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THE SCIENCE OF MEDITATION
When you experience the
scientifically proven benefits of mind
training through meditation, you are making
a clear choice to think, feel and lead
better.
Common outcomes are:
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• Reduction in stress and
anxiety
• Improved efficiency
• Improved concentration and
memory
• Reduction in errors and
accidents
* Improves negative
emotions
* Improves mood and
behaviour
• Improved productivity and
communication
• Improved creativity for
problem
solving
• Enhanced energy and
enthusiasm
• Reduction in stress
hormones
• Increased awareness and
response
time
• Improved time
management
• Reduction in medical care
costs
• Greater work/life
balance
• Improved overall health and
wellness
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Research findings are from
Mind Body Medical
Institute - Harvard Medical
School
Join the increasing number of
corporations, business leaders, professionals
and athletes using meditation to help focus
exclusively on the task at hand, to get the job
done.
Here’s what experts from various
fields have to say about
meditation:
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"How can meditation be
this beneficial? The
answer lies in our
physiology. Meditation is
something the body knows how to
do and does willingly, if you
set up the right conditions to
allow it. The body knows
how to enter a profound healing
state. All you have to do
is pay
attention."
Dr Lorin Roche,
Author
Exploring, researching and
teaching meditation since
1968
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“Probably the single most
reported physiological benefit
of meditation –
indeed, of systematic
relaxation techniques generally
– is the drop in blood
pressure. Even the National
Institutes of Health have
recommended
meditation.
Dr
Daniel
Goleman
The Meditative
Mind: The Varieties of
Meditation
Experience.
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University of
Wisconsin Study Reports Sustained
Changes In Brain and Immune
Function After
Meditation. Employees who
meditated regularly at the
bio-technical company Promega were
found to show an increase in the
left-side of the frontal region of
the brain which is associated with
lower anxiety, a more positive
emotional state and optimistic
behaviour. The research team also
tested the immune system of
the meditation group
who had developed an increase in
their
antibodies.
Dr Jon Kabat –Zinn
Mindfulness-Based Stress
Reduction Program
University of Massachusetts
February
2003
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“We all meditate on something
or other. Most of the time,
unfortunately, we meditate on
anger, stress, worry,
depression and the like. The
effect of this indiscriminate,
unconscious, habitual and
harmful form of ‘meditation’ is
a testament to the power
of attention.”
Dr
Craig Hassed
‘Meditation as a Tool for
Happiness’
Monash University,
Department of General
Practice
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"We are at a time
when companies lose $200 billion in
absenteeism, low performance,
tardiness, and workers'
compensation claims related to
stress ... if business were clever,
what they would do is simply put
time aside
and
have a quiet room for
people to carry out a
meditative behaviour of
their
choice."
Dr
Herbert Benson
Mind Body Medical
Institute - Harvard Medical
School. Business Week - August
2004
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“ … for people that have
difficulty with the process of
keeping their mind on what you
want it to be on in a sustained
fashion, meditation enhances
that function considerably.
Attention deficit disorder and
even ageing, can slow down
through the mind training of
meditation
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Dr
Amishi P. Jha
Centre for Cognitive
Neuroscience
University of Pennsylvania
ABC Radio
National
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People who meditate grow bigger
brains than those who don’t.
Researchers at Harvard, Yale
and, the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
conducted brain scans and
revealed that meditators
boasted increased thickness in
parts of the brain that deal
with attention and processing
sensory input. Many said, “it
reduced their
stress,
increased clarity of thought
and their tolerance for staying
focused in difficult
situations.”
Harvard University Psychology
Today - February
2008
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"Meditation can modify
the effects of strenuous
exercise on the immune system.
Athletes who meditated found
that their T-Cells, a
type of white
blood cell increased
immunity."
British Journal of
Sports Medicine. Vol 29 -
2007
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“Meditation can
help people pay more attention to
their present emotions, thoughts
and sensations without reacting
strongly … the meditation subjects
experienced greater activation in
the right ventrolateral pre-frontal
cortex and greater calming effect
in the amygdala, suggesting, for
the first time, an underlying
reason why meditation programs
improve mood and
health.”
Psychologist Dr
David
Creswell
University of
California, Los Angeles
– June
2007
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"Meditators out
paced non-meditators on the
attention test, and they became
significantly better at handling
stress. Salvia samples revealed
lower levels of the stress hormone
cortisol ... the mind training
practice helps the brain to
regulate awareness and
attention.
Neuroscientist
Dr Michael Posner -
University of Oregon
June
2008
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"Meditation may help
squash anxiety. The practice
brings about dramatic affects
in as little
as
a 10 -minute
session."
The Science of Meditation,
Psychology Today – June
2001
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“Over 10 million
Americans now say they practice
some kind of meditation
regularly. Not only do studies
show that meditation is
boosting their immune system,
but brain scans suggest that it
may be rewiring their brains to
reduce stress
…”
The Science of Meditation -
TIME Magazine 2003
(cover
story)
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Findings from the Mind Body Medical Institute
of Harvard Medical School
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Chronic
patients reduce their physician
visits by
36%
The Clinical Journal of Pain,
Vol 2, pages 305-310,
1991
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80% of hypertensive patients
have lowered blood pressure and
decreased medication. 16% are
able to discontinue all
medication.
These
results lasted at least 3
years.
Journal of
Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation,
Vol 9, pages 316-324,
1989
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Infertile women have a 42%
conception rate, a 38% take
home baby rate and, decreased
levels of depression, anxiety
and anger.
Journal of American
Medical Women’s Association,
Vol 54, pages 196-8,
1998
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100% of
insomnia patients reported
improve sleep and 91% either
eliminated or reduced sleeping
medication
use.
The American Journal of
Medicine, Vol 100, pages
212-216,
1996
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Women with severe PMS have a
57% reduction in physical and
psychological
symptoms.
Obstetrics and
Gynecology, Vol 75,
pages 649-655, April
1990
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