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Sarah Hensley

Psychotherapy and Counselling

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More good reasons to meditate

November 30, 2010 by Sarah Hensley Leave a Comment

We know now that mediation is good for managing stress but as these latest research findings demonstrate, meditation is much more than just a relaxation technique. Here are five more good reasons to take up meditation.

To enhance concentration

Meditation has an undeserved reputation for being esoteric and difficult to learn. In truth, it’s really nothing more than the practice of focusing the mind intently on a particular thing or activity. It seems logical that regular meditation would hone a person’s powers of concentration, and a recent study in the Journal of Neuroscience (1) found just that. In the study, three months of intensive meditation training led to improvements in attentional stability – the ability to sustain attention without frequent lapses.

To improve sleep

Research indicates that meditation may help fight insomnia. In a study from India’s National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences (2), researchers looked at how sleep was affected by vipassana meditation. This form of meditation involves focusing the mind on mental and physical processes in order to develop insight. The study included 105 healthy men between the ages of 30 and 60. Half were experienced vipassana meditators, and half had no experience with any type of meditation. The meditators showed enhanced slow wave (deep) sleep and REM sleep across all age groups. In contrast, the non-meditators showed a pronounced decline in slow wave sleep with age, a sign of declining sleep quality in the older men.

To manage pain

One of the best-studied medical uses of meditation is for helping manage chronic pain. The form of meditation often employed for this purpose is mindfulness meditation, which involves fully focusing on whatever is being experienced from moment to moment. The idea is to take note of the here-and-now experience without judging or reacting to it. For chronic pain sufferers, mindfulness may help them notice and accept their pain without becoming anxious and panicky, which just makes the pain worse. However, a study from the University of Montreal (3) suggests that long-term practice of mindfulness meditation may also lead to physical changes in the brain that directly affect pain perception. The study matched 17 expert meditators with non-meditators of the same age and gender. Structural MRI brain scans showed that the meditators had a thicker cortex in certain pain-related areas of the brain. This cortical thickening was associated with lower pain sensitivity.

To live longer

Meditation may influence not only quality of life, but also quantity. Three converging lines of research explain why. One, meditation may help counter the body’s stress response and all the physical wear and tear that goes along with chronic stress. Two, meditation may help slow aging by decreasing oxidative stress – cellular damage caused by highly reactive molecules known as free radicals. Several studies have linked meditation to reductions in various measures of oxidative stress. There is also evidence of enhanced activity by antioxidants – molecules that defend the body against free radicals – during meditation. Three, meditation may help fight chronic inflammation throughout the body, which contributes to diseases as diverse as obesity, atherosclerosis, diabetes, cancer and Alzheimer’s disease. Research indicates that meditation can dampen several inflammatory processes.

To connect with others

Meditation might seem like the ultimate in self-absorption. But at least one form of meditation, known as loving-kindness meditation, also seems to help build a sense of social connectedness. In loving-kindness meditation, the mind is sharply focused on compassionate feelings and well wishes that are directed toward real or imagined others. A study in the journal Emotion (4) found that just a few minutes of this form of meditation practice increased positive, connected feelings toward strangers.

References:

1.Mental training enhances attentional stability: neural and behavioral evidence.

Lutz A, Slagter HA, Rawlings NB, Francis AD, Greischar LL, Davidson RJ.

Journal of Neuroscience, 2009 Oct 21;29(42):13418-27.

2. Practitioners of vipassana meditation exhibit enhanced slow wave sleep and REM sleep states across different age groups. Ravindra Pattanashetty,Sulekha Sathiamma, SathyaPrabha Talakkad, Pradhan Nityananda,  Raju Trichur, Bindu M Kutty.Article first published online: 25 NOV 2009, DOI: 10.1111/j.1479-8425.2009.00416.x

© 2009 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2009 Japanese Society of Sleep Research

3. Cortical thickness and pain sensitivity in zen meditators.

Grant JA, Courtemanche J, Duerden EG, Duncan GH, Rainville P. Emotion. 2010 Feb;10(1):43-53.

Filed Under: Meditation Tagged With: meditating, meditation, why meditate

Overcoming anxiety with mindfulness therapy

November 30, 2010 by Sarah Hensley Leave a Comment

General Anxiety Disorder (GAD) is a very common condition that affects many of us at some time in our lives. At any one time it is estimated that nearly 15 per cent of the Australian population (around two million people) has been diagnosed with GAD and are actively seeking treatment through medication or some form of cognitive therapy.

In essence recurrent anxiety is a form of intense worrying about health, work, fear of the future or a wide range of situations that may occur in the future that creates an immense amount of emotional suffering. So what can we do to control our anxiety levels?

It is important to understand that anxiety, like most emotional reactions, has a structure.Bottom of Form

We are all familiar with the patterns of recurring negative thinking: the thought loops that maintain and amplify worry and anxiety. This internal dialogue can be relentless and often hits us in the early hours of the morning, if we can sleep at all! This negative thinking tends to solidify into generalized beliefs about the future, about ourselves and other people that takes on a life of their own. We become consumed by worry about things that may never happen. But, most importantly, the worry thinking does not in any way help us deal with the objective reality of things that need our attention. In fact the reactive thinking makes us less able to cope, leaves us feeling drained and confused.

Clearly, the path to controlling anxiety must involve changing these internal negative thought loops and beliefs. However, most people find this extremely hard to do.

Mindfulness is a therapeutic technique that emerged from Eastern philosophy and encourages us to live fully in the present moment. Western psychology has borrowed many of the concepts and using aspects of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) works to make a distinction between who we are and what we think. So often what we think is going to happen, what we think other people are thinking and our own inner judgements and criticisms make life seem more stressful than it really is.

Focusing on releasing the trapped, frozen emotional energy that has become attached to habitual thinking is one of the primary focuses of Mindfulness Therapy. First we train ourselves to identify these negative thought reactions. This is most important, because we cannot change what we cannot see. Therefore, we must make our reactions visible by paying very close attention to catch them as and when they arise. But after mastering this, we shift our attention away from the content or story that forms the cognitive structure of the anxiety reaction to the emotional feeling quality that gives it power. This is called “sitting with the emotion.” We learn to sit with our anxiety, without getting caught up in further reactivity and thinking, or in trying to attack the negative thoughts. We are, in fact, learning to turn our attention towards the reaction, and this changes everything.

Mindfulness Therapy is well researched and evidence-based. A recent study* took a sample of anxious subjects and treated one group with Progressive Muscle Relaxation and thought suppression and a second with Mindfulness Therapy. Both groups showed equal post-treatment improvement in the clinical and daily self-report measures. However, mindfulness participants reported better emotional meta-cognition (emotional comprehension) and showed improved indices of somatic and autonomic regulation (reduced breathing pattern and increased vagal reactivity during evocation of cardiac defense). These findings suggest that mindfulness reduces chronic worry by promoting emotional and physiological regulatory mechanisms contrary to those maintaining chronic worry.

EXERCISE

1. Sit down and get comfortable. Close your eyes. Allow yourself to relax and practice basic mindfulness of breathing to steady the mind.

2. Open the field of your awareness until it feels like a large space.

3. Introduce an anxiety emotion into this space and experiment with just sitting with it as you would with a friend: looking and listening very carefully with interest and an open mind.

4. Find the colour that best fits the feeling.

5. Experiment with surrounding that colour with another colour. Try the exact opposite colour first and notice the shift in feeling intensity of the anxiety.

6. Develop this imagery and try other modifications in size, position and movement.

7. Continue monitoring the change in intensity on a 1-10 scale. When the anxiety has reduced by at least 50% open your eyes and take a break before returning for another round.

8. Repeat the whole process 5 to 10 times for 3 to 4 days. Notice how your perceptions change each day.

Now, of course it is easier to do this with a skilled mindfulness therapist, but you will probably be quite surprised at how quickly things change once you get down to the detailed sensory level, made possible through focused mindfulness.

If you are interested in Mindfulness Therapy call Sarah Hensley on 0405 394 202.

*‘Treating chronic worry: Psychological and physiological effects of a training programme based on mindfulness’ (Delgado, L. C., Guerra, P., Perakakis, P.,Vera, M. N., et al. (2010). Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1-10.)

Filed Under: Anxiety Tagged With: dealing with anxiety, overcome anxiety, overcoming anxiety

Research support hypnosis as treatment for anxiety and depression

November 30, 2010 by Sarah Hensley Leave a Comment

Research into treatments for anxiety and depression is showing that Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) used with hypnosis to be significantly more effective than CBT alone and that the results were maintained at both six and 12 month follow ups.*

Leading clinical hypnotherapist Dr Michael Yapko describes hypnosis as ‘a vehicle for communicating important ideas, not a therapy in itself’. It provides a focussed and absorbed state where the client is able to listen, remain attentive, be responsive and be less analytic.

I support the theory that what we do in hypnosis can be done in conscious state, however the use of clinical hypnosis in therapy allows us to ‘get out of our own way’ and move more easily to adaptive ways of thinking, feeling and acting.

I have a special interest in working with anxiety and depression. I believe CBT in hypnosis, combined with mindfulness practices and lifestyle changes offers clients the best chance of sustainable recovery. To make an appointment contact me here.

*Alladin.A  & Alibhai, A. (2007) Cognitive Hypnotherapy for Depression: An Empirical Investigation. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis.

Filed Under: Anxiety, Depression, Hypnosis Tagged With: hypnosis, hypnosis treatment, hypnotherapy

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