Understanding Mindfulness, Its Benefits, and How To Get Started
Mindfulness. We hear this word so often that it’s easy to dismiss it as the latest New Age fad. But before dispensing with the idea altogether, consider that mindfulness-based cognitive therapy has been credited by the American Psychological Association with reducing unhelpful emotional responses and negative thoughts during stressful situations. Its benefits are so many and so well recognized that even respected universities like UCLA and Harvard offer programs for it.
If you struggle with feeling overwhelmed, obsessive thoughts, stress, and anxiety, mindfulness may just be the life-changing, simple, and cost-effective habit you need.
In this article, you’ll get a better understanding of what mindfulness is, its benefits, and some techniques that you can use to get started.
What Is Mindfulness?
Mindfulness is a mental state that requires you to be fully aware of the present and can significantly reduce your levels of stress.
How does it work?
Mindfulness works through the art of sensation, observing what you’re doing in the here and now, and how you feel about it without judgment.
It trains your brain to anchor itself to the present, giving it a break from endless thoughts, emotions, and memories. It’s a way to control your mind, eliminate thoughts that needlessly repeat themselves, and leave your worries behind so you can savor every moment as it happens.
Benefits of Mindfulness
The benefits of mindfulness are plenty, but these six have been well-documented:
Helps Cancer Management
Among cancer patients, depression has a prevalence of 25%. Mindfulness interventions have been shown to reduce suicidal thoughts.
In addition, preliminary evidence suggests mindfulness interventions can reduce the severity of pain, anxiety, and depression in patients with cancer, thus improving their quality of life. A systematic review also showed its potential in increasing the levels of melatonin, a pineal gland hormone that may exhibit anti-cancer effects.
Improving Brain Health
Mindfulness meditation training can alter the brain’s structure and increase gray matter volume which is associated with reduced risks of cognitive impairment.
It can affect several regions of the brain, including the:
- Anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) which is tasked with “affective” cognitive functions like emotional expression, self-regulation, conflict-and-error monitoring, etc.
- Hippocampus which is responsible for learning, emotions, and memory
Reducing Stress
Mindfulness-based interventions have been shown to help individuals disengage from maladaptive behaviors, thought patterns, and emotions that prevent them from adapting and participating in life’s different aspects. As a result, people can be better protected against stress-related diseases.
Decreasing Symptoms of Depression
Mindfulness also helps with emotional regulation. In cases of depression, it suppresses worry and negative thoughts, helping reduce its symptoms. The same research also showed that it can lessen the risk of symptoms that lead to clinical disorders.
Targeting Eating Disorders
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy in people with bulimia nervosa (BN) or binge eating disorder (BED) can reduce binge-eating behaviors and improve executive control (the ability to exhibit goal-directed behavior) and emotion regulation, consequently decreasing impulsiveness.
Moreover, studies like this one established that it is a promising approach for tackling eating disorders.
Treating Anxiety
A 2017 study found that Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) is “moderately-to-largely effective” at reducing anxiety symptoms in patients with medical and psychiatric conditions. Another research found mindfulness-based therapy (MBT) helpful in treating people with anxiety or mood disorders.
6 Mindfulness Techniques To Calm Your Body and Mind
As with any new habit, practicing mindfulness can be difficult at first. But with consistency and effort, this change in mindset can be achieved. The good news is there are a handful of mindfulness techniques that are easily accessible. These include:
Body Scan
This practice helps you better connect with your body on a physical level. It forces you to take account of your bodily sensations from head to toe for any stress, tension, or pain. This allows you to experience feelings without judgment while having greater awareness of what you’re going through.
Journaling
When you write things down, it’s easier to be objective and gain a greater understanding of your problems and fears. It also allows you to indulge in positive self-talk. The result? A decrease in stress, anxiety, and symptoms of depression, which improves your mood, and gives you better confidence.
Meditation
Meditation uses a set of mental and physical techniques to fully engage you whether it’s through breathing, focusing on a specific object, or repeating a phrase in mind. This helps you relax while reducing anxiety and stress.
Mindful Breathing and Movement
Mindful breathing and movement involve taking slow and controlled breaths, focusing on how it flows through your body as you inhale or exhale, or paying attention to how your body feels as it moves. Bringing awareness to your movements can help release stagnant energy, make your thoughts feel less scattered, and prevent you from mulling over regrets.
Sensory Exercises
Sensory exercises are part of occupational therapy. It entails engaging your senses with different stimuli to boost self-regulation. This could include getting a massage, listening to calming music, taking a short walk outdoors, or cooking your favorite meal — the possibilities for using sensory experiences are endless.
Visualization
Visualization means focusing on something you want to achieve. The idea behind it is to hold your desires in your mind captive, repeatedly pushing the outcomes you want to achieve and believing that they will come true.
Professionally Aided Mindfulness Therapies
If you prefer to work with a professional to help you become more mindful, they may suggest the following therapies:
- Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT): It encourages you to accept your feelings and thoughts, helping you face the problem instead of fighting it.
- Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT): DBT started as a treatment for personality disorders but is now being used to improve emotion regulation among everyday individuals.
- Mindfulness-based art therapy (MBAT): This combines mindfulness with art therapy to decrease distress levels while promoting health and wellness.
What Are the 5 Basics of Mindfulness?
Whichever technique you decide to go with, learning how to practice mindfulness on your own consists of 5 basic steps:
- Choose a place with few disturbances. You want to focus on the present and let go of your past and worries about your future. You cannot do that in a place where you’re constantly distracted.
- Focus on your breathing, how it happens, and how it moves through your body.
- If you find yourself breathing and not meditating, bring your attention back to your breath and get in touch with your senses so you can keep your mind from wandering.
- Allow the experience to consume you and take it for what it is. Don’t set any expectations or they will foster feelings of dissatisfaction.
- Be mindful in everything you do, whether eating, walking, or any of your day-to-day activities. Remember that small changes bring big benefits.
Conclusion
From better health, awareness, and a more relaxed state of mind, mindfulness has many benefits. If you want to start enjoying them, mindfulness exercises are easy enough for anyone to do. As you embark on your journey of mindfulness, be patient with yourself and accept your progress. After all, mindfulness is ultimately about enjoying the moment without worrying about the past or future.
Other Articles You Might Be Interested In:
What is your Ikigai?
Not everyone wants to live a long life. But what about a happy and healthy life? If this is you, sit down and pull up a chair. Ikigai might be the answer.
Stroke Rehabilitation: Overcoming Mental Barriers
Dealing with the aftermatch of a stroke can lead to a whirlwind of emotions including confusion, hopelessness, disappointment, and even despair. If you are in the process of recovery, these emotions are completely normal. Here I break down some of the most common...
Not what you get, but what you become
"What you get by achieving your goals is not as important as what you become by achieving your goals." -Zig Ziglar I often get messages from people who are feeling discouraged. "Progress isn't fast enough". "The process is too challenging". Oh, and by the way, "this...
The Gift of Language
“I will never do (X) ” “I Can’t” “I am always going to be this way” “I will be this way forever” “This is impossible” If you have been following me for a while, you know that I discourage this type of language. It is self-limiting at best, and self-destructing at...
Best Brain Exercises For Stroke Recovery
Best Brain Exercises For Stroke Recovery A stroke can cause long-term damage to the brain, impair movement, and significantly diminish cognitive abilities. Mobility and strength training to retrain the muscles after a stroke is a huge part of the stroke recovery...
Gratitude, Pain, and Suffering
"Gratitude is the healthiest of all human emotions. The more you express gratitude for what you have, the more likely you will have even more to express gratitude for."- Zig Ziglar Ahh, the practice of gratitude. From my earliest memories, I was told “gratitude” is...
Superman
A hero is an ordinary individual who finds the strength to persevere and endure in spite of overwhelming obstacles". - Christpher Reeve, Superman Christopher Reeve. Many know of him as a super hero. And of course this is true. He IS the original Superman. And...