
Just Say
Scientists study
it. Doctors recommend it. Millions of Americans-- many of whom don't even own
crystals--practice it every day. Why? Because meditation works
Time
By Joel Stein; Reported by
David Bjerklie, Alice Park and David Van; Biema/
The one thought I
cannot purge, the one that keeps coming back and
getting between me and my bliss, is this: What a waste of time. I am sitting
cross-legged on a purple cushion with my eyes closed in a yoga studio with 40
people, most of them attractive women in workout outfits, and it is
accomplishment enough that I am not thinking about them. Or
giggling. I have concentrated on the sounds outside and then on my breath
and then, supposedly, just on the present reality of my physical state--a
physical state concerned increasingly with the lack of blood in my right foot.
But I let that pass, and then I let my thoughts of the hot women go, and then
the future and the past, and then my worries about how best to write this
article and, for just a few moments, I hit it. It looks like infinite blackness,
feels like a separation from my body and seems like the moment right before you
fall asleep, only I'm completely awake. It is kind of nice.
And then,
immediately, I have this epiphany: I could be watching television.
After 20 minutes we
stop for a break, which surprises me, since I would not have guessed that
sitting on a cushion is an activity that requires a break. Before we begin
again, our instructor, Sharon Salzberg, a cofounder of
the Insight Meditation Society in
But as pitiably
muggable as these people may appear, the latest
science says they've got something on my judgmental self. For one thing, they
will probably outlive me by quite a few years. Not only do studies show that
meditation is boosting their immune system, but brain scans suggest that it may
be rewiring their brains to reduce stress. Meanwhile, we nonbelievers are
becoming the minority. Ten million American adults now say they practice some
form of meditation regularly, twice as many as a decade ago. Meditation classes
today are being filled by mainstream Americans who don't own crystals, don't
subscribe to New Age magazines and don't even reside in
And they no longer
have to go off to some bearded guru in the woods to do it. In fact, it's
becoming increasingly hard to avoid meditation. It's offered in schools,
hospitals, law firms, government buildings, corporate offices and prisons. There
are specially marked meditation rooms in airports alongside the prayer chapels
and Internet kiosks. Meditation was the subject of a course at
But the current
interest is as much medical as it is cultural. Meditation is being recommended
by more and more physicians as a way to prevent, slow or at least control the
pain of chronic diseases like heart conditions, AIDS, cancer and infertility. It
is also being used to restore balance in the face of such psychiatric
disturbances as depression, hyperactivity and attention-deficit disorder (ADD).
In a confluence of Eastern mysticism and Western science, doctors are embracing
meditation not because they think it's hip or cool but because scientific
studies are beginning to show that it works, particularly for stress-related
conditions. "For 30 years meditation research has told us that it works
beautifully as an antidote to stress," says Daniel Goleman, author of Destructive Emotions, a conversation
among the Dalai Lama and a group of neuroscientists. "But what's exciting about
the new research is how meditation can train the mind and reshape the brain."
Tests using the most sophisticated imaging techniques suggest that it can
actually reset the brain, changing the point at which a traffic jam, for
instance, sets the blood boiling. Plus, compared with surgery, sitting on a
cushion is really cheap.
As meditation is
demystified and mainstreamed, the methods have become more streamlined. There's
less incense burning today, but there remains a nugget of Buddhist philosophy:
the belief that by sitting in silence for 10 minutes to 40 minutes a day and
actively concentrating on a breath or a word or an image, you can train yourself
to focus on the present over the past and the future, transcending reality by
fully accepting it. In its most modern, Americanized
forms, it has dropped the creepy mantra bit that has you memorize a secret
phrase or syllable; instead you focus on a sound or on your breathing. It's a
practice of repetition found somewhere in the history of most religions. There
are dozens of flavors, from the Relaxation Response to gtum-mo, a technique practiced by Tibetan monks in
eight-hour sessions that allows them to drive their core body temperature high
enough to overcome earthly defilements or--even cooler--to dry wet sheets on
their backs in the freezing temperatures of the
The brain, like the
body, also undergoes subtle changes during deep meditation. The first scientific
studies, in the '60s and '70s, basically proved that meditators are really, really focused. In
In 1967 Dr. Herbert
Benson, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, afraid of looking too
flaky, waited until late at night to sneak 36 transcendental meditators into his lab to measure their heart rate, blood
pressure, skin temperature and rectal temperature. He found that when they
meditated, they used 17% less oxygen, lowered their heart rates by three beats a
minute and increased their theta brain waves--the ones that appear right before
sleep--without slipping into the brain-wave pattern of actual sleep. In his
1970s best seller, The Relaxation Response, Benson, who founded the Mind/Body
Medical Institute, argued that meditators counteracted
the stress-induced fight-or-flight response and achieved a calmer, happier
state. "All I've done," says Benson, "is put a biological explanation on
techniques that people have been utilizing for thousands of years."
Several years
later, Dr. Gregg Jacobs, a professor of psychiatry at
Studies of the
meditating brain got much more sophisticated after brain imaging was discovered.
Or maybe not. In 1997
At the
Studies on
meditation moved into the modern era in March 2000, when the Dalai Lama met with
Western-trained psychologists and neuroscientists in Dharamsala, India, and urged the Mind and Life Institute to
organize studies of highly accomplished meditation masters using the most
advanced imaging technology, the results of which will be discussed in September
at a conference at M.I.T. (which will also plan the next stages of research).
Not only did these studies allow for a more detailed understanding of how the
brain works during meditation, but they also provided a lot of cool shots of
monks wearing electrodes.
What scientists are
discovering through these studies is that with enough practice, the neurons in
the brain will adapt themselves to direct activity in that frontal,
concentration- oriented area of the brain. It's what samurais and kamikaze
pilots are trained to do and what Phil Jackson preaches: to learn to be totally
aware of the moment. "Meditation is like gasoline," says Robert Thurman,
director of the Tibet House (and father of actress Uma
Thurman). "In
Increasingly it is
being detached from Buddhism. Along with the more obscure Zen techniques (such
as sitting for hours in positions that look painful to me and asking to be hit
with sticks if you feel you are about to doze off), Americans are trying Vipassana (which begins by focusing on your breath), walking
meditation (at first walking really, really slowly and then being hyperaware of
each step), Transcendental Meditation (or TM, repeating a Sanskrit syllable over
and over), Dzogchen (cultivating a clear but even-
keeled awareness) and even trance dance (spinning with a blindfold on for an
hour to dance music). And early next year a new book, Eight Minutes That Will
Change Your Life, by Victor Davich, will advocate the
most American form of meditation yet: a daily practice that he claims takes just
eight minutes. That, it turns out, is exactly how long we're conditioned by
modern society to concentrate, since it's the amount of time between TV
commercials.
Josh Baran, author of the upcoming book 365 Nirvana Here and Now,
says when his brain wanders in a distinctly unfocused, nonmeditative way--that deal when you've flipped five pages
of a book and read nothing--it actually causes him discomfort. Roger Walsh, a
professor of psychiatry, philosophy and anthropology at the
Psychologists are
trying to discover whether meditation can reprogram minds with an antisocial
bent. A study at the Kings County North Rehabilitation Facility, a jail near
Contentment and
inner peace are nice, but think how many Americans would start meditating if you
could convince them they would live longer without having to jog or eat broccoli
rabe. More than a decade ago, Dr. Dean Ornish argued that meditation, along with yoga and dieting,
reversed the buildup of plaque in coronary arteries. Last April, at a meeting of
the American Urological Association, he announced his most recent findings that
meditation may slow prostate cancer. While his results were interesting, it's
important to note that those patients were also dieting and doing yoga. Jon
Kabat-Zinn, who studied Buddhism in the '60s and
founded the Stress Reduction Clinic at the
Lately Kabat-Zinn has been studying a group of patients with
psoriasis, an incurable skin disease that is often treated by asking patients to
go to a hospital, put goggles on and stand naked in a hot, loud ultraviolet
light box. Apparently, many people find this stressful. So Kabat-Zinn randomly picked half the patients and taught them
to meditate in order to reduce their stress levels in the light box. In two
experiments, the meditators' skin cleared up at four
times the rate of the nonmeditators. In another study,
conducted with
Meanwhile, the
evidence from meditation researchers continues to mount. One study, for example,
shows that women who meditate and use guided imagery have higher levels of the
immune cells known to combat tumors in the breast. This comes after many studies
have established that meditation can significantly reduce blood pressure. Given
that 60% of doctor visits are the result of stress- related conditions, this
isn't surprising. Nor is it surprising that meditation can sometimes be used to
replace Viagra.
But meditation does
more than reduce stress, bring harmony and increase focus. As the Beatles
demonstrated in 1968 when they visited the Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi in his Himalayan ashram (they had met him in
Goldie Hawn, who
says she has been practicing for 31 years, has a dedicated meditation room in
her house filled with her favorite crystals, flowers, incense and pictures of
the Dalai Lama and Mother Teresa. She meditates twice a day for at least 30
minutes. "How do you learn to witness your destructive emotions?" she asks. "You
can only do this by being able to sit quietly and quiet your mind."
More recent
devotees are decisively noncrystal. Eileen Harrington,
who runs the hard-boiled consumer-fraud group of the Federal Trade Commission in
Though I don't meditate as religiously, I
can see Gore's point.
Taking time out of our video-and Wi-Fi-drenched lives
to rediscover the present is a worthwhile activity. And I felt a tangible
difference when, in my postmeditative buzz, I would
walk down the street hyperaware of my surroundings, like some not particularly
useful superhero power. I could even get myself to not need to go to the
bathroom if I concentrated on my bladder and accepted its fullness, though I'm
not really sure this is a health benefit. But if I weren't one of the few people
I know who need to be more active and less chill--I could use an anger-training
class--I would meditate more. And if I ever find myself faced with trauma or
disease, I think I'll pursue meditation. That's what Buddhists meant it for,
after all, since they believe that life inevitably entails suffering. My only
counterargument is that they came up with that suffering idea before television
was invented. -- Reported by David Bjerklie, Alice
Park and David Van Biema/
How to Meditate
You can teach
yourself in a matter of minutes by following a
few simple steps
1
FIND
If it helps, turn
out the lights. The fewer distractions you
have, the easier it will be to concentrate
2
CLOSE YOUR EYES
The idea is to shut
out the outside world so your brain can stop
actively processing information coming from the
senses
3
PICK A WORD, ANY WORD
Find a word or
phrase that means something to you, whose sound or
rhythm is soothing when repeated
4
SAY IT AGAIN AND AGAIN
Try saying your
word or phrase to yourself with every outbreath.
The monotony will
help you focus
Through The Ages
Meditation, nearly
as old as humanity, has always been part of
Eastern religions. Now the West is rediscovering its own
meditative past
PREHISTORY
Shamanistic Tradition
No one knows
precisely when meditation began, but experts think
it could well have been practiced by
hunter-gatherers many
thousands of years ago. Like other mystical
practices, it might
have been reserved for tribal shamans, who were
believed to be in
direct touch with the invisible world of spirits.
2000-3000 B.C.
Vedic Tradition
Meditation is
described in ancient Hindu texts; it has been a
part of Hinduism and its many offshoots ever
since.
588 B.C.
Buddha
After meditating
under a banyan tree, Prince Siddhartha Guatama
achieved enlightenment; Buddhism in all its many
forms would be
the ultimate result.
2ND CENTURY A.D.
Christian Meditation
A group of early
Christian monks known as the Desert Fathers
retreated from the world to live in simplicity. They
used
meditation to get closer to God--and for more than
1,000 years
afterward, meditation would be an increasingly
important part of
Christian practice.
CIRCA 1000 A.D.
Cabalistic (Jewish) Meditation
Its practitioners
believe that the Jewish mystical tradition of
Cabalism is
ancient, but it was codified in
1,000 years ago.
Meditation was one way Cabalists would try to
commune with God.
1000
Muslim Meditation
At about the same
time that some Jews were embracing mysticism,
certain Muslims were doing the same. The Muslim
sect known as
Sufis (after the
plain wool garments, called suf, that they wore)
incorporated meditation into their rituals of worship.
EARLY 1500S
Martin Luther
He didn't approve
of mysticism and preferred a plain reading of
Scripture to any kind of
incantation. In response
to the
Reformation he
inspired, the Roman Catholic church suppressed the
influence of monks who taught meditation.
1550
St. Theresa
Even as Luther's
influence was spreading, this Spanish Carmelite
nun championed meditation and other mystical
practices, in a last
gasp of Christian meditation for centuries to
come.
1967
Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi
Promoting his own
brand of meditation, this guru won the Beatles
as converts and began a resurgence of
meditation in the Western
world that still flourishes
today.
Copyright © 2003 Bell & Howell
Information and Learning Company. All rights reserved.