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7 Fascinating Facts About Meditation

The Huffington Post     First Posted: 07/15/2011 9:25 am EDT   Updated: 01/07/2013 3:02 pm EST

Over the last decade, interest in the science of meditation has skyrocketed. We now know more than ever before about just how meditation affects our minds and bodies. Increased research has led to a plethora of fascinating discoveries: Take, for instance, the fact that meditation can prevent heart disease. Or that it reduces stress. Or that it can significantly lessen ADHD symptoms, and in many cases, beats medication.

Still, much is left to be discovered. We know more but we definitely don't know everything. While we wait for science to catch up with ancient wisdom, check out this slideshow on the complex effects of the simple act of focused breathing.

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  • It Makes Your Brain Plastic

    Quite literally, sustained meditation leads to something called neuroplasticity, which is defined as the brain's ability to change, structurally and functionally, on the basis of environmental input. For much of the last century, scientists believed that the brain essentially stopped changing after adulthood. But research by University of Wisconsin neuroscientist Richard Davidson <a href="http://brainimaging.waisman.wisc.edu/publications/2008/DavidsonBuddhaIEEE.pdf" target="_hplink">has shown that experienced meditators exhibit high levels of gamma wave activity</a> and display an ability -- continuing after the meditation session has attended -- to not get stuck on a particular stimulus. That is, they're automatically able to control their thoughts and reactiveness.

  • It Increases Gray Matter

    A 2005 study on American men and women who meditated a mere 40 minutes a day <a href="http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1147167-2,00.html" target="_hplink">showed that they had thicker cortical walls than non-meditators</a>. What this meant is that their brains were aging at a slower rate. Cortical thickness is also associated with decision making, attention and memory.

  • It Can Be Better Than Sleeping

    In a 2006 study, college students were asked to either sleep, meditate or watch TV. They were then tested on their alertness by being asked to hit a button every time a light flashed on a screen. The meditators <a href="http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1147167-2,00.html" target="_hplink">did better than the nappers and TV watchers</a> -- by a whole 10 percent.

  • It's Better Than Blood Pressure Medication

    In 2008, Dr. Randy Zusman, a doctor at the Massachusetts General Hospital, asked patients suffering from high blood pressure to try a meditation-based relaxation program for three months. These were patients whose blood pressure had not been controlled with medication. After meditating regularly for three months, <a href="http://www.npr.org/2008/08/21/93796200/to-lower-blood-pressure-open-up-and-say-om" target="_hplink">40 of the 60 patients showed significant drops in blood pressure levels</a> and were able to reduce some of their medication. The reason? Relaxation results in the formation of nitric oxide which opens up your blood vessels.

  • It Can Protect Your Telomeres

    Telomeres -- the protective caps at the end of our chromosomes -- are the new frontier of anti-aging science. Longer telomeres mean that you're also likely to live longer. Research done by the University of California, Davis' Shamatha Project <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2011/apr/24/meditation-ageing-shamatha-project" target="_hplink">has shown that meditators have significantly higher telomerase activity that non-meditators</a>. Telomerase is the enzyme that helps build telomeres, and greater telomerase activity can possibly translate into stronger and longer telomeres .

  • It Can Slow The Progression Of HIV

    A 2008 study on HIV positive patients found that, after an eight-week meditation course, patients <a href="http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/07/080724215644.htm" target="_hplink">who'd meditated showed no decline in lymphocyte content</a> compared with non-meditators who showed significant reduction in lymphocytes. Lymphocytes or white blood cells are the "brain" of the body's immune system, and are particularly important for HIV positive people. The study also found that lymphocyte levels actually went up with each meditation session. However, due to the small sample size -- only 48 volunteers -- it's harder to draw definitive conclusions.

  • Its Pain Relieving Properties Beat MorphIne

    Earlier this year, a study conducted by Wake Forest Baptist University found that <a href="http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-04-demystifying-meditation-brain-imaging.html" target="_hplink">meditation could reduce pain intensity by 40 percent and pain unpleasantness by 57 percent</a>. Morphine and other pain-relieving drugs typically show a pain reduction of 25 percent. Meditation works by reducing activity in the somatosensory cortex and increasing activity in other areas of the brain. This study also had a small sample size, making it harder to draw definite conclusions.

  • Related Video

    The Positive Benefits of Meditation

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09:04 AM on 08/06/2011
That was such a POOR example of how Meditations would work for HIV Individuals. Meditations are not laboratory specimens to be examine in a period of time. Meditations in my opinion, are based on FAITH, just as all spiritual beliefs. To peg-hole it and give it a certain amount of time to work for individuals is totally inappropriate AND in my opinion, MISLEADING!
11:34 AM on 08/09/2011
I agree that this article leaves much to be desired, but your comment that meditation is based on faith doesn't line up with my experience (I do transcendental meditation). If a meditation technique is effective and not just a temporary mood enhancing exercise, it should affect the body in measurable ways. So a laboratory is a good place to study meditation.
03:50 PM on 07/17/2011
This is interesting. The first fact squares with my sense of what "enlightenment" actually is. The awareness based response to current, moment to moment, input. Or as Buddha put it, "right thinking, right action". You pretty much have be here for that to happen, lol! This opposed to the typical habitual response engendered by whatever a persons current conditioning dictates. Good stuff.
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H P
Citizen
10:51 PM on 07/16/2011
Nice article. thanks.
02:26 PM on 07/16/2011
Meditation is not an activity. It is to bear the friction between 'what is' and what you think should be' without any comforting idea.
http://www.fundamentalexpressions.com
10:07 AM on 07/16/2011
I have always used mindfulness to become part of
the moment of doing something and fully engaging.
For instance, when drinking tea or coffee, fully
become aware of all aspects of the preparation,
pouring, and drinking without thinking of
something else. Just be present, its a great
exercise and then return to the breath when
needed.
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french queen13
my beloved is mine and I am his
03:44 AM on 07/16/2011
Man, I wish the "you might live longer" thing didn't get tagged onto everything that's good for one. Quality of life is one thing but some of us don't WANT to live longer ...
03:58 PM on 07/15/2011
I guess I just think about meditation in a different context; I'm not interested in data. Can Buddhism survive in the West. Or will it become some sort of new age self-help regimen?
Gate gate Paragate Parasamgate Bodhiswaha. dhidhidhidhidhidhidhidhidhidhidhidhi......
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Ed and Deb Shapiro
05:33 PM on 07/15/2011
Gate gate Paragate Parasamgat­e Bodhiswaha­ ...(gate - pronounced ga te) -

this is one of my very favorites - meaning (my understanding) ~

beyond the beyond
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Jeanne Ball
Teacher of meditation, David Lynch Foundation
02:49 PM on 07/15/2011
I look forward to more comparative research on different meditation techniques. There is still a lot of confusion about all meditation techniques being the same.
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Ed and Deb Shapiro
05:38 PM on 07/15/2011
From my experience of over 40 years - I don't think there is confusion about meditation techniques being the same - there are many different techniques - but the technique is not meditation!
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Ed and Deb Shapiro
07:30 PM on 07/15/2011
In the Zen tradition:

the finger points to the moon but the finger is not the moon!
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11:05 PM on 07/15/2011
Very true. Most people assume that all meditation practices are basically the same, in practice and results. But the truth is that there are many different approaches, different effects and benefits from different techniques, and different meditative states. This is especially evident in the brain research that shows different EEG patterns from the different types of meditations.

It's therefore meaningless to clinically or spiritually use the word 'meditation' as a generic term that refers to all practices.

Not all meditation techniques even have the same goal, so naturally they have different effects.
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Ed and Deb Shapiro
10:41 AM on 07/16/2011
meditation is just meditation -

no technique or method will get you there - all the practices & techniques are helpful for the mind and body to relax & deal with stress and have various affects on the brain - but meditation is none of that -

Meditation and the practice of meditation are two different things. Meditation occurs when all practices & techniques stop.

The confusion is when you say:

"It's therefore meaningles­s to clinically or spirituall­y use the word 'meditatio­n' as a generic term that refers to all practices."

You are speaking in reverse -

meditation is not a generic term that refers to practice, it is something that can only be known and experienced, it is not a mental exercise - it is understood deep within!

Krishnamurti - & others have been saying this for ages.

May all beings be happy!
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Ed and Deb Shapiro
01:17 PM on 07/15/2011
Hi Riddhi - this is a very important post - thank you!

The more people are informed about meditation the more they will realize how invaluable it is.

We are fortunate that doctors Dean Ornish & Richie Davidson are contributors to our book:

BE THE CHANGE
How Meditation Can Transform You and our World
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Saijanai
Micro bio? We don't need no stinkin' micro bio...
01:03 PM on 07/15/2011
Scientists have long known that the brain has neuroplasticity. What the research on buddhist meditation showed was that purely mental activity could lead to this. Before this research, scientists believed that neuroplasticity was only the result of the brain changing due to external experience, athletic training, etc.

WIth this research, scientists now have evidence that thoughts, by themselves, can change the brain's structure.
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KMBerger
"Cui adhaereo, prae est,"
01:24 PM on 07/15/2011
In meditation you try to clear your mind of thoughts so that you can reach a state of enlightenment (near sleep mode).
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Saijanai
Micro bio? We don't need no stinkin' micro bio...
02:22 PM on 07/15/2011
The specific meditation techniques that scientists looked at for this study were a buddhist meditation technique called Vippasana and another called "compassion meditation"... People don't try to clear their mind in these kinds of meditation.

In the kind of meditation I practice, Transcendental Meditation, you don't try to clear your mind, either, though a state of complete mental silence can often result.

Enlightenment is defined differently in different spiritual traditions and the techniques used in those traditions reflect this.
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spawoman
06:10 PM on 07/15/2011
This belief is what causes many people to reject meditation without trying it. I've had many people tell me, "I can't meditate because I can't clear my mind."

In the form I practice, the goal is not to clear the mind of thoughts, but rather to allow thoughts without getting attached to them. By returning to breath or mantra, thoughts don't run our lives.
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1highstepper
IT'S OK! JUST RELAX AND ENJOY THE RIDE!
12:40 PM on 07/15/2011
I have to make meditation a key part of my lifestyle in order to maintain my sanity!
But it's always good to have an ongoing knowledge of the many benefits of meditating also.
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Keith DeBoer
Meditation Teacher
11:44 AM on 07/15/2011
It seems the phrase "use it or lose it" applies not only to muscles but to brain cell connections as well. The brain is not stagnant and grows and decays and how and when we use it has a great deal to do with how it performs daily and over time. For me Transcendental Meditation is the best way to exercise your brain, so put on your Nike's and "just do it".
11:38 AM on 07/15/2011
I think the author means gamma wave activity, not gamma ray, unless meditation makes you shoot radioactive rays out from your head. LOL
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french queen13
my beloved is mine and I am his
03:47 AM on 07/16/2011
Heheh that would be rather cool ... give all the tinfoil hat manufacturers a boost! :P
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Ed and Deb Shapiro
10:58 PM on 07/16/2011
you are funny fq13 :-))
10:42 AM on 07/15/2011
Thanks for the interesting links to studies on various meditation techniques. Just as with anything else, we need to educate ourselves about the different types of meditation and what effects they have. It gets as complex as reading nutrition labels. The title and opening of this article is misleading in that regard because we shouldn't assume all meditations have the same "7 facts" -- Research on one technique doesn't apply to other techniques.
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Terri Lorz
10:31 AM on 07/15/2011
Loved this - Terri Jo Lorz