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Re: Can ornithine help with anxiety?
 
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Published: 11 y
 
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Re: Can ornithine help with anxiety?


Just plain old daily meditation will rewire your brain and reduce anxiety.  I personally devote a minimum of an hour a day to meditation and have done so for more than thirty years.  I would truly be dead without meditation.

That said - one has to take control of what they put in their mouths too.  Alcohol is a known depressant and excess caffiene will produce a great deal of anxiety.  Learn to live "in the moment" and accept things as they are instead of how you think they should be.

At the end of the day, I can end up just totally wacky, because I've made mountains out of molehills. With meditation, I can keep them as molehills.  - Ringo Starr

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/08/meditation-beats-anxiety-brain-regio...

Meditation Beats Anxiety By Activating Certain Brain Regions, Study Finds

Posted:

Mindfulness meditation -- nonjudgmental awareness of thoughts and emotions -- is known for its anxiety-busting powers, and now scientists are getting a better understanding of why it has this impact in the brain.

Researchers from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center found that meditation has effects on activity of particular brain regions, namely the anterior cingulate cortex -- which controls thinking and emotions -- and the ventromedial prefrontal cortex -- which controls worrying. Meditation seems to increase activity in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, and decrease activity in the anterior cingulate cortex.

"Mindfulness is premised on sustaining attention in the present moment and controlling the way we react to daily thoughts and feelings," study researcher Fadel Zeidan, Ph.D., a postdoctoral research fellow in neurobiology and anatomy at the medical center, said in a statement. "Interestingly, the present findings reveal that the brain regions associated with meditation-related anxiety relief are remarkably consistent with the principles of being mindful."

The study, published in the journal Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, included 15 people who had normal levels of everyday anxiety (with no history of anxiety disorders) and who had never meditated before. The participants underwent brain scans to track their brain activity at the start of the study, and also had their anxiety levels measured, before taking classes to learn how to do mindfulness meditation.

After the training -- which consisted of four 20-minute classes -- researchers measured the participants' anxiety levels again, and also had them undergo brain scans again.

Researchers found that anxiety levels decreased by up to 39 percent after the mindfulness meditation training, and that those decreases in anxiety seemed to be linked with the activation and deactivation of particular brain regions.

"These findings provide evidence that mindfulness meditation attenuates anxiety through mechanisms involved in the regulation of self-referential thought processes," the researchers wrote in the study.

 

 

 
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