What Are the Benefits of Meditation?
Meditation is supposed to be good for you. Is this true?
Let's look at some research.
Over the past 40 years, dozens of universities in the
United States, Europe and India have conducted hundreds of
studies on the effects of meditation on human physiology
and behavior. The research results point to meditation as
producing benefits on many levels of life simultaneously
– body, emotions, mental functioning, and relationships.
· Greater Orderliness of Brain Functioning
· Improved Ability to Focus
· Increased Creativity
· Deeper Level of Relaxation
· Improved Perception and Memory
· Development of Intelligence
· Natural Change in Breathing
· Decrease in Stress Hormone
· Lower Blood Pressure
· Reversal of Aging Process
· Reduced Need for Medical Care
· Reduction in Cholesterol
· Increased Self-Actualization
· Increased Strength of Self-Concept
· Decreased Cigarette, Alcohol, and Drug Abuse
· Increased Productivity
· Improved Relations at Work
· Increased Relaxation and Decreased Stress
· Improved Health and More Positive Health Habits
The Catch
What's the catch? The catch is, you have to spend time in
meditation everyday to get these benefits. And in order for
that to happen, you have to want to meditate. And to want to meditate, the
approach you choose has to suit your individual nature so
well that you love meditating. Then you have to meditate
just the right amount each day, not too much and not too
little, for your body type, emotional type, and your life
purpose.
Over the years, when interviewing people who quit
meditating, it appears that they quit because they were
doing the wrong technique, not because they were
undisciplined.
There are thousands of different ways and styles of
meditating. This is because people are really, really
different from each other. Unfortunately, this means that
if you just randomly try this and that meditation you may
not find an approach that works for you. The success ratio
is so low that no one seems to even be studying it – but it
may be as low as 5% or even 3% of people who start.
Instinctive Meditation was created in part out of the study
of how and why people fail at meditation. We interviewed
hundreds of meditators of all kinds in the 1970's to find
out what went wrong, and developed a system of instruction
that lets people have a good chance of getting it right the
first time.
How Can Meditation Be This Beneficial?
It is interesting to wonder, how could something as simple
as meditation be so beneficial? The answer is in the
physiology. Meditation is something the body knows how to
do, and does willingly if you set up the conditions and
allow it. The body knows how to enter a profound healing
state. All you have to do is pay attention in certain ways,
and tolerate the intensity of what you feel as you let go
of stress.
So one answer is that meditation is a built-in ability of
the human body. The word meditation is just a name we give
to the situation where we give the nervous system, the
brain and senses a chance to tune themselves up. More than
a chance – meditation is giving total permission for the
nervous system to do its healing thing. And since this is
an innate thing, the body and brain are very good at it.
People are naturally good at meditation, like cats are
naturally good at hunting mice.
And when we don't meditate, it is as if we are
"meditation-deprived." In other words, we are not adding
something weird to our life – we are just giving ourselves
something we need. What is weird is to NOT meditate. In
other words, it is unnatural to go through life deprived of
a time each day to rest more deeply than sleep, and let go
of all the stresses that keep you wound so tight.
If this is true, then this is part of why meditation has
such powerful effects – because it is a way of giving into
the powerful mind/body healing dynamics that we already
have within us, as part of our genetic heritage. Or, you
could say, God put it there.
Meditation is one of the few things in the self-help arena
you can do that produces measurable changes. In other
words, you can take a few hours of meditation training, and
then go into a medical lab and meditate, and they can
meaure the changes in your breathing, your blood chemistry,
your brain waves, and your response to stress. And if you
were sitting in a medical lab, all wired up, and they saw
you enter a state of rest deeper than sleep in 5 minutes, a
knowledgable researcher would look at the instruments and
say, "Oh, you just started meditating. I can see it on the
meters."
One of the main reasons meditation is so beneficial is that
it is instinctive and natural. When you meditate, you are
accessing your body's own built-in ability to heal itself
and tune itself for action.
Reliable Research
Here is a summary of research findings from the
Mind
Body Medical Institute at Harvard Medical School (They
recently changed the name to Benson-Henry Institute
for Mind-Body Medicine. BHIMBM?
The Harvard Medical School lab is the only one whose
findings I trust – if they say they measured something, it
is replicable.
Mind/Body Medical
Institute clinical findings include:
- Chronic pain patients
reduce their physician visits by 36%. The Clinical
Journal of Pain, Volume 2, pages 305-310,
1991
- There is approximately a
50% reduction in visits to a HMO after a
relaxation-response based intervention which resulted in
estimated significant cost savings. Behavioral Medicine,
Volume 16, pages 165-173, 1990
- Eighty percent of
hypertensive patients have lowered blood pressure and
decreased medications - 16% are able to discontinue all
of their medications. These results lasted at least three
years. Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation, Volume
9, pages 316-324, 1989
- Open heart surgery
patients have fewer post-operative complications.
Behavioral Medicine, Volume 5, pages 111-117,
1989
- One-hundred percent of
insomnia patients reported improved sleep and 91% either
eliminated or reduced sleeping medication use. The
American Journal of Medicine, Volume 100, pages 212-216,
1996
- Infertile women have a
42% conception rate, a 38% take-home baby rate, and
decreased levels of depression, anxiety, and anger.
Journal of American Medical Women's Association. Volume
54, pages 196-8, 1999
- Women with severe PMS
have a 57% reduction in physical and psychological
symptoms. Obstetrics and Gynecology, Volume 75, pages
649-655, April, 1990
- High school students
exposed to a relaxation response-based curriculum had
significantly increased their self-esteem. The Journal of
Research and Development in Education, Volume 27, pages
226-231, 1994
- Inner city middle school
students improved grade score, work habits and
cooperation and decreased absences. Journal of Research
and Development in Education, Volume 33, pages 156-165,
Spring 2000
You can read more about MBMI's approach to research
here.
Interesting Trends in Research
The following list of research is interesting, and most of
the results will probably be proven to some extent in the
future, but right now this is a mixure of preliminary
results and solid data.
Greater Orderliness of Brain Functioning
EEG coherence increases between and within the cerebral
hemispheres during meditation. EEG coherence is
quantitative index of the degree of long-range spatial
ordering of the brain waves. In a new meditator, the EEG
coherence increased during the period of meditation. In a
person who had been meditating for 2 years, spreading of
coherence occurred even before meditation began, spreading
of coherence to high and lower frequencies about half way
through the meditation period, and continuing high
coherence even into the eyes-opened period after
meditation. Psychosomatic Medicine 46: 267-276, 1984.
Broader Comprehension and Improved Ability to Focus
Field independence has been associated with a greater
ability to assimilate and structure experience, greater
organization of mind and cognitive clarity, improved
memory, greater creative expression, and a stable internal
frame of reference. The results show that practice of
meditation techniques develop greater field independence.
This improvement in meditators is remarkable because it was
previously thought that these basic perceptual abilities do
not improve beyond early adulthood. Perceptual Motor Skills
39: 1031-1034, 1974, and 62: 731-738, 1986.
Increased Creativity
This study used the Torrance Test of Creative Thinking to
measure figural and verbal creativity in a control group
and in a group that subsequently learned meditation. On the
post test five months later, the meditation group scored
significantly higher on figural originality and flexibility
and on verbal fluency. Journal of Creative Behavior, 13:
169-190, 1979, and Dissertations Abstracts International,
38: 3372-3373, 1978.
Deeper Level of Relaxation
A comprehensive statistical "meta-analysis" was conducted
that compared the findings of 31 physiological studies on
meditation and on resting with eyes closed. (A
meta-analysis is the preferred scientific procedure for
drawing definitive conclusions from large bodies of
research). The study evaluated three key indicators of
relaxation and found that meditation provides a far deeper
state of relaxation than does simple eyes-closed rest. The
research showed that breath rate and plasma lactate
decrease, the basal skin resistance increases,
significantly more during meditation than during
eyes-closed rest. Interestingly, immediately prior to the
meditation sessions, meditating subjects had lower levels
of breath rate, plasma lactate, spontaneous skin
conductance, and heart rate than did the controls. This
deeper level of relaxation before starting the practice
suggests that reduced physiological stress through
meditation is cumulative. American Psychologist, 42:
879-881, 1987.
Improved Perception and Memory
College students instructed in meditation displayed
significant improvements in performance over a two-week
period on a perceptual and short-term memory test involving
the identification of familiar letter sequences presented
rapidly. They were compared with subjects randomly assigned
to a routine of twice-daily rest with eyes closed, and with
subjects who made o change in their daily routine. Memory
and Cognition, 10: 207-215, 1982.
Development of Intelligence
University students who regularly practiced meditation
increased significantly in intelligences over a two-year
period, compared to control subjects. The finding
corroborates the results of two other studies showing
increased IQ in meditation students. Personality and
Individual Differences, 12:1105-1116, 1991, and Perceptual
and Motor Skills, 62: 731-738, 1986.
Natural Change in Breathing
Subjects were measured for changes in breathing rate during
the practice of meditation. Breath rate fell from 14
breaths per minute to about 11 breaths per minute,
indicating meditation produces a state of rest and
relaxation. The change in breath rate is natural,
effortless, and comfortable. American Journal of
Physiology, 22: 795-799, 1971.
Decrease in Stress Hormone
Plasma cortisol is a stress hormone. The study shows that
plasma cortisol decreased during meditation, whereas it did
not change significantly in controlled subjects during
ordinary relaxation. Hormones and Behavior, 10: 54-60,
1978.
Lower Blood Pressure
In a clinical experiment with elderly African American
(mean age 66) dwelling in an inner-city community,
meditation was compared with the most widely used method of
producing physiological relaxation. Subjects who had
moderately elevated blood pressure levels were randomly
assigned meditation, Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR),
or usual care. Over a three-month interval, systolic and
diastolic blood pressure dropped by 10.6 and 5.9 mm Hg,
respectively, in the meditation group, and 4.0 and 2.1 mm
Hg in the PMR group, with virtually no change in the usual
care group. A second random assignment study with the
elderly conducted at Harvard found similar blood pressure
changes produced by meditation over three-months (11 mm Hg
for systolic blood pressure). Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology, 57: 950-964, 1989.
Reversal of Aging Process
Biological age measures how old a person is
physiologically. As a group, long-term meditators who had
been practicing meditation for more than five years were
physiologically twelve years younger than their
chronological age, as measured by reduction of blood
pressure, and better near-point version and auditory
discrimination. Short-term meditators were physiologically
five years younger than their chronological age. The study
controlled for the effects of diet and exercise.
International Journal of Neuroscience, 16: 53-58, 1982.
Reduced Need for Medical Care
A study of health insurance statistics on over 2,000 people
practicing meditation over a five-year period found that
meditators consistently had less than half the
hospitalization than did other groups with comparable age,
gender, profession, and insurance terms. The difference
between the meditation and non-meditation groups increased
in older-age brackets. In addition, the meditators had
fewer incidents of illness in seventeen medical treatment
categories, including 87% less hospitalization for heart
disease and 55% less for cancer. The meditators
consistently had more than 50% fewer doctor visits than did
other groups. Psychosomatic Medicine, 49: 493-507, 1987.
Cholesterol
A longitudinal study showed that cholesterol levels
significantly decreased through meditation in
hypercholsteolemic patients, compared to matched controls,
over an eleven-month period. Journal of Human Stress, 5:
24-27, 1979.
Increased Self-Actualization
Self-actualization refers to realizing more of one's inner
potential, expressed in every area of life. A statistical
meta-analysis of 42 independent studies indicated the
effect of meditation on increasing self-actualization is
markedly greater than that of other forms of relaxation.
This analysis statistically controlled the length of
treatment and quality of research design. Journal of Social
Behavior and Personality, 6: 189-248, 1991.
Increased Strength of Self-Concept
One month after beginning meditation, subjects experienced
an improved self-concept in comparison to before learning
meditation. Meditation participants developed a more
strongly defined self-concept and also came to perceive
their "actual self" as significantly closer to their "ideal
self." No similar changes were observed for matched
controls. Journal of Psychology, 4: 206-218, 1976.
Decreased Cigarette, Alcohol, and Drug Abuse
A statistical meta-analysis of 198 independent treatment
outcomes found that meditation produced a significantly
larger reduction in tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drug use
than either standard substance abuse treatments (including
counseling, pharmacological treatments, relaxation
training, and Twelve-Step programs) or prevention programs
(such as programs to counteract peer-pressure and promote
personal development). This meta-analysis controlled for
strength of study design and included both heavy and casual
users. Whereas, the effects of conventional programs
typically decrease sharply by three months, effects of
meditation on total abstinence from tobacco, alcohol, and
illicit drug ranged from 50% to 89% over a 18 to 22 month
period of study. Alcoholism Treatment Quarterly, 11: 13-87,
and International Journal of the Addictions, 26: 293-325,
1991.
Increased Productivity
In this study subjects practicing meditation showed
significant improvements at work, compared with members of
a control group. Job performance and job satisfaction
increased while desire to change jobs decreased. People at
every level of the organization benefited from practicing
meditation. Academy of Management Journal, 17: 362-368,
1974.
Improved Relations at Work
This study found significant improvements in relations with
supervisors and co-workers after an average of eleven
months practicing meditation, in comparison to control
subjects. And while meditators reported that they felt less
anxiety about promotion (shown by reduced climb
orientation), their fellow employees saw them as moving
ahead quickly. People at every level of the organization
benefited from practicing meditation. Academy of Management
Journal, 17: 362-368, 1974.
Increased Relaxation and Decreased Stress
This three-month study of managers and employees who
regularly practiced meditation in a Fortune 100
manufacturing company (Puritan-Bennett Corporation) and a
smaller distribution-sales company in Philadelphia showed
that meditation practitioners displayed more relaxed
physiological functioning, greater reduction in anxiety,
and reduced tension on the job, when compared to control
subjects with similar job positions in the same companies.
Anxiety, Stress and Coping International Journal, 6:
245-262, 1993.
Improved Health and More Positive Health Habits
In two companies that introduced meditation, managers and
employees who regularly practiced meditation improved
significantly in overall physical health, mental
well-being, and vitality when compared to control subjects
with similar jobs in the same companies. Meditation
practitioners also reported significant reductions in
health problems such as headaches and backaches, improved
quality of sleep, and a significant reduction in the use of
hard liquor and cigarettes, compared to personnel in the
control groups. Anxiety, Stress and Coping International
Journal, 6: 245-262, 1993.
Discussion
From personal experience, I can say that these kinds of
benefits sometimes happen, and even often happen, when
people meditate every day, if they are doing the right
meditation for their individuality.
This life-transforming quality of meditation is not all
that mysterious – just imagine how your life would change
if you spend 45 minutes a day in the greatest relaxation
you have ever known, resting more deeply than sleep, giving
your body, nervous system, and brain a chance to tune for
action.
So why don't more people meditate? Why do only 10 million
Americans meditate? For one thing, there are thousands of
different kinds of meditation, and many of them will grate
on your nerves. You will only feel at home with certain
ones. Many of these other techniques are like kinds of
music you just do not like, flavors of food you will never
grow to love.
Keep in mind that meditation (the way I teach it) leads to
a kind of restfulness and ease greater than you have ever
known. This is a natural experience but you have not been
getting it, most likely. So the pervasive benefits which
are reported make sense. Often, when a person starts
meditating every day, 20 minutes in the morning before
breakfast, 20 minutes in the evening before dinner, you can
watch them change visibly over the next three months.
People start looking more rested and relaxed, as if they
just came back from a vacation. They get a kind of glow
about them, as if they are in love. I have seen this over
and over again in the past 36 years of teaching meditation
– it's what keeps me interested in meditation.
The benefits of daily meditation practice are sometimes
dramatic, when people find a technique that truly suits
their individual nature. This is a big IF, though. There
really does have to be a good match between the meditation
practice – and there are thousands of techniques and
variations – and your unique individual needs and
preferences. Otherwise you won't want to meditate, you
won't feel comfortable doing the technique, and you won't
thrive.
Can Meditation Be Harmful?
Yes, absolutely.
Let's use an analogy. When a shoe does not fit, it can make
your toes sore, even make your toenails fall off. If you
get blisters, they can get infected. If you force yourself
to wear the shoe anyway, in spite of the pain, you might
eventually "break it in," but more likely it will just
break your foot. With shoes, they can be too large, making
you trip and fall, or too small, damaging or even crippling
your foot.
When a meditation technique does not fit you, the main
damage is usually in your relationship to yourself. You
damage your ability to skillfully pay attention to your
internal life. First of all, you will not want to do a
meditation that does not suit you – which is good. But
usually people blame themselves when they "fail" at
meditation. And if you make yourself do it anyway, you will
probably do some kind of harm to yourself. It's not really
"the meditation" that is harming you, it is that you have
bought into the idea that if you impose an unnatural
technique on yourself, that it will be "good for you."
Let's use another analogy. Most meditation techniques have
a "medicinal" quality to them. A medicine is something,
often an herb or plant, that has toxic qualities. If you
take the right medicine in the right doses, over the right
course of time, and if you have a certain disease, the
medicine can kill the disease more than it kills you.
Almost all meditation techniques were developed for male
monks living in monasteries or ashrams or lamaseries,
thousands of years ago. Monks need to kill off their
sexuality, their desire to live, their attachments to
anything other than their robes and their vows, and kill
off any creative urges they may have. Monks have to kill
off not only their procreative impulses, but their creative
impules as well, any inclination to improve the way things
are done in the monastery.
If you are not a monk and you study with a monk, it is very
likely that you will be damaged in important ways.
Read the Science For Yourself
If you want to read further in the research, see
The Physical and Psychological Effects of
Meditation (opens in new window) online at the
Institute of Noetic Sciences. I used to hand out
thousands of copies of these kinds of research reports
at the TM lectures I gave from 1970 to 1975.
With all scientific research, it helps if you know the
conditions in the lab and the expectations of the
researchers. I was a lab subject for meditation research
from 1968 through 1978. One study I was in focused on serum
cortisol, a stress hormone. This meant that I was asked to
drive over to University of California Medical Center in
Irvine or Tustin, and sit in a chair and let Archie Wilson
stick needles in my arm to take blood samples. In one of
the labs I meditated in, about 30 feet away from the chair
I was sitting in, was a wall of cages with white mice or
rats in them, and the smell of ether was in the room. The
noise, having people in white coats hoovering over me, the
stink of the mice, the chemical smells in the room, and
having a big catheter in my wrist, all made it a bit
challenging to go deep into meditation. The ether in the
room may have made me go to sleep for a few seconds here
and there during the half hour meditation, I don't know. I
normally nod off for a few seconds here and there in
meditation. But the overall stress of meditating in such a
weird place may have raised my cortisol levels somewhat
before meditating, so perhaps there was more of a drop
during meditation, which would make for more "before and
during contrast." Who knows. Has anyone studied that? So
whenever you read the research, especially physiological
research on meditation, imagine that someone, God knows
why, volunteers to go into a lab and meditate under those
conditions. I did it as part of my general evangelism for
meditation, because the researchers were desperate for
subjects, and because they were friends of mine and when
they called I couldn't say no.
Meditating scientists, especially members of the TM
organization, conducted much of the early research on
meditation (1970-77) and quite a bit of it has not been
fully replicated, so you should take these results with a
grain of salt. In the late 1970's some scientists got tired
of reading all the glowing, evangelical reseach reports on
the benefits of meditation and decided to debunk it. So
they invited a bunch of meditators to come into their lab
and meditate, and they found - voila! - significant amounts
of sleep during meditation, much more than anyone else had
found. This was published in a journal, and I heard
gloating comments from various scientists, ha ha ha,
meditation is just sleep, you meditators have really been
put in your place. The image is really funny, if you think
about it – there is a meditator sitting in a lab, all these
instruments wired to her body to measure these supposedly
remarable physiological effects, and then what . . .
instead of meditating, she just falls alseep. ZZZZzzzzzz
instead of OMmmmmm. Then I happened to be talking with a
researcher who had stopped by the lab where this study was
conducted, and he found it had a very strong smell of
ether, for they were anesthetizing rats nearby and there
was quite a strong smell. He said none of the researchers
there even noticed the ether smell anymore – they were all
used to it. They dismissed the idea that the ether was
putting the meditators to sleep. All these things happen
during research – scientists are just human, and they want
to prove things, and sometimes they want to prove other
scientists are wrong.
So there needs to be a study on the effect of small amounts
of ether on meditation. And physiologists need to publish
more details of how they actually do the studies. In the
serum cortisol study I was a subject in, the subtitle
should have been, "Effects on serum cortisol of meditating
in a room full of rats and ether while needles are stuck in
your arm and doctors hoover over you taking blood samples
every five minutes."
Any one scientific study does not mean much, except to
point out a field of inquiry. The results are often
somewhat wrong, and the reasons given for the effect are
often wrong. But when many people replicate the results,
eventually they figure out what is going on. Right now the
only meditation research I give high credibility to is that
associated with the Harvard Medical School labs of Herbert
Benson and The Mind Body Medical
Institute.
Benson is a real physician and a scientist, and I don't
believe he would publish anything that is not
replicable. So when you read the science collated at
the Noetic sciences site, check back at
MBMI to see what subset of the exploratory
studies have been validated.
Science is clear thinking that gets done in spite of the
fact that money, politics, and religion are involved. In
terms of scientific research, there is a good news/bad news
situation. The good news is that meditation is not a drug.
It is a built-in instinct of the human body. The bad news
is that it not a drug. There is no way for a drug company
to make billions of dollars selling meditation pills, so
why should they invest millions of dollars doing research
on it? Eventually, insurance companies may spend a lot of
money on meditation research, because they wind up paying
for what happens when people don't meditate. There is
another good/bad situation, which is that many researchers
are passionate about meditation and figure out how to do
low-budget studies. This is interesting. The bad news is
that they may skew the results, or try to prove that their
type of meditation, whether it be Buddhist, Hindu, or
nondemonational, is better, and then the study is not
replicated. This will eventually bring dishonor to the
field. Science advances through confusion and controversy,
but only if people keep working to clarify things.
How Do I Get These Benefits?
You only get the benefits of meditation if you actually
meditate everyday – that is one key. And in order to
meditate every day, you need to find a technique and an
approach that truly suits your individuality and the rhythm
of your day. That is where Instinctive Meditation is so
useful – because you don't just learn a technique, you
learn how to adapt meditation to fit the direction of your
life.
What is meditation? It is a skill of paying attention in a
restful way to the flow of life in your body. This triggers
a natural response, a built-in instinct. There are
thousands of different meditation techniques that can serve
to elicit a similar physiological response.
Meditation is a built-in capacity of the human body. That
means you can do it, and it can feel natural to you. The
thousands of different techniques of meditation are just
different ways of letting yourself love what you love.
Learning to meditate is a matter of learning to cooperate
with your individual nature, learning to give in to the way
that you love life. Because meditation is invisible
behavior, hardly anyone gets coaching. So you need to have
some understanding as you set out, so that you get the feel
for what it means to go with your own essential nature,
rather than go against it.
Here is a simple truth to consider: meditate in accord with
your nature. Let your technique be what you love. That is
why the term, "instinctive meditation" suggests itself for
the path of letting one's inner nature suggest the type and
tone of one's meditation practice.
How Do I Learn?
Some people are naturals, and need no instruction. If they
need a teacher, it is more to help prevent bad habits from
forming.
The best way to get started is one-to-one instruction.
about 90 minutes a day for five consecutive days, then
every other day for the next week, then once a week for a
few weeks. In these sessions, we explore what techniques
work the best for you. Then, as you meditate each day, you
get immediate feedback on how to handle experiences.
Some people – maybe one in twenty – can just meditate, and
need no instruction. Others need a little coaching.
Whenever you begin meditation, or begin again, you get a
fresh start. All my books are written in such a way that
you can start meditating and building the skills you need.
Let's Go
A good way to begin is to use the book and CD,
Meditation 24/7. It is really short and succinct, and
comes with a great CD of 14 guided meditations and
awareness exercises.