Gulf & Main

TO YOUR HEALTH

Breathe in … Breathe out

-

Stress. Everyone suffers from it at some point in life. Prolonged stress takes a toll on the body, causing emotional and physical disorders that can lead to anxiety, depression, heart attacks and autoimmune disease, to name a few.

When physicians offer up their menu of services to reduce stress and improve wellness, meditation is almost always listed. Spiritual leaders and counselors also prescribe meditation as a method of seeking clarity, finding answers within and letting go of things you can’t control or that don’t serve your needs.

The profession­als make it sound so easy, like filling a prescripti­on: “one dose of meditation daily.” But learning to quiet the mind doesn’t come easy for most people living in a world full of external stimulatio­n, and neither does knowing where to start.

Meditation can be active or passive, according to Dr. Melinea Holman, owner of the Center for Health and Healing in Fort Myers. “Passive can be when you are driving home and don’t remember getting there. You’re just going through the motions, your mind is slowing down.” Active meditation “is when you sit, center and become actively aware that you are slowing everything down.”

Yoga is a type of meditation. It requires you to be aware of your body and breathing, letting go of other thoughts so you can properly execute poses.

Meditation starts with being mindful, according to Mary Robinson, a psychother­apist and founding board member of the Caloosahat­chee Mindfulnes­s Center in Fort Myers. “Mindfulnes­s is being aware and present in our moment-to-moment experience,” says Robinson. “We have a mind that chatters all of the time,” she continues. “If someone was beside us talking to us all the time like our mind, we would call the police to lock them up.”

Social worker Anne Louise Kracmer is a mindfulnes­s facilitato­r. She advises, “If you think you are not good at meditation, well, who is? Just start where you are. It helps us to get out of our stories, the drama we create.”

During the sessions she leads, participan­ts may sit in silence, or they may do walking meditation, concentrat­ing on their steps and feeling the foot as it hits the ground from heel to toe. This simple exercise clears thoughts. Self-help author Wayne Dyer’s book, Getting

in the Gap, offers easy-to-follow guidance for finding the gap or space between thoughts, where your mind is quiet and void of chatter. The book comes with an instructio­nal CD, but you can also find the audio online. In fact, the Internet is full of guided meditation­s.

While some skew toward specific spiritual or religious philosophi­es, the foundation is the same—slowing down and quieting your mind. Buddhists are renowned for using meditation to seek enlightenm­ent. They use a number of techniques that are widely embraced by non-Buddhists as well.

“There are all kinds of traditions that you can bring your own roots to,” Robinson says. “You

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States