http://blogs.psychcentral.com/bipolar/2011/04/mindfulness-bipolar-disorder-de...
Rewiring Your Brain through Mindfulness
If brain chemistry can affect thoughts and behaviors, can thoughts and
behaviors affect brain chemistry and perhaps even rewire the brain?
Yes.
An accumulating body of evidence supports the notion that non-medical
interventions – especially mindfulness – can create changes in the
body and brain that help reduce distress and improve brain function in a variety
of ways.
- Mindfulness
- A mental state of heightened awareness, free of distraction, and more
conducive to deliberate thought and action.
Some of the most interesting projects have explored the use of mindfulness
practices to reduce stress and depression and improve attention. Several
fascinating studies have explored the minds of “experts” in meditation – a
form of mindfulness – and clearly show they have strong neuro-circuitry in
areas of emotional regulation and feelings of compassion.
A recent study in the journal Neuroimage entitled “Impact of
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Training on Intrinsic Brain Connectivity”
(Kilpatrick et al., 2011 Feb 17) involved a group of healthy women who were
trained for eight weeks in mindfulness meditation skills compared to a group
that did not participate in the training. Functional MRI studies at the end of
the eight weeks showed “increased functional connectivity” between various
areas of the brain in the women who studied mindfulness. The training changed
the brain in ways thought to relate to how the brain pays attention and how it
processes sensory information.
Some studies have examined the effects of cognitive behavioral therapy
(CBT) on obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) that have similarly suggested brain
changes that occur in response to therapy and are related to improving symptoms.
Our feelings and behaviors are the results of complex and constantly evolving
interactions of our genetic patterns and the environment acting on those
patterns. The environment includes all things that affect us – physical and
social/emotional stresses are all part of the story. What we need to keep in
mind is that the environmental effects on our systems are just as
“biological” as any medication or surgical procedure, and they may affect
the brain in positive ways as well as negative.
Nurture is nature; our biological makeup evolves as we interact with the
world around us. So the work of helping ourselves feel better involves looking
at all the possible ways of creating beneficial changes in the nervous system
– from medicine to food to exercise to light to various types of therapies and
practices such as mindfulness and beyond.
Come back on Thursday to read guest blogger Shamash Alidina’s post,
“Using Mindfulness for Bipolar Disorder.” Shamash Alidina is author of Mindfulness
For Dummies.”
If you’ve had any sort of mindfulness training, please share your
experiences and insights.
Also on Psych Central, ”How to Be Mindful and Have More Positivity,” by
Joe Wilner.
http://www.nbcnewyork.com/blogs/go-healthy-ny/Transcendental-Meditation-TM-No...
If Stressed, Try Meditating: Psychiatrist
If you’re stressed, meditate, says a world-renowned
psychiatrist.
“Your nervous system is constantly being assaulted all day
long -- stresses from within, from other people, obstacles occur. When you
meditate regularly, you don’t get bent out of shape so easily,” says Dr.
Norman Rosenthal, a clinical professor of psychiatry at Georgetown Medical.
"Often times when we snap at people, we’re under
stress,” he says.
This can be especially true for those living in large cities
like New York City.
“Getting to work, getting to the bus, the deadlines that
you have to make, and the hours that you have to work – these are constant
stresses stressing us and if we don’t have a quiet place to go and a special
technique that enables us to settle down our bodies and our minds, then we
don’t have protection against the frequent batterings to our nervous system
– that have consequences,” Rosenthal says.
The technique that the former 20-year National Institute of
Mental Health senior researcher recommends is transcendental meditation, which
uses a mantra taught in a specific, effortless way.
But "any meditation is better than none," he says......