Thursday, August 27, 2009

Google Alert - meditation

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Meditation for troubled times
gmail.com> wrote: Meditation for troubled times: God is your healer and your strength. You do not have to ask Him to come to you. ...
alt.christnet.bible - Aug 26, 2009 by - 2 message - 2 author
Mindfulness Meditation Audiobooks - Page 2 - Katz Forums
there are four cds from series 1 the body scan, sitting meditation and two hatha yoga cds. if u can post them then i will be indebted forever despite the ...
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 4 message - 4 author
Hot Young Girl Teaches How to Do Yoga Exericse & Meditation
The Auror ... grup-seksevli-ciftler Hot Young Girl Teaches How to Do Yoga Exericse & Meditation Yoga and the Kung Fu girl opening Baba ...
grup-seksevli-ciftler - Aug 25, 2009 by - 0 message - author
Meditation & Satsang - Maharaj Ji's direct broadcast from ...
His discourse are on Spiritual topics and Meditation. Date: Sunday, August 30th 2009 Time: Meditation will start at noon (Broadcast could start anytime ...
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Hot Young Girl Teaches How to Do Yoga Exericse & Meditation
The Auror ... dat_sexy_chris_brown_4_lyfe Hot Young Girl Teaches How to Do Yoga Exericse & Meditation Yoga and the Kung Fu girl opening ...
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Ch'an Meditation form and free emanual: "Mind Surfing in the Now"
Lindsay Kliedspahr ... meditation-wellington Hello, Ch'an No Mediation Meditation: http://www.emoclear.com/nomeditationmeditation.htm ...
Meditation Wellington - Aug 25, 2009 by - 0 message - author


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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Google Alert - meditation

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Explore the world within through Meditation - Visionary Spiritual ...
The key to this world is meditation which connects you to your soul. ... Once you manage to learn this technique of meditation you can explore the world ...
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 4 message - 4 author
Hot Young Girl Teaches How to Do Yoga Exericse & Meditation
The Auror ... bollywood-mastigooglegroupscom Hot Young Girl Teaches How to Do Yoga Exericse & Meditation Yoga and the Kung Fu girl ...
bollywood-mastigooglegroupscom - Aug 25, 2009 by - 1 message - 1 author
Meditation for troubled times
Waldtraud richa...@gmail.com alt christnet bible Meditation for troubled times: God is your healer and your strength. You do not have to ask Him to come to ...
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Hot Young Girl Teaches How to Do Yoga Exericse & Meditation
The Auror ... dv0oel0m Hot Young Girl Teaches How to Do Yoga Exericse & Meditation Yoga and the Kung Fu girl opening Baba Ramdev -Yoga ...
dv0oeL0m - Aug 25, 2009 by - 0 message - author
Meditation? - The Pub - Shroomery Message Board
Anyone a whiz in meditation? What is meditation? Is it sitting their with good posture(mom was always proud)and chanting?
- Aug 25, 2009 by - 4 message - 3 author
Mantra & Focus on Breathing - Project Meditation Community Forum
I've only just started trying to meditate. I often find that my mantra is repeated in my head in sync with my breathing most of the time, and for that.
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 4 message - 4 author


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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Google Alert - meditation

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Does anyone here practice meditation? (serious) - Bodybuilding.com ...
Does anyone here practice meditation? (serious) Misc. ... I will dig up a link for you guys to look at which gives you a good meditation technique. ...
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 7 message - 4 author
Meditation for troubled times
Trudie richa...@gmail.com alt religion christian-teen Meditation for troubled times: God is your healer and your strength. You do not have to ask Him to ...
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Natural Traditional Hot Yoga Exercise Methods & Meditation
The Auror ... internet-marketing-expert Natural Traditional Hot Yoga Exercise Methods & Meditation The Barkan Method - Hot Yoga - Spine ...
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Natural Traditional Hot Yoga Exercise Methods & Meditation
The Auror ... isteri-kuat-seks Natural Traditional Hot Yoga Exercise Methods & Meditation The Barkan Method - Hot Yoga - Spine Twist ...
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Natural Traditional Hot Yoga Exercise Methods & Meditation
The Auror ... h1b_jobs Natural Traditional Hot Yoga Exercise Methods & Meditation The Barkan Method - Hot Yoga - Spine Twist Abs Yoga ...
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Natural Traditional Hot Yoga Exercise Methods & Meditation
The Auror ... daily-traders-in-india-on-stock-market Natural Traditional Hot Yoga Exercise Methods & Meditation The Barkan Method - Hot ...
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Natural Traditional Hot Yoga Exercise Methods & Meditation
The Auror ... gay-sex-club-tokyo Natural Traditional Hot Yoga Exercise Methods & Meditation The Barkan Method - Hot Yoga - Spine Twist ...
gay-sex-club-tokyo - Aug 24, 2009 by - 0 message - author
Meditation Emulation
Hello everyone I am new to these forums, posting wise, but have been avidly reading them for the past half year or so. It is certainly clear that.
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 2 message - 2 author


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Monday, August 24, 2009

Google Alert - meditation

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Meditation, Mysticism, & the Mind
I send you all Reiki and support; and I ask for the same from you! in love and devotion, Mark Date: Thu, 20 Aug 2009 22:53:27 -0700 Subject: Re: Meditation, ...
Mark Wilcox - Aug 23, 2009 by - 6 message - 2 author
Meditation what is it? Have you tried it? | Femail Boards | Mail ...
Meditation what is it? Have you tried it? You have 4000 characters left. Alert me to any new posts on this debate. ...
- Aug 23, 2009 by - 20 message - 4 author
i dont really understand meditation | RSD Nation
I really want to learn how to meditate, I hear so much amazing stuff about it pertaining to pickup and every other aspect of life. ...
- Aug 23, 2009 by - 3 message - 2 author
ELDER'S MEDITATION - Page 25
ELDER'S MEDITATION Twelve Step Recovery- AA. ... God Bag Meditation, CodieCW, Peace, Serenity and Spirituality, 0, 06-24-2006 10:10 PM ...
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 13 message - 1 author
Meditation and Awareness: My 3-part system - SAUK Discussion Board
Meditation and Awareness: My 3-part system The Recovery Room.
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 3 message - 3 author
new meditation... - Marijuana.com
i was just doing this now, its really intense. i'm like meditating to the rhythm of the music, letting it control the pace of my breath. you guys.
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 3 message - 3 author
Gnostic Practices (meditation) - Mombu the Religion Forum
Gnostic Practices (meditation) Religion. ... to gnostic practices, for example meditation and the like. Or have any of ...
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 8 message - 4 author


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Sunday, August 23, 2009

Google Alert - meditation

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Luigi cornaro. Overeating
To little or no avail) As for meditation, I practice Japanese Zen Soto meditation, ie Zazen. Simply sitting on the zafu aware of breath and body, ...
Martin Verbeke - Aug 22, 2009 by - 1 message - 1 author


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Saturday, August 22, 2009

Google Alert - meditation

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Fw: Free 7 day Life Bliss Meditation in Ekatta center, Irvine ...
6 Weeks Life Bliss Meditation 3. Please send in this new attachment, disregard the old one Thanks once again In a message dated 8/20/2009 3:12:51 pm Pacific ...
nithyaCoreOC - Aug 21, 2009 by - 0 message - author
{ada2aje} Re: Animals in Meditation
... 2009 9:27 AM To: ... Subject: {ada2aje} Re: Animals in Meditation hihi..yg monyet atas kayu tu...sure jatuh.. hihi On Fri, Aug 21, ...
ada2aje - Aug 21, 2009 by - 3 message - 3 author
Hello I am Berni G.L. - Project Meditation Community Forum
Hello My name is Bernadine, Berni for short...I am from California, but I have been in Rochester NY for about 11 years now, 9 as a single parent of a.
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 3 message - 3 author
Skills: Meditation? - RPGnet Forums
I'm finalizing my skills list and came to a skreaching halt on Meditation. Should I include it? My skills are mainly 'modern' skills with Magic skills ...
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 4 message - 4 author
What is the purpose of meditation?
What is the " purpose of meditation? " " M: We know the outer world of sensations and " actions, but of our inner world of thoughts and " feelings we know ...
talk.religion.course-miracle - Aug 21, 2009 by - 1 message - 1 author


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Friday, August 21, 2009

Happy Days: Self, Meditating


Happy Days: Self, Meditating

This Friday I’m heading up to rural Massachusetts in hopes of getting born again — again.

Six years ago, in the same locale, I attended my first and only silent meditation retreat. It was just about the most amazing experience of my life. Certainly it seemed more dramatic than my very first born-again experience — my response to a southern Baptist altar call as a child, which I wrote about in this space last month.

I came away from that week feeling I had found a new kind of happiness, deeper than the kind I’d always pursued. I also came away a better person — just ask my wife. (And neither of those things lasted — just ask my wife.)

So with the retreat approaching, I should be as eager as a kid on Christmas Eve, right? Well, no. Meditation retreats — at this place, at least — are no picnic. You don’t follow your bliss. You learn not to follow your bliss, to let your bliss follow you. And you learn this arduously. If at the end you feel like you’re leaving Shangri-La, that’s because the beginning felt like Guantanamo.

We spent 5.5 hours per day in sitting meditation, 5.5 hours per day in walking meditation. By day three I was feeling achy, far from nirvana and really, really sick of the place.

I was sick of my 5 a.m. “yogi job” (vacuuming), I was sick of the bland vegetarian food, and I wasn’t especially fond of all those Buddhists with those self-satisfied looks on their faces, walking around serenely like they knew something I didn’t know (which, it turns out, they did).

Yes, the payoff was huge. But it’s unlikely to be as big this time around. It’s famously hard to replicate the rapture of your first meditation retreat. Last time, during the first half of the week, my apparently prescient unconscious mind kept filling my head with that old song by Foreigner, “It feels like the first time, like it never will again.” I’ve never especially liked that song, and during those first few days it joined the list of things I hated.

What I hated above all was that I wasn’t succeeding as a meditator. Now, as the two leaders of this retreat were known to point out, you’re not supposed to think of “succeeding” at meditating. And you’re not supposed to blame yourself for failing. And blah, blah, blah.

Well, they were right: To “succeed” I really did have to quit pursuing success, and quit blaming myself for failing. And some other things had to go right.

And what was “success” like? Well, to start at the less spiritual, more sensual end: By the time I left, eating the food I’d initially disdained ranked up there with above-average sex. I’m not exaggerating by much. When I first got there, I didn’t understand why some people were closing their eyes while eating. By the end of the retreat, I was closing mine. The better to focus on the source of my ecstasy. I wasn’t just living in the moment — I was luxuriating in it.

Also, my view of weeds changed. There’s a kind of weed that I had spent years killing, sometimes manually, sometimes with chemicals. On a walk one day I looked down at one of those weeds and it looked as beautiful as any other plant. Why, I wondered, had I bought into the “weed” label? Why had I so harshly judged an innocent plant?

If this sounds crazy to you, you should hear how crazy it sounds to me. I’m not the weed-hugging type, I assure you.

And as long as we’re on the subject of crazy, there was my moment of bonding with a lizard. I looked at this lizard and watched it react to local stimuli and thought: I’m in the same boat as that lizard — born without asking to be born, trying to make sense of things, and far from getting the whole picture.

I mean, sure, I know more than the lizard — like the fact that I exist and the fact that I evolved by natural selection. But my knowledge is, like the lizard’s, hemmed in by the fact that my brain is a product of evolution, designed to perform mundane tasks, to react to local stimuli, not to understand the true nature of things. And — here’s the crazy part — I kind of loved that lizard. A little bit, for a little while.

Whether I had made major moral progress by learning to empathize with a lizard, let alone a weed, is open to debate. The more important part of my expanding circle of affinity involved people — specifically, my fellow meditators.

At the beginning of the retreat, looking around the meditation hall, I had sized people up, making lots of little judgments, sometimes negative, on the basis of no good evidence. (Re: guy wearing Juilliard t-shirt and exhibiting mild symptoms of theatricality: Well, aren’t we special?) By the end of the retreat I was less inclined toward judgment, especially the harsh kind. And days after the retreat, while riding the monorail to the Newark airport I found myself doing something I never do — striking up a conversation with strangers. Nice strangers!

My various epiphanies may sound trite, like a caricature of pop-Buddhist enlightenment. And, presented in snapshot form, that’s what I’m afraid they’re destined to sound like. All I can say is that there is a bigger philosophical picture that these snapshots are part of, and that I had made some progress in apprehending it by the end of the retreat.

The “apprehension” isn’t just intellectual. This retreat was in the Vipassana tradition, which emphasizes gaining insight into the way your mind works. Vipassana has a reputation for being one of the more intellectual Buddhist traditions, but, even so, part of the idea is to gain that insight in a way that isn’t entirely intellectual. Or, at least, in a way that is sometimes hard to describe.

On Thursday night, the fifth night of the retreat, about 30 minutes into a meditation session, I had an experience that falls into that category, so I won’t try to describe it. I’ll just say that it involved seeing the structure of my mind — experiencing the structure of my mind — in a new way, and in a way that had great meaning for me. And, happily, this experience was accompanied by a stunningly powerful blast of bliss. All told, I don’t think I’ve ever had a more dramatic moment.

This retreat is coming at a good time for me. In June I published a book that I’ve been feverishly promoting. Publishing and promoting a book can bring out the non-Buddhist in a person. For example, when book reviewers make judgments about your book, you may make judgments about the reviewers — ungenerous judgments, even.

Also, you’re inclined to pursue the fruits of your activity — like book sales — rather than just experience the activity. Checking your Amazon ranking every 7 minutes would qualify as what Buddhists call “attachment.” And attachment is bad. (Oops: I just made a judgment about attachment.)

In fact, in general I’ve been living like someone who hasn’t been meditating with much regularity or dedication, who has strayed from the straight and narrow. It’s time to start anew.

At the end of my first retreat, still reeling from that Thursday-night experience, I told one of the meditation teachers about it. He nodded casually, as if the insight I’d had was one of the standard stops on the path to enlightenment — but far from the end of the path. Through truly intensive meditation, he said, the transformation of your view of your mind — and your view of your mind’s relationship to reality, and your view of reality itself — can go much deeper than I’d gone.

That would be interesting! But this week I’d settle for half as deep.


Source: http://happydays.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/19/self-meditating/

Robert Wright, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation, is the author of “The Moral Animal,” “Nonzero” and, most recently, “The Evolution of God.”



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Relax - it's good for you!


Meditation has long been lauded. Now science has shown that deep relaxation changes our bodies on a genetic level - for the better. Anastasia Stephens reports.

It's a piece of advice yogis have given for thousands of years: take a deep breath and relax. Watch the tension melt from your muscles and all your niggling worries vanish. Somehow we all know that relaxation is good for us.

Now the hard science has caught up: a comprehensive scientific study showing that deep relaxation changes our bodies on a genetic level has just been published.

What researchers at Harvard Medical School discovered is that, in long-term practitioners of relaxation methods such as yoga and meditation, far more ''disease-fighting genes'' were active, compared to those who practised no form of relaxation.

In particular, they found genes that protect from disorders such as pain, infertility, high blood pressure and even rheumatoid arthritis were switched on. The changes, say the researchers, were induced by what they call ''the relaxation effect'', a phenomenon that could be just as powerful as any medical drug but without the side effects.

''We found a range of disease-fighting genes were active in the relaxation practitioners that were not active in the control group,'' Dr Herbert Benson, associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, who led the research, says.

The good news for the control group with the less-healthy genes is that the research didn't stop there.

The experiment, which showed just how responsive genes are to behaviour, mood and environment, revealed that genes can switch on, just as easily as they switch off.

''Harvard researchers asked the control group to start practising relaxation methods every day,'' says Jake Toby, hypnotherapist at London's BodyMind Medicine Centre, who teaches clients how to induce the relaxation effect.

''After two months, their bodies began to change: the genes that help fight inflammation, kill diseased cells and protect the body from cancer all began to switch on.''

More encouraging still, the benefits of the relaxation effect were found to increase with regular practice: the more people practised relaxation methods such as meditation or deep breathing, the greater their chances of remaining free of arthritis and joint pain with stronger immunity, healthier hormone levels and lower blood pressure.

Benson believes the research is pivotal because it shows how a person's state of mind affects the body on a physical and genetic level. It might also explain why relaxation induced by meditation or repetitive mantras is considered to be a powerful remedy in traditions such as Ayurveda in India or Tibetan medicine.

But just how can relaxation have such wide-ranging and powerful effects? Research has described the negative effects of stress on the body. Linked to the release of the stress-hormones adrenalin and cortisol, stress raises the heart rate and blood pressure, weakens immunity and lowers fertility.

By contrast, the state of relaxation is linked to higher levels of feel-good chemicals such as serotonin and to the growth hormone which repairs cells and tissue. Indeed, studies show that relaxation has virtually the opposite effect, lowering heart rate, boosting immunity and enabling the body to thrive.

''On a biological level, stress is linked to fight-flight and danger,'' Dr Jane Flemming, a London GP, says. ''In survival mode, heart rate rises and blood pressure shoots up. Meanwhile muscles, preparing for danger, contract and tighten. And non-essential functions such as immunity and digestion go by the wayside.''

Relaxation, on the other hand, is a state of rest, enjoyment and physical renewal. Free of danger, muscles can relax and food can be digested. The heart can slow and blood circulation flows freely to the body's tissues, feeding it with nutrients and oxygen. This restful state is good for fertility, as the body is able to conserve the resources it needs to generate new life.



While relaxation techniques can be very different, their biological effects are essentially similar. ''When you relax, the parasympathetic nervous system switches on. That is linked to better digestion, memory and immunity, among other things,'' Toby says. ''As long as you relax deeply, you'll reap the rewards.''

But, he warns, deep relaxation isn't the sort of switching off you do relaxing with a cup of tea or lounging on the sofa.

''What you're looking for is a state of deep relaxation where tension is released from the body on a physical level and your mind completely switches off,'' he says. ''The effect won't be achieved by lounging round in an everyday way, nor can you force yourself to relax. You can only really achieve it by learning a specific technique such as self-hypnosis, guided imagery or meditation.''

The relaxation effect, however, may not be as pronounced on everyone. ''Some people are more susceptible to relaxation methods than others,'' says Joan Borysenko, director of a relaxation program for outpatients at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Centre in Boston. ''Through relaxation, we find some people experience a little improvement, others a lot. And there are a few whose lives turn around totally.''

The health benefits of deep relaxation

The next time you tune out and switch off and let yourself melt, remind yourself of all the good work the relaxation effect is doing on your body. These are just some of the scientifically proven benefits …

Immunity

Relaxation appears to boost immunity in recovering cancer patients. A study at the Ohio State University found that progressive muscular relaxation, when practised daily, reduced the risk of breast cancer recurrence. In another study at Ohio State, a month of relaxation exercises boosted natural killer cells in the elderly, giving them a greater resistance to tumours and to viruses.

Fertility

A study at the University of Western Australia found that women are more likely to conceive during periods when they are relaxed rather than stressed. A study at Trakya University, in Turkey, also found that stress reduces sperm count and motility, suggesting relaxation may also boost male fertility.

Irritable bowel syndrome

When patients suffering from irritable bowel syndrome began practising a relaxation meditation twice daily, their symptoms of bloating, diarrhoea and constipation improved significantly. The meditation was so effective the researchers at the State University of New York recommended it as an effective treatment.

Blood pressure

A study at Harvard Medical School found that meditation lowered blood pressure by making the body less responsive to stress hormones, in a similar way to blood pressure-lowering medication. Meanwhile a British Medical Journal report found that patients trained how to relax had significantly lower blood pressure.

Inflammation

Stress leads to inflammation, a state linked to heart disease, arthritis, asthma and skin conditions such as psoriasis, say researchers at Emory University in the US. Relaxation can help prevent and treat such symptoms by switching off the stress response. In this way, one study at McGill University in Canada found that meditation clinically improved the symptoms of psoriasis.

Switch off stress

How can you use relaxation's healing powers? Harvard researchers found that yoga, meditation and even repetitive prayer and mantras all induced the relaxation effect. ''The more regularly these techniques are practised, the more deeply rooted the benefits will be,'' Jake Toby says. Try one or more of these techniques for 15 minutes once or twice a day.

Body scan Starting with your head and working down to your arms and feet, notice how you feel in your body. Taking in your head and neck, simply notice if you feel tense, relaxed, calm or anxious. See how much you can spread any sensations of softness and relaxation to areas of your body that feel tense. Once your reach your feet, work back up your body.

Breath focus Sit comfortably. Tune into your breath, follow the sensation of inhaling from your nose to abdomen and out again. Let tension go with each exhalation. When you notice your mind wandering, return to your breath.

Mantra repetition The relaxation response can be evoked by sitting quietly with eyes closed for 15 minutes twice a day, and mentally repeating a simple word or sound such as ''Om''.

Guided imagery Imagine a wonderfully relaxing light or a soothing waterfall washing away tension from your body and mind. Make your image vivid, imagining texture, colour and any fragrance as the image washes over you.

The Independent

Source: The Sydney Morning Herald
http://www.watoday.com.au/lifestyle/relax--its-good-for-you-20090819-eqlo.html?page=-1



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Meditation & Naturalness


We all like to go to nature for peace, happiness, relaxation… Why does nature does have this power – it is nature’s *naturalness*! All of us like small babies - because of their naturalness. Everyone likes people who are natural. It is important to be yourself, to be natural…

Meditation can help you to be natural. Let’s see how…

Being natural means being what you are from inside. For that, you need to be connected with your inner self. And meditation can do it the best.

*The unchanging aspect of consciousness – your natural Self*

By observing that everything is changing in our world, in your lives, in society, gives you a clue that there is something, which is not changing. That non-changing aspect of your consciousness gives you enormous strength, courage and creativity.

Experiencing the non ­changing aspect deep within you:

· Makes your body energized

· Mind focused, our intellect free from inhibitions

· Memory free from traumas

· Joyful flavor to your exposition comes around. You are thus able to get in touch with the joy, which you are seeking.

Everybody’s natural tendency is to be happy, smiling, friendly, celebrating… Observe yourself, when you are doing these things - you need to not take any efforts. Being natural they do not build stress in you…


But when you are sad, angry, lonely… you are not natural - so these things bring stress to you!

Meditation connects you with your inner self. Meditation helps your mind expand. Your stress reduces. And you are able to take better decisions and live better life.

“The natural tendency of consciousness is to expand, to become bliss. Like the natural tendency of water is to flow downward, and the natural tendency of air is not to be under pressure, the natural tendency of consciousness is to expand and to be at peace.”

Source : tejal khatri


_

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Google Alert - meditation

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meditation
siva great ... apenvconnect SCIENCE OF MEDITATION PYRAMID SPIRITUAL SOCIETIES MOVEMENT There are three great laws in the science of ...
apenvconnect - Aug 20, 2009 by - 1 message - 1 author
Tuhi Tuhi Remixed & Meditation
Sony ... sikhyouthaustralia The last one: http://www. brainwaveentrainment.org/node/126 Tuhi Tuhi Rain Positivity Alpha Meditation by Sony ...
Sikh Youth Australia - Aug 20, 2009 by - 3 message - 1 author
Night owl meditation
biff blinddo...@yahoo.com alt smokers pipes Helolo all. I hope everyone had a good day. Work was tough but I still love my job. I am now relaxing with some ...
alt.smokers.pipes - Aug 20, 2009 by - 1 message - 1 author
Zen meditation to improve LSAT score
Anyone here practice Zen meditation and find that it helps with concentration when it comes to focusing for the LSAT? ...
- Aug 21, 2009 by - 3 message - 3 author
{APEC} Re: meditation
In the same token, chanting of any mantra doesn't play any role in meditation ! The mouth has to be kept shut ! Since meditation is silencing the incessant ...
apenvconnect - Aug 20, 2009 by - 3 message - 3 author
Underwater meditation?, page 1
Discusion about Underwater meditation? in the AboveTopSecret.com website alternative topics discussion forum Psychology, Philosophy and Metaphysics.
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 7 message - 5 author
Chulent.Hypnotic state of Meditation & Kavana. Concert Aug 20
Tonight's Presenter : Dr. Selwyn Mirkin Topic : Altered States :Trancendental Meditation and the Kabbalistic experience of Kavana as taught by Abulafiah To ...
Chulent - Aug 20, 2009 by - 0 message - author
{APEC} meditation
SCIENCE OF MEDITATION PYRAMID SPIRITUAL SOCIETIES MOVEMENT There are three great laws in the science of meditation : " the first law " " When we are with ...
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Meditation session today
Melissa Ellamil ... ubcmeditation Hi everyone, Today's meeting will be in *Room 2512 in the Douglas Kenny (Psychology) Building* (2136 ...
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Thursday, August 20, 2009

Google Alert - meditation

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Meditation & Naturalness
tejal khatri ... aoljabalpur Meditation & Naturalness We all like to go to nature for peace, happiness, relaxation… ...
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WUTYL-Columbus lecture on Meditation, Biochemistry, Habits, and ...
... buddhismcentralohio The "Wake Up to Your Life" meditation group of Columbus invites you to a pu= blic lecture with Buddhist ...
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: dailyom Music: Reflections: A Guided Meditation
... christianloveletters --
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How many of you did the Online Meditation by Guruji ??
All that you need to do is visit www.powerofmeditation.org and then click on the link to Experience Guided Meditation on top right on the home page Once the ...
artofliving-ttc - Aug 19, 2009 by - 0 message - author
First experience (real experience) - Project Meditation Community ...
Hi yall im matt, I recently got into meditation, few weeks ago started with holosync prologue, thought that first step was powerful and deep until I.
- Dec 31, 1969 by - 3 message - 2 author
Meditation & visualization - Opiophile.org
Meditation can certainly provide some needed relief and the best ones can even leave their bodies during meditation. ...
- Aug 19, 2009 by - 10 message - 7 author
Daily Inspiration, Scripture, Meditation and Prayer for the Day
Nadine Mansour ... cathprayers Make peace with your imperfections and concentrate on your strengths. Lord, teach me to become more aware of ...
cathprayers - Aug 19, 2009 by - 4 message - 1 author
Weekly Twin heart Meditation on Tues 18th August/ Wed 19th August ...
phgroupmeditations ... phgroupmeditations Atma Namaste, Please join us for a worldwide group meditation. Meditation on Twin Hearts 6:30pm ...
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Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Google Alert - meditation

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Sahaj meditation update
Priya, Kameshwari ... ekalavyas789 Hi Neha, You could start doing meditation with Guruji's CD . ...
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Sun Worship and Meditation...
... [Ingrid Stenquist] <http:// www.myspace.com/wildwildwoman> wrote: Monday, August 17, 2009 Sun Worship and Meditation... Is most of what I did all day. ...
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Daily Inspiration, Scripture, Meditation and Prayer for the Day
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Meditation, Mysticism, & the Mind
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Tuesday, August 18, 2009

How God (or more precisely, meditation) changes your brain


Some book titles are too good to pass up. “How God Changes Your Brain” is neuroscientist Andrew Newberg’s fourth book on “neurotheology,” the study of the relationship between faith and the brain. All are pitched at a popular audience, with snappy titles like “Born to Believe” or “Why God Won’t Go Away.” Anyone reading the latest one, though, might wonder if the title shouldn’t be “How God Meditation Changes Your Brain.” As he explains in an interview with Reuters here, the benefits that Buddhist monks and contemplative Catholic nuns derive from meditation and intense prayer are also available to atheists and agnostics. The key lies in the method these high performing believers use, not in the belief itself. But that would have made for a more awkward title.

That’s not to say Newberg doesn’t have some interesting points to make in this book. His brain scans of meditating monks and praying nuns show that the frontal lobe — the area that directs the mind’s focus — is especially active while the amygdala — the area linked to fear reactions — is calmed when they go through their spiritual experiences. His studies show these brain regions can be exercised and strengthened, like building up a muscle through training. And his treatment of a mechanic with a faltering memory showed that a traditional Indian meditation method, even when stripped of its spiritual trappings, could bring about these changes in two months.

The book goes on to ascribe a list of positive results from meditation and offer advice on caring for the brain. Newberg’s “number one best way to exercise your brain” is faith. As he puts it, “faith is equivalent with hope, optimism and the belief that a positive future awaits us. Faith can also be defined as the ability to trust our beliefs, even when we have no proof that such beliefs are accurate or true.” Critics, especially clerics, would probably protest that this is not really theology, but psychology. If we’re talking about God, where’s the religion?

That brings up another interesting aspect. While he is clearly favourable to faith and spirituality, Newberg remains a scientist eager to study the religious feelings he calls “among the most powerful and complex experiences people have.” He studiously avoids promoting any one faith or closing the door to atheists who might be reading the text. The tone is upbeat, the approach inclusive and the conclusion optimistic. There’s a touch of Eastern mysticism, too, with sections on how widely practiced meditation could foster compassion and understanding among people and peoples. Thanks to this open-minded approach towards both religion and science, Newberg teaches radiology, psychology and religious studies at the University of Pennsylvania and speaks frequently to church groups or in religious media.

Newberg gave me a few SPECT brain scan images that illustrate the changes he finds in his subjects’ brains. The image above left shows the brain of a Buddhist monk before and during meditation. The increased yellow in the lower right of the right-hand image shows reduced activity in the parietal lobe, the brain area responsible for orientation in space and time. Below right, the image shows a nun before and during prayer, with increased activity in the frontal lobe, the area for concentration and analytical thinking, and in areas linked to language.

Newberg, a cheerful and optimistic man who was brought up in a Reform Jewish family and says he is still exploring his own beliefs, told me his next book will be an academic work on neurotheology. He stresses that the field is in its infancy and its brain scanning methods are still “incredibly crude. We really don’t know which neurons are firing in that little three-millimeter space” captured in fMRI scans. “If we can ultimately say something epistemologically interesting, then that’s great,” he told me. “But it’s going to take me a long time before I get to saying something like that.”

What do you think about “neurotheology”? Do you think brain scans and neuroscience can tell us anything significant about religion?


Source:
Posted by: Tom Heneghan
http://blogs.reuters.com/faithworld/2009/08/17/how-god-or-more-precisely-meditation-changes-your-brain/


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Faith rites boost brains, even for atheists: book


PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - Buddhist monks and Catholic nuns boost their brain power through meditation and prayer, but even atheists can enjoy the mental benefits that believers derive from faith, according to a popular neuroscience author.

The key, Andrew Newberg argues in his new book "How God Changes Your Brain," lies in the concentrating and calming effects that meditation or intense prayer have inside our heads.

Brain scanners show that intense meditation alters our gray matter, strengthening regions that focus the mind and foster compassion while calming those linked to fear and anger.

Whether the meditator believes in the supernatural or is an atheist repeating a mantra, he says, the outcome can be the same - a growth in the compassion that virtually every religion teaches and a decline in negative feelings and emotions.

"In essence, when you think about the really big questions in life -- be they religious, scientific or psychological -- your brain is going to grow," says Newberg, head of the Center for Spirituality and the Mind at the University of Pennsylvania.

"It doesn't matter if you're a Christian or a Jew, a Muslim or a Hindu, or an agnostic or an atheist," he writes in the book written with Mark Robert Waldman, a therapist at the Center.

NEUROTHEOLOGY

In his office at the University of Pennsylvania's hospital, Newberg told Reuters that "neurotheology" - the study of the brain's role in religious belief - is starting to shed light on what happens in believers' heads when they contemplate God.

Science and religion are often seen as opposites, to the point where some in each camp openly reject the other, but this medical doctor and professor of radiology, psychology and religious studies sees no reason not to study them together.

"The two most powerful forces in all of human history have been religion and science," he said. "These are the two things that help us organize our world and understand it. Why not try to bring them together to address each other and ultimately our world in a more effective way?"

Atheists often see scanner images tracking blood flows in brains of meditating monks and nuns lost in prayer as proof that faith is an illusion. Newberg warns against simple conclusions:

"If you see a brain scan of a nun who's perceiving God's presence in a room, all it tells you is what was happening in her brain when she perceived God's presence in a room.

"It may be just the brain doing it, but it may be the brain being the receiver of spiritual phenomena," said Newberg, whose research shows the short prayers most believers say leave little trace on the brain because they are not as intense as meditation.

"I'm not trying to say religion is bad or it's not real," he added. "I say people are religious and let's try to understand how it affects them."

NO "GOD SPOT"

Another notion Newberg debunks is the idea there is a single "God spot" in the brain responsible for religious belief: "It's not like there's a little spiritual spot that lights up every time somebody thinks of God."

Instead, religious experiences fire neurons in several different parts of the brain, just like other events do. Locating them does not explain them, but gives pointers to how these phenomena occur and what they might mean.

In their book, Newberg and Waldman sketch out some of the "God circuits" in the brain and their effects, especially if trained through meditation as muscles are through exercise.

Meditation both activates the frontal lobe, which "creates and integrates all of your ideas about God," and calms down the amygdala, the emotional region that can create images of an authoritative deity and fog our logical thinking.

The parietal-frontal circuit gives us a sense of the space around us and our place in it. Meditation suppresses this sense, giving rise to a serene feeling of unity with God or the world.

"Even 10 to 15 minutes of meditation appear to have significantly positive effects on cognition, relaxation and psychological health," the authors declare in the book.

Newberg, who grew up in a Reform Jewish family and has studied many religions, said his work might help both believers and atheists understand religious feelings, which he said were "among the most powerful and complex experiences people have."

But he cautioned against expecting "neurotheology" to come up with surprising insights soon: "As good as our techniques are, they are still incredibly crude. We have a long way to go."

By Tom Heneghan, Religion Editor
(Editing by Paul Casciato)
Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews/idUSTRE57G3LN20090817?sp=true

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PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) – Buddhist monks and Catholic nuns boost their brain power through meditation and prayer, but even atheists can enjoy the mental ...
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Monday, August 17, 2009

Want to increase your Brain Size? Meditation May Increase Gray Matter!


Meditation May Increase Gray Matter

ScienceDaily (May 13, 2009) — Push-ups, crunches, gyms, personal trainers — people have many strategies for building bigger muscles and stronger bones. But what can one do to build a bigger brain?

Meditate.

That's the finding from a group of researchers at UCLA who used high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to scan the brains of people who meditate. In a study published in the journal NeuroImage and currently available online (by subscription), the researchers report that certain regions in the brains of long-term meditators were larger than in a similar control group.

Specifically, meditators showed significantly larger volumes of the hippocampus and areas within the orbito-frontal cortex, the thalamus and the inferior temporal gyrus — all regions known for regulating emotions.

"We know that people who consistently meditate have a singular ability to cultivate positive emotions, retain emotional stability and engage in mindful behavior," said Eileen Luders, lead author and a postdoctoral research fellow at the UCLA Laboratory of Neuro Imaging. "The observed differences in brain anatomy might give us a clue why meditators have these exceptional abilities."

Research has confirmed the beneficial aspects of meditation. In addition to having better focus and control over their emotions, many people who meditate regularly have reduced levels of stress and bolstered immune systems. But less is known about the link between meditation and brain structure.

In the study, Luders and her colleagues examined 44 people — 22 control subjects and 22 who had practiced various forms of meditation, including Zazen, Samatha and Vipassana, among others. The amount of time they had practiced ranged from five to 46 years, with an average of 24 years.

More than half of all the meditators said that deep concentration was an essential part of their practice, and most meditated between 10 and 90 minutes every day.
The researchers used a high-resolution, three-dimensional form of MRI and two different approaches to measure differences in brain structure. One approach automatically divides the brain into several regions of interest, allowing researchers to compare the size of certain brain structures. The other segments the brain into different tissue types, allowing researchers to compare the amount of gray matter within specific regions of the brain.

The researchers found significantly larger cerebral measurements in meditators compared with controls, including larger volumes of the right hippocampus and increased gray matter in the right orbito-frontal cortex, the right thalamus and the left inferior temporal lobe. There were no regions where controls had significantly larger volumes or more gray matter than meditators.

Because these areas of the brain are closely linked to emotion, Luders said, "these might be the neuronal underpinnings that give meditators' the outstanding ability to regulate their emotions and allow for well-adjusted responses to whatever life throws their way."

What's not known, she said, and will require further study, are what the specific correlates are on a microscopic level — that is, whether it's an increased number of neurons, the larger size of the neurons or a particular "wiring" pattern meditators may develop that other people don't.

Because this was not a longitudinal study — which would have tracked meditators from the time they began meditating onward — it's possible that the meditators already had more regional gray matter and volume in specific areas; that may have attracted them to meditation in the first place, Luders said.

However, she also noted that numerous previous studies have pointed to the brain's remarkable plasticity and how environmental enrichment has been shown to change brain structure.

Other authors of the study included Arthur Toga, director of UCLA Laboratory of Neuro Imaging; Natasha Lepore of UCLA; and Christian Gaser of the University of Jena in Germany. Funding for the study was provided by the National Institutes of Health. The authors report no conflicts of interest.


Source :

Adapted from materials provided by University of California - Los Angeles (2009, May 13). Meditation May Increase Gray Matter. ScienceDaily. Retrieved August 18, 2009, from http://www.sciencedaily.com /releases/2009/05/090512134655.htm

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Sunday, August 16, 2009

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Saturday, August 15, 2009

Stress resiliancy - moving meditation as a way to control stress


Stress resiliancy - moving meditation as a way to control stress

Stress is a response to actual or perceived danger. It is a series of hormonal and chemical responses intended to get us moving and create memories that will help us make quick decisions about dangerous situations in the future. When the danger is real, this response is protective. When the danger is perceived, especially for long periods as in an economic recession threatening your job, the response is not beneficial. It is the response to perceived danger that we want to control or at least significantly lessen.

Meditation is usually thought of as something we do in the quiet of our home or in a special secluded place. It is mainly perceived to be an altered state of consciousness that takes years of practice to become proficient. This may in part be true but because of resistance to trying meditation few people from Western countries take advantage of the principles of meditation.

While meditation can be a spiritual practice, it can also be an effective tool for stress reduction. I want to introduce you to 3 practices that can help you to reduce your level of stress and improve your health.

The first thing I want you to learn is a breathing practice. This one thing can be the most effective at immediately reducing muscle tension and stopping a stress response. It should be done throughout the day. This is done by stopping what you are doing, so you need to be able to take a break initially. I focused on something that helped me breathe in deep and blow out long. I imagined feathers floating into my face, like snow flakes, falling down and tickling and itching my face. If I just take a deep breath and blow it all out three times I can keep them off of my face. Stop and try this one now. Take a deep breath from your abdomen. As you breathe in your abdomen protrudes out. When you contract the abdominal muscles slowly and steadily, you blow the air out of your lungs. Do this three consecutive times.

The second practice is drinking water. Simply drink some water from a bottle just before you do the breathing practice. Your mind will associate taking a drink of water with relaxation. Even if you can not stop physically or mentally you will relax more and be better able to send the relaxation message to all parts of your body more quickly if you are well hydrated.

The third thing is a more vigorous movement that you may find helpful first thing in the morning and right after work to help you let go and relax. This one takes 7 minutes the way I will explain it. You need some music that you like for the last 3 minutes. First, shake you head, arms and legs. It can be gentle or vigorous. Imagine that the stress is something you have on you that you want off NOW! Shake it off. Use a timer and do this for 1-2 minutes. After your shaking time is over, stand perfectly still and breathe into your abdomen slowly and blow out through your mouth but don't move. Stand still and breathe. After one or two minutes of stillness, put on the music (just what you like - fast or slow) and dance. Don't think, don't analyze, just dance for 3 straight minutes. You can do 60's free style, any thing that makes you feel good but no dance moves. Just freely dance. Dance away from stress, away from fear, away from fatigue. After three minutes, drink some water, take a couple of deep breathes and get on with living.

Source :
Bruce Bair
Raleigh Disease Prevention Examiner
http://www.examiner.com/x-15564-Raleigh-Disease-Prevention-Examiner~y2009m8d14-Stress-resiliancy--moving-meditation-as-a-way-to-control-stress

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