How Mindfulness Meditation Can Calm You Down

Pay close attention to each feeling, and let it be

By Deborah Kotz

Posted: June 5, 2008

Let's say you slam into the back of a car that cuts you off or your boss moves your deadline up a week. How do you react? Perhaps your pulse quickens as you berate yourself for not foreseeing the circumstance. Maybe your breathing shortens as you feel anger or panic—or both. Most people, though, don't notice such details; they react with an "Aargh!" and distract themselves with a run or a beer or a gallon of ice cream.

But researchers say one of the best ways of soothing stress is to be "mindful," to pause and actually tune in to what's going on at the moment. Being acutely aware of what you're experiencing—the racing heart, the tumbling thoughts—and accepting it without judgment, observing as it changes, has a strong calming effect, experts say. "You might have a thought like 'I'm a failure,' but you know that it's just a thought," explains researcher Elissa Epel, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of California-San Francisco School of Medicine. That will prevent you from turning those thoughts into a self-fulfilling prophecy by, say, quitting the gym or a challenging job.

Wandering thoughts. How do you get to a mindful state in the midst of a panic? Most people need to practice a form of meditation that focuses on their breathing and sensations in each body part. If your mind wanders (and it will), you just acknowledge the errant thoughts, let them go, and bring your attention back to the breath. Check out a mindfulness tape at mindfulnesstapes.com, or take a free virtual-mindfulness class on YouTube with Jon Kabat-Zinn, a professor of medicine emeritus at the University of Massachusetts and author of several books on mindfulness. "You are training your mind to be less reactive and more stable," he writes in Full Catastrophe Living. A 2007 study found that mindfulness classes gave students an improved sense of well-being—and that practicing the technique for about 30 minutes a day helped induce a mindful response when people would normally feel stress.

The practice may also help alleviate some of the physiological damage caused by chronic stress, like the tendency to store fat around abdominal organs. Epel and her colleagues are currently studying whether 50 overweight women who describe themselves as "stress eaters" can curb food cravings by practicing mindfulness—by noticing a raisin's color, texture, and smell, say, before eating it. If stress reduction practices lower cortisol levels, the body's storage of fat should shift from the abdomen to the hips and thighs, where it won't cause insulin resistance, Epel speculates. A bonus: It might get easier to stop at one Oreo.

But we aren't dogs or cats ....

The big problem for me when people tell me to look at dogs and cats and copy them is that I am not a dog or cat, I am a human being. I think and feel in ways that animals don't and can't. I feel emotions that animals can't, I have memories and imagination. I have insights into how I feel and how other people feel. A dog doesn't let bad experiences interfere with surviving in any conscious way - they don't make a decision to behave like that, they don't have that capability - they just do what they do. Some people live long and contented lives for a myriad of reasons not only because they are too busy living to have regrets etc. I'm sorry but life just isn't that simple.

Jane @ Jan 08, 2010 05:13:54 AM

depression

Being in England and reading an artical called;

"Increasing Your Creative Ability 400%"

"Learn More in less Time" "By Doing Nothing"

A small leaflet on 'Mindfulness'

The leaflet and the above comments relate to depression, but,

I have not read any causes, problems or remidies on 'Situations that cause depressions'

My Wife and I have worked together all our working life (now being 71 respectively) We have had several Business's, none being completely successful, and I have to say now, not for the want of trying.

Our last venture started in 1988 by us selling our property to purchase a large shop (newsagents,fancy goods,stationary etc)

in a lovely Seaside Town, a short distance from the Sea, Having no pension, this gave us the opportunity to provide for our later years, although we were already Fifty Years of age,

We didn't mind the Hours 4AM to 7PM or the fact that it was

7 days a Week, 52 Weeks a Years - because of the NEWSPAPERS.

We managed this for 10 Years, untill the Local Council rerouted

our main road via another system causing us to lose our passing trade, at that time heavy advertising from the Holiday Brochures promoting Sun-Sea-Sand in Spain, caused People to go Abroad for their Holidays. At the same time our Country went into a 'DEPPRESSION'.

Not taking enough money to cover our loan committment, the BANK

recalled the loan (forclosed) forcing us into Bankruptcy in 1997

We lost everything including our investment (house money) savings,We walked away with our suitcases into rented accommodation.

As a Man we can stand a certain amount of loss and adjustment, but my Wife did not deserve such a disasterous outcome.

I alone carry this burden, for convincing her to support me in my business ventures.

The year is now 2009 and I see no release from my responsibility

and suffer heavely from guilt, because I have no time left to make amends. My Wife (God Bless Her) holds me no grudge and we

try to make the best of what we have, but doctors pills and reading books has not released me from this depression.

BECAUSE; There is no time left to make amends.

Terry Maidlow @ Nov 19, 2009 12:16:01 PM

Legalize........

....it. You know, it. Yea I said it. That and a combination of St. John's wort and meditation is the perfect cocktail to relieve what ails you. In your face big pharma!

Suzette of CA @ Mar 05, 2009 12:44:14 PM

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