Meditation has a beneficial effect on pain and physical ailments
This has been recognised for thousands of years in Eastern medicinal practises but now meditation has been scientifically proven to have beneficial effects on physical ailments including everything from pain, high blood-pressure, heart problems, diabetes, skin conditions, viruses, gastro-intestinal problems such as ulcers and constipation, infertility, PMS, side effects from cancer and AIDS and much, much more.
Meditation helps to fight off colds, flu and respiratory infections
By boosting the body’s immune system and decreasing the effects of stress, studies have shown a 40-50% reduction in respiratory infections in people prone to colds and flu that practise regular meditation. Compare this to flu vaccinations which only protect at about 50-60% of just a few strains of the virus and also have a catalogue of nasty adverse events, precautions and contraindications, meditation looks to be a much safer preventative measure with the side effects being decreased stress, improved mood and relaxation!
Meditation in schools
Ground-breaking research has been taking place with regards to the benefits of meditation being introduced into schools. By taking part in "Quiet Time" (10-15 minutes of silent seated meditation) reducing stress and promoting learning readiness among students has shown to be improvement in test scores and graduation numbers, 86% reduction in suspensions, 40% reduction in psychological distress including anxiety and depression and 65% decrease in violent conflicts in schools that previously had these problems among it's students. Compassion-based meditation is also used to create better cohesion among students, reducing the chance of bullying and increasing awareness of the feelings of others.
Meditation improves your sex life
Not only by simply reducing stress (top passion-killer), meditation stimulates the areas of the brain associated with production of 'feel-good' hormones, endorphins, serotonin, dopamine and melatonin, increasing feelings of love, compassion and understanding of yourself as well as your partner. Add to that the ability to remove distracting thoughts and 'be in the moment', increased circulation, blood flow and balancing sex drive hormone DHEA, regular meditators find it much easier to get, and stay, 'in the mood'.
Meditation increases productivity at work
More and more national and multinational businesses, corporations and organisations are applying meditative techniques within their workforces. Companies such as Apple, Google, First Direct, Nike and Yahoo have launched stress-reduction initiatives leading to employees feeling fully present on the job, making better decisions and having a positive effect on team relations as well as becoming more effective as a leader for managers. Maintaining attention, focus, intuition and clarity of thought increases with regular practise of meditation in the workplace.
Meditation for increased creativity
Many artists, be it painters, musicians, performers or craftspersons often report being "in the zone" or "flow state" when they create their work. Meditation offers a route to bypass the logical, analytical mind and access this state of being- the natural intuition and boundless creative energy that is tucked away within allof us, not just found in 'artists'.
Meditation for enhanced relationships
An increased feeling of social connection and emotional intelligence is a well-known benefit of meditation - and not just from the social aspect of meeting up in groups to meditate! As well as becoming more comfortable with yourself (which helps others to be more comfortable with you!) a feeling of "Interconnectedness" has been acknowledged in practitioners of meditation which extends further than a recognition within the conscious mind. Mediation has an effect on the way that we behave and relate to each other, becoming accepting and comfortable with those around us as well as with ourselves.
Meditate to help kick addictions
From smoking to over-eating to negative thinking to unhelpful behaviours, alcohol abuse and addiction to prescription and non-prescribed drugs, meditation is used within many rehabilitation programs throughout the world. Neuroscientists have proven that meditation causes physical changes and increased blood flow to the areas of the brain that deal with self-control.