6 Good Reasons to Start a Mindfulness Meditation Practice

Growing research shows significant benefits for the mind and body. Time to sit down, close your eyes and observe.

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Young woman meditating

Do you meditate? (Evdokimov Maxim / Shutterstock.com) 

Meditation used to feel like something reserved for yoga addicts, but growing research is showing benefits for the mind and body that every one of us could use. Ready to reap the benefits? The simple instructions in this two-minute video make meditation accessible to everyone.

1. MEDITATION HELPS YOU SLEEP SOUNDER

Researchers at the University of Minnesota looked at seven studies on mindfulness meditation and sleep, concluding that the practice helps some people get better rest. Mediation might help people break the cycle of obsessing about not being able to get to sleep, which makes it harder to your zzz’s, says Nicole Winbush, who co-authored the study. Reducing stress hormones like cortisol, which can interfere with sleep, may also help.

Man sleeping peacefully

Meditation boosts beauty sleep (wavebreakmedia / Shutterstock.com) 

2. MEDITATION EASES PAIN

Mindfulness meditation has been shown to help ease chronic discomfort like neck and back pain, arthritis, fibromyalgia and recurring headaches. It teaches you to open your senses to your breathing, the sound of the wind rustling or the feel of the sun on your skin, says Jeffrey Greeson, a clinical health psychologist at Duke University. “If some attention is going toward other things, the pain’s not going to bother you as much,” Greeson says.

Woman stretching arms hiking

Sore muscles? Meditation! (Iryna Inshyna / Shutterstock.com) 

3. MEDITATION IMPROVES YOUR ABILITY TO FOCUS

“Mindfulness training improves your ability to maintain attention and regulate emotional distractions,” says Fadel Zeidan, a cognitive neuroscientist at Wake Forest School of Medicine. In one study he conducted, people who did 20-minute meditation sessions for just four days did significantly better on timed cognitive tests than a control group. The meditators were better able to ignore the timer and simply focus on the task, he explains.

Man concentrating on work

Meditation can help you get in the zone (Viktoriia Hnatiuk / Shutterstock.com) 

4. MEDITATION REDUCES ANXIETY AND STRESS

Recent studies are proving that meditation can actually lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol in our bodies. And in a new study by Zeidan, levels of everyday anxiety decreased by a whopping 39 percent after just four 20-minute mindfulness meditation classes. How? Being more aware of our immediate experiences through meditation may keep us from stewing over the past or worrying about the future.

Man feeling relaxed and calm

No surprises here - meditation calms the mind (Antonio Guillem / Shutterstock.com) 

5. MEDITATION STABILIZES EMOTIONS

Many of us automatically interpret things in a negative way and assume the worst about ourselves and others. This can cause depression, which meditation has been shown to alleviate. “One of the reasons why meditation is effective for mood and depression is because it helps us not believe these automatic thoughts that we have,” says Greeson. “It involves focusing on what’s possible, not what’s impossible.”

Happy joyful woman

Get meditating - and reap the positive vibes (Rido / Shutterstock.com) 

6. MEDITATION HELPS YOU HEAL FASTER AND LIVE LONGER

In a study last year, people who took eight weeks of mindfulness meditation training had far fewer cases of colds and flu and less severe infections compared to a group of non-meditators. Daniel Muller, a doctor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who worked on this study, says meditation may help to restore the body’s homeostatic balance. It may even help us live longer by keeping our DNA from degrading over time, according to recent research at the University of California, San Francisco.

Happy older lady playing with paper plane

The key to a long, healthy life? It could be meditation (Halfpoint / Shutterstock.com) 

This article by Jennifer Abbasi was originally published on Happify, and appears here with permission. Start meditating - or take your practice to the next level - with guided audio and visual meditations on Happify: Sign up here, today!

 
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