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Showing posts with label mindfulness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mindfulness. Show all posts

Transcendental Meditation, Mindfulness, and Vipassana

Mindfulness meditation, often associated with Vipassana, is generally considered to be a practice of "open monitoring" — watching thoughts, perceptions or sensations come and go without judging or holding on, practiced to gain insight and equanimity.

However, there are various forms of mindfulness meditation and Vipassana, practiced in different ways. Some practices referred to as ‘mindfulness’
Posted on 12:02 PM / 0 comments / Read More

What Doctors and Scientists Say About Transcendental Meditation Research:


"If TM were a new drug conferring this many benefits, it would be the biggest, multi-billion-dollar block-buster drug on the market."
—Norman E. Rosenthal, MD, Bestselling author and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Georgetown University School of Medicine, 20-year Senior Researcher at the National Institutes of Health

"If you're on medication for cholesterol, we hope you can get 30
Posted on 11:25 AM / 0 comments / Read More

Myth #2: Meditation and relaxation practices are all the same and produce the same effects

The scientific literature on meditation shows that not all meditation practices produce the same effects. Different types of meditation practices engage the mind in different ways and employ a variety of methods for different results. 

For example, numerous independent scientific studies have found consistent distinctions between the Transcendental Meditation technique and other practices on
Posted on 4:58 AM / 0 comments / Read More

Three categories of meditation techniques


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Posted on 1:57 PM / 0 comments / Read More

But it's so hard to clear my mind of thoughts!

You don't have to clear your mind of thoughts to successfully practice the Transcendental Meditation technique. There's no mind control involved, no concentrating against thoughts or anything else. The TM technique is a different kind of practice all together. It's simple, effortless, and totally natural.
It's not just sitting and watching your thoughts, either. Nor is it a process of
Posted on 5:50 PM / 0 comments / Read More

Aren’t all forms of meditation 'transcendental?'

If by transcendental one means a practice that systematically takes attention beyond the surface, active levels of the mind to finer and deeper levels until the faintest impulse of thought is left behind and what remains is pure awareness—the state of restful alertness—then no, all forms of meditation are not designed or intended for this specific meditative process.

The variety of meditation
Posted on 11:42 AM / 0 comments / Read More

How is Transcendental Meditation different from mindfulness?

Mindfulness meditation, often associated with Vipassana, is generally considered to be a practice of "open monitoring" — watching thoughts, perceptions or sensations come and go without judging or holding on, practiced to gain insight and equanimity.

However, there are various forms of mindfulness meditation and Vipassana, practiced in different ways. Some practices referred to as ‘mindfulness’
Posted on 11:19 AM / 0 comments / Read More

Natural Antidepressant to Boost Your Spirits

Antidepressants have become the most commonly prescribed drugs in the United States. It's time to take a more serious look at natural alternatives, like meditation. A recent report on the Huffington Post lists mindfullness meditation as a natural treatment for depression. Interestingly, the research referred to from a BBC article on mindfulness and depression, states that mindfulness is "recommended for people who are not currently depressed, but who have had three or more bouts of depression in their lives." The researcher also emphasized that this particular study is not conclusive.

People who are suffering from real depression may be interested to know that there is a body of comprehensive, controlled research on another well-known practice, Transcendental Meditation, demonstrating its positive effects on anxiety, depression and mental health.

Mindfulness has been found to produce some good benefits, even though it engages awareness on the surface level of the mind, actively watching and sustaining conscious attention. The TM technique is another approach all together. It allows the mind to transcend mental activity, including depressing thoughts, worry and anxiety. Experiencing the field of transcendental bliss, expansion and peace--the state of pure awareness beyond the field of thought--is the opposite of depression. This state has a unique style of physiology, characterized by very deep rest and more integrated and harmonious brain functioning.

The peer-reviewed research on TM's effects for alleviating depression can be found at Pub Med or at http://www.tm.org/benefits-depression-adult#q02
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost
Posted on 7:28 PM / 0 comments / Read More

Transcendental Meditation and the path to enlightenment

In the recent article on the Huffington Post, " Bringing the benefits of meditation into daily life", the author encourages readers to engage in a "meditation" while in activity and prescribes contriving behavior and controlling thoughts as a practice for gaining enlightenment. My comments were posted as follows:

The qualities described in this article as a practice, such as observation of one's self while acting (detachment), attentiveness to the present moment (mindfulness), lack of expectation (surrender), are 'attributes' of a heightened state of consciousness, not the 'path' to it. I have found in my 35 years of teaching Transcendental Meditation that students easily transcend during the TM technique and reach the source of thought, their minds get energized with bliss and pure consciousness. Afterwards, their awareness can naturally focus more powerfully, and in a spontaneous way, without conscious intention to be mindful or attentive.

Trying to be detached or watchful of our thoughts while in the midst of action divides and weakens the mind and creates artificiality in behavior. Unfortunately, the goal of many great traditions of enlightenment has been mistaken for the path, leaving well-intentioned seekers trying to create a state of steadiness though contrivance. Enlightenment is cultivated through deep, effortless meditation that infuses pure consciousness into our daily activity.
Posted on 3:28 PM / 0 comments / Read More
 
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