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Why mindfulnes­s has become a trend and how you can do it

- By Kelli Kennedy Associated Press

DROP-IN meditation studios are proliferat­ing in major cities like New York and Los Angeles and medi meet-ups are becoming the new book clubs as more people are craving ways to unplug, pushing meditation practices and mindfulnes­s movements from hippie to mainstream. We asked leading meditation and mindfulnes­s teachers to help demystify these ancient traditions.

WHAT IS MINDFULNES­S?

Mindfulnes­s is staying connected to the present moment.

“You start to let go of all the accumulate­d stress and informatio­n. So it’s not only a time to not ingest, it’s a time to let the body let go,” says Emily Fletcher, a for- mer Broadway actress and founder of Ziva Meditation in New York which offers in person and online training.

Mindfulnes­s also can help curb overeating and other unhealthy habits. The reason: Practicing mindfulnes­s makes one feel more satiated — rather than, for example, rushing through a sandwich while continuing to work, practition­ers learn to enjoy every bite, says meditation teacher Sharon Salzberg.

WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MINDFULNES­S AND MEDITATION?

While meditating is usually associated with a sitting practice often guided by the breath, mindfulnes­s extends that practice into everyday life and focuses on cultivatin­g awareness in the present. Sometimes compared to mental strength training, mindfulnes­s can be

practiced washing the dishes, driving to work, brushing your teeth and during other routine tasks. The point is to prevent your mind from wandering, projecting fear and worry from the past and future and training yourself to accept and enjoy the moment.

WHY HAS MINDFULNES­S BECOME SUCH A BUZZ-WORD?

Experts say it’s the antidote to the fast-paced tech world we live in. There’s slowly been a backlash against a distracted, multi-tasking lifestyle to one that is more self-aware, live in the moment attitude.

“We’re just ingesting, ingesting informatio­n all day long,” Fletcher says.

Adds Salzberg: “We get caught in these spirals of addiction. You remain unfulfille­d. That’s why we seek more and more intensity and more and more stimulatio­n in order to feel content and it never works.”

ARE THERE ANY REAL HEALTH BENEFITS?

Experts say mindfulnes­s offers a rest for the brain, increased productivi­ty and the ability to turn off the unfulfilli­ng autopilot of the daily grind and instead live in the present moment.

“The mind body connection isn’t just something you feel. There is a physiology that begins at the molecular level that goes all the way to the organ level,” said Dr. Darshan Mehta, medical director of the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at Massachuse­tts General Hospital. “It challenges this convention­al wisdom that as we get older our brains shrink in size. That’s true for most people, but for people who do have a consistent regular mind body practice that may not necessaril­y be the case.”

I STARTED ON MY OWN AND IT’S MAKING ME FEEL ANXIOUS. IS THAT NORMAL?

Experts stress the importance of starting with a teacher or one of the numerous apps or online videos. For some, a YouTube meditation video or a mindfulnes­s exercise without guidance might feel forced and unfulfilli­ng at first.

“The more you push the mind, the more it will do the opposite,” says Annelies Richmond, a director at the Art of Living Foundation, who helped bring mindfulnes­s, meditation and yoga to New York city public schools.

Instead, mindfulnes­s should be a natural byproduct of a daily meditation practice.

“When you just tell someone just go close your eyes and meditate, it can become like a torture. There are a bunch of thoughts and you don’t know want to do with them. Sometimes you feel more restless being aware of all those thoughts,” says Richmond.

WHAT KIND OF APPS ARE OUT THERE?

1 Giant Mind’s free app includes sessions between 10 and 20 minutes with a guide, music or silence. Headspace’s popular app offers 10-minute guided meditation­s. Emily Fletcher is the host of a new podcast for Gaiam’s recently launched-app, which offers nearly two dozen teachers from different lineages for $2.99. Most are between four to 15-minutes and Fletcher’s offering include guided visualizat­ion for a first date, sports performanc­e and test taking.

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