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View Full Version : Meditation booms as people seek a way to slow down



FBD
02-17-2015, 05:17 PM
http://touch.latimes.com/#section/-1/article/p2p-82827071/

Meditation, primarily a 2,500-year-old form called mindfulness meditation that emphasizes paying attention to the present moment, has gone viral.

The unrelenting siege on our attention can take a good share of the credit; stress has bombarded people from executives on 24/7 schedules to kids who feel the pressure to succeed even before puberty. Meditation has been lauded as a way to reduce stress, ease physical ailments like headaches and increase compassion and productivity.

Religious practitioners have long claimed that, adopted by enough people, meditation could bring us world peace. Now we hear that from Chade-Meng Tan, a Google executive charged with making the company more mindful. You needn't even put down your phone, with apps like Insight Timer, which has guided meditations and ways to track your stillness.

It has moved from its Asian, monastic roots to become a practice requiring no particular dogma on a path not necessarily toward nirvana but toward a more mindful everyday life. Some serious advocates worry it's becoming another feel-good commodity.

The practice of mindfulness meditation has become more widespread at a time when the fastest-growing group demographic is made up of people who say they are unaffiliated with a particular denomination, said Varun Soni, the dean of religious life at USC, which has launched a university-wide effort toward mindfulness.

"Every religious tradition changes when it moves to a new place," Soni said.

In the case of meditation, it's also moved full force into the academic realm. Aside from the Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care and Society at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, the UCs in San Diego, Los Angeles and Berkeley are among universities that also have meditation programs. Hundreds of research papers have been published. At Lesley University in Cambridge, Mass., students can earn a master's degree in mindfulness studies.

"It's mind-blowing," said Sharon Salzberg, co-founder of the Insight Meditation Society in Massachusetts and one of the people who brought Buddhist meditation to the United States in the 1970s.

"It fits a lot about the American spirit," she said. "You don't have to join anything. It's very private. It's a very direct answer to an awful lot of stress and confusion."

::

Marturano was one of those modern jugglers: a spouse, mother to school-age children, daughter to aging parents, president of an arts board in the Twin Cities and a top executive at General Mills.

"Every day I juggled faster and faster, and on most days, most of the time, most of the balls stayed in the air," she told the hospital group.

You know where this is going: What goes up must come down.

She was put in charge of a protracted buyout of Pillsbury by General Mills; failure would have meant 10,000 layoffs (as she put it, 10,000 families losing an income, some of them people she knew). Then, within months, both of her parents died.

Marturano was depleted; a friend suggested a spa — not really her thing. Her friend insisted, and what finally lured Marturano was that it was an "intensive" retreat to study mindfulness. She figured, if it was intensive, then it might be OK.

And so she found herself at a spa in Arizona, studying with Jon Kabat-Zinn, pioneer in bringing meditation to a secular audience. She was hooked.

When she returned to General Mills, she was for a time a "closet meditator." Slowly, she shared what she'd learned and her thinking on about using mindfulness as a leader. The company now has dedicated meditation rooms, and Marturano left in 2010 to found her institute.

"You do not have to chant, shave your head or wear a robe," she told the Long Beach group.

"Being mindful or meditating does not mean that thoughts don't intrude, that the mind doesn't wander. It does," she said. "Mindfulness occurs at the moment you are aware of the distraction. Then, escort the mind back to the breath."

::

When Suze Yalof Schwartz opened her pristine, white-walled West L.A. meditation studio nearly a year ago, she kept in mind just the sort of people Marturano knows well.

Unplug aims to be a place where "my husband, who's a venture capitalist and has zero tolerance for woo-woo things, won't walk out." There are no zafu cushions or incense sticks. Instead, meditators come into the studio and take a sleek black folding floor chair — no sitting cross-legged required. The lighting is a pink-violet, inspired by the artist James Turrell.

Unplug appeals to the meditation skeptics, to "the people who don't want to meditate but their shrinks told them they should," said Schwartz, who calls herself a spiritual entrepreneur. The formula for classes is simple, she said: Tell people what the point is, show them how to do it.

Meditation, said Schwartz, who spent years as a makeover maven and fashion editor in New York, speaks to our moment.

"We're all over-stimulated. It doesn't matter whether you are 3 or 93. People are not going to the bathroom without their iPhones, and if they tell you they are, they're lying," she said. "We need a place to take a time out."

Olivia Rosewood, a teacher at Unplug who said she learned to meditate from former Beatle George Harrison when they happened to meet in Fiji, pointed to other 21st century stresses.

"There is an acceleration of a level of suffering and an acceleration of the violence in the world. And I don't think anyone is untouched," she said. "That intensity increases the value of any experience that brings you to your own inner peace."

A sign outside Unplug calls passersby to find that peace: "Hurry up and slow down."

FBD
02-17-2015, 05:20 PM
Personally I'd kinda just rather find a cave, but like everyone else, worldly attachments wind up keeping me here. Then again if there wasnt enough overlap, those attachment might not be sufficient.


All starts with the breath...but the rabbit hole goes much deeper, and had much more usefulness than simply helping stop the world from driving you mad ;)

Hal-9000
02-17-2015, 06:21 PM
I'm just having an XL coffee and two smokes....I can't even read this right now :lol:




:bounce:

Goofy
02-17-2015, 06:28 PM
I prefer medication :)

Hal-9000
02-17-2015, 06:31 PM
do you have a special medication mat :lol:

Goofy
02-17-2015, 06:32 PM
do you have a special medication mat :lol:

I sometimes lie on the floor when i've had one too many, does that count? :lol:

Hal-9000
02-17-2015, 06:35 PM
I sometimes lie on the floor when i've had one too many, does that count? :lol:

and your mantra is - Ummmmm, ummmmm, urrggghhhh, gaag.....HONK :puke:

Goofy
02-17-2015, 06:36 PM
Nah, it's normally :yawn: zzzzzzzzzzzzz :fart2:

PorkChopSandwiches
02-17-2015, 06:39 PM
I've been considering this as well, both my dad and step dad still meditate daily

Noilly Pratt
02-17-2015, 06:40 PM
I think it's great that she allows for a quiet room in which to meditate. I'm very glad I know how to, otherwise I'd have gone loony long ago.

Now excuse me, I have to go wax my aardvark...I think it's going to rain.

No, seriously...I do meditate and recommend it highly.

Hal-9000
02-17-2015, 06:47 PM
I'll be looking into heavy meditation in a few weeks...as I purge 35 years of chemicals from my body and crawl the fckn roof

Noilly Pratt
02-17-2015, 07:02 PM
Don't get bogged down in dogma or chant words or holding rocks or whatever...a quiet place and nice music in the background is all I need.

Even if you can't shut your mind off completely, if you concentrate on one simple thing it will benefit you in our multi-tasking world. For me I often concentrate on the music I'm listening to -- what chord a particular song has for instance. Whatever it takes to turn the world off for a bit.

Teh One Who Knocks
02-17-2015, 07:05 PM
I just had a 5 Hour Energy :bounce:

FBD
02-17-2015, 07:39 PM
I've been considering this as well, both my dad and step dad still meditate daily

where you really see the benefit is when the habit is established decently well :thumbsup: if you just do it sporadically, the benefit will only be small. do it regularly, and the benefit is medium. do it every day and the benefit is significant. do all of that and then combine all the neigung methods that develop your energy centers, and it sparks the shit out of your whole system :tup: