The Asian Age

Active meditation­s to boost immunity

- Amrit Sadhana is editor of Osho Times Internatio­nal. She facilitate­s meditation workshops based on Osho insights around the country and abroad. Amrit Sadhana

Doing a lot of exercise in older age can prevent the immune system from declining and protect people against infections, scientists say. They followed 125 long- distance cyclists, some now in their 80s, and found they had the immune systems of 20 year olds, as reported by the BBC news.

Professor Norman Lazarus, 82, of King’s College London, who took part in and coauthored the research, said: “If exercise were a pill, everyone would be taking it. It has widerangin­g benefits for the body, the mind, for our muscles and our immune system.”

Looking at the sedentary lifestyle of people and the health benefits of exercise, Osho has devised active meditation­s, which combine active and passive states. Recent studies have shown that regular practice of meditation can have an incredibly positive impact on health like lower blood pressure, heart rate and r e s p i r a - t i o n , r e d u c e a n x i e t y and anger, and help alleviate insomnia, mild to moderate depression, as well as lead to other benefits.

Many doctors and researcher­s have speculated about the reasons meditation produces these effects, but a credible scientific explanatio­n has been elusive until now. The researcher­s sought to test a particular theory: that in people who are stressed, anxious or depressed, the right frontal cortex of the brain is often overactive and the left frontal cortex, relatively underactiv­e. Many such people also show heightened activation of the amygdala, a vital brain centre for processing fear.

By contrast, people who are usually calm and happy typically show higher activity in the left frontal cortex, relative to the right. These folks also pump out less of stress hormone cortisol, recover faster from adverse events, and have higher levels of the white blood cells that battle infection and are a measure of immune system function. These early studies suggest that the subtleties of mind, long known subjective­ly to proficient meditators, may prove capable of being understood objectivel­y as well.

What researcher­s are trying to prove clinically has been the experience of meditators down the millennium. In the modern world, Osho has designed amazing active and cathartic meditation­s that have a scientific foundation. They have been working wonders on thousands of people. Osho says: “The practice of meditation will have many physiologi­cal results too. Some physical diseases can disappear, longevity can increase, and many chemical changes can take place in the body. Numerous glands of the body that are at the moment as good as dead can be activated. Meditation has profound chemical effects on the body. In fact, the w h o l e chemistry of the body changes. The body begins to perceive, think and u n d e r - s t a n d things in a different way altogether. All the electric circuits of the body change.”

Just as a lot of things happen in the body, a great deal occurs at the level of the mind too. The possibilit­ies are numerous. By living unconsciou­sly, we accumulate many toxins in the body and an archive of thoughts, memories and wounds in mind. Osho’s active meditation­s cleanse all these debris and rejuvenate the entire system. It is terrific that this has been supported by the scientific research because it will attract younger educated people who like to test everything on the touchstone of science to meditation, which will completely change their life for the better.

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