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Therapy Definitions
Meditation
Meditation is a practice of concentrated focus upon a sound, object,
visualization, the breath, movement, or attention itself in order to increase
awareness of the present moment, reduce stress, promote relaxation, and enhance
personal and spiritual growth.
Meditation benefits people with or without acute medical illness or stress.
People who meditate regularly have been shown to feel less anxiety and
depression. They also report that they experience more enjoyment and
appreciation of life and that their relationships with others are improved.
Meditation produces a state of deep relaxation and a sense of balance or
equanimity. According to Michael J. Baime, "Meditation cultivates an emotional
stability that allows the meditator to experience intense emotions fully while
simultaneously maintaining perspective on them." Out of this experience of
emotional stability, one may gain greater insight and understanding about one's
thoughts, feelings, and actions. This insight in turn offers the possibility to
feel more confident and in control of life. Meditation facilitates a greater
sense of calmness, empathy, and acceptance of self and others.
Meditation can be used with other forms of medical treatment and is an important
complementary therapy for both the treatment and prevention of many
stress-related conditions. Regular meditation can reduce the number of symptoms
experienced by patients with a wide range of illnesses and disorders. Based upon
clinical evidence as well as theoretical understanding, meditation is considered
to be one of the better therapies for panic disorder, generalized anxiety
disorder, substance dependence and abuse, ulcers, colitis, chronic pain,
psoriasis, and dysthymic disorder. It is considered to be a valuable adjunctive
therapy for moderate hypertension (high blood pressure), prevention of cardiac
arrest (heart attack), prevention of atherosclerosis (hardening of arteries),
arthritis (including fibromyalgia), cancer, insomnia, migraine, and prevention
of stroke. Meditation may also be a valuable complementary therapy for allergies
and asthma because of the role stress plays in these conditions. Meditative
practices have been reported to improve function or reduce symptoms in patients
with some neurological disorders as well. These include people with Parkinson's
disease, people who experience fatigue with multiple sclerosis, and people with
epilepsy who are resistant to standard treatment.
Overall, a 1995 report to the National Institutes of Health on alternative
medicine concluded that, "More than 30 years of research, as well as the
experience of a large and growing number of individuals and health care
providers, suggests that meditation and similar forms of relaxation can lead to
better health, higher quality of life, and lowered health care costs…"
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