Showing posts with label Stress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stress. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Breathing: The Little Known Secret to Peace of Mind

“A few weeks ago shooting, cars exploding, screaming, death, that was your world. Now back home, no one knows what it is like over there so no one knows how to help you get back your normalcy. They label you a victim of the war. I am not a victim… but how do I get back my normalcy? For most of us it is booze and Ambien. It works for a brief period then it takes over your life. Until this study, I could not find [the] right help for me, BREATHING like a champ!” Those were the words of a 25 year old marine, a veteran of the war in Afghanistan who partook in the research study I ran with Dr. Richard Davidson at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Whereas therapeutic and drug treatments had not helped many of the participants who volunteered for my study, a breathing practice – the intervention we used – did. One of the veterans in our study has since gone on to become an instructor so he can share the practices he learned with other veterans. “Thank you for giving me my life back,” he told us.
The Breath Is a Powerful Tool to Calm the Mind
We have an intuitive understanding that the breath can regulate our mind and emotions. Most of us have either told others or been told ourselves to “take a deep breath” when things got challenging. Most clinical psychologists use some kind of breathing practice with patients. However, because breathing happens automatically, many of us don’t give the breath as much attention as it deserves nor have we learned to harness its full potential to calm our minds.

One of the reasons why breathing can change how we feel is that emotions and breathing are closely connected. A revealing research study by Pierre Phillipot showed that different emotional states are associated with distinct respiration patterns. In Phillipot’s study, participants came in and were instructed to generate emotions like sadness, fearanger and happiness to the best of their ability. While they were experiencing the emotions, Phillipot’s team requested participants to closely observe and report on their own respiration patterns. The research team found that each emotion was associated with a distinct pattern of breath. For example, when the participants felt anxious or afraid, they breathed more quickly and shallowly and when they felt happy, they breathed slowly and fully. Even more interesting was the follow-up study in which  the researchers invited in a different group of participants into their lab and instructed them to breathe in the patterns they had observed corresponded to emotions. The researchers literally told the participants how to breathe and then asked them how they felt. Lo and behold, the participants started to feel the emotions that corresponded to the breathing patterns!
This finding is revolutionary: We can change how we feel using our breath! Given the fact that it is so difficult to change one’s emotions using thoughts alone – try “talking yourself out of” intense anger or anxiety – , learning to use the breath becomes a very powerful tool. Since it is so difficult “talk” our way out of our feelings, we can learn to “breathe” our way through them.  After participating in a 6-day workshop, veterans who said they had felt “dead” since returning from Iraq said they felt alive again. 2 years later, they are spokespeople for the program, volunteering to encourage other veterans to learn to breathe again.
More Benefits of Learning Breathing Practices
Several studies suggest that controlled yogic breathing has immediate and positive effects on psychological well-being, as well as on physiological markers of well-being, such as blood pressure and heart rate. Within minutes you will feel better and place your body in a significantly healthier state. The long-term effects of a daily breathing practice are even more pronounced. By activating the part of our nervous system associated with “resting and digesting” (the parasympathetic nervous system), breathing practices may “train” the body to be calmer. For example, preliminary studies have found that regularly practicing breathing exercises lowers one’s level of cortisol — the “stress hormone.” Having lower levels of this hormone may be indicative of an overall calmer state of being, which may translate into less reactivity in the face of inevitable life stressors and less risk of heart disease. Although substantial studies of yogic breathing and the brain have yet to emerge, preliminary brain studies of meditation and the breath suggest that they activate brain areas involved in the control of the autonomic system, such as the insula. Control of the breath appears to activate brain regions that guide the parasympathetic, or “rest and digest,” processes of the body, perhaps thereby inducing its calming effects. Deep breathing has even been found to reduce pain.
A Breathing Practice to Try at Home: Alternate Nostril Breathing
This gentle pranayama is said to cool the mind and emotions. You may notice that, at any given time, one nostril is dominant (that is, air flows more smoothly through one nostril and only partially through the other). The dominant nostril alternates throughout the day. Preliminary research suggests that breathing through the right nostril oxygenates the left side of the brain, while breathing through the left nostril oxygenates the right side of the brain. One of the reasons alternate nostril breathing may induce its calming and balancing effects on the mind is that it gently allows for airflow through both nostrils.
To practice, place the index and middle finger of the right hand on the center of the eyebrow, and place the thumb on the right nostril, and the ring finger and pinky on the left nostril. The left hand rests on the lap, palm facing up. Take a deep breath in and, closing the right nostril with your thumb, breathe out through the left nostril. Then take a deep breath in through the left nostril, close the left nostril with your ring finger and pinky at the end of the inhale, and exhale through the right nostril. Take a deep breath in through the right nostril and, closing the right nostril with the thumb, exhale on the left side, and start over. Do this with your eyes closed for about five minutes. Notice the effects on your body and mind.
Want to Learn to Breathe Again?
The veterans I worked with learned the practices taught in the Project Welcome Home Troops workshop which teaches Sudarshan Kriya Yoga. The International Association for Human Values offers this program programs for veterans www.pwht.org)”>(www.pwht.org), in schools (http://www.youthempowermentseminar.org), and in prisons (http://www.prisonsmart.org/). This practice is also taught for the general population by the Art of Living Foundation, see artofliving.org. Elementary yogic breathing practices can also be learned in general yoga classes. Kundalini yoga classes, for example, place a particular emphasis on breathing practices.

Thursday, 5 June 2014

How To Turn These Life Setbacks Into Opportunities For Growth





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MINDFULNESS

Navigating through life's most stressful situations can oftentimes feel like swimming against a swift current -- no matter how hard we try to stay calm, we drift further along, getting more and more wrapped up in our rambling, reactive thoughts. As this process repeats itself time and again in our daily lives, the stress can leave us feeling more mentally frustrated, physically depleted and emotionally exhausted than ever.
In recent years, chronic stress has become recognized as one of the largest public health issues in the United States. According to the American Psychological Association's 2013 Stress in America survey, 42 percent of adults said their stress has increased -- and to an unhealthy level -- in the past five years. Most respondents said they value the ability to manage stress, but very few lend themselves the time and space to learn how to do so.
When life's stresses begin to feel less than bearable, one way to reduce tension and anxiety is to pause and ask yourself, "What can I learn from this situation?" This question not only allows you to manage the stress that's weighing you down, but helps you to find the positive element (and there always is one, if you look hard enough) in any situation. Despite how uncomfortable they may make you feel, some of life's most important (and formative) lessons are learned during the times when you're struggling and feel most vulnerable.
Here are six of life's most stressful situations that can be transformed into opportunities for personal growth.
Dealing with a difficult person?
argument
Find your ability to empathize.
As tough it might be to take a step back from your own frustration and consider a situation from another person's perspective, practicing empathy is one of the most important skills you can learn when it comes to building any kind of relationship. Leaving all judgments, opinions and criticisms aside, empathy allows both parties to express themselves, feel heard, and begin breaking down defensive walls that can make communication so challenging. Try to find your common ground with the other person -- however big or small it may be -- in order to feel more connected and less combative.


On a tight deadline at work?
work deadline
Learn to harness the calming power of your breath.
This tried-and-true stress management technique might seem obvious, but setting a slower, intentional pace with your breathing can help your body begin relaxing within seconds. When you start feeling overwhelmed, notice how your breath becomes shallow, and make a more conscious effort to slow your breathing. Focus on counting slowly through a series of steady inhales and exhales, and notice how much calmer your body feels. Try this breathing technique the next time you notice stress sabotaging your breathing.


Dealing with travel delays?
passengers bags airport
Practice patience.
While the thoughts of sitting idly in an airport or staring at the insides of a subway tunnel may make your skin crawl, the challenge of waiting presents the perfect opportunity to build patience. There is incredible power in this spiritual practice, from intentionally silencing the mind to freeing yourself from unwanted emotions. Developing patience will not only make you feel more at ease the next time your commute doesn't go as planned, but it could also help improve your decision-making skills.


Lost your job?
woman fired
Cultivate resilience. 
While unemployment may feel like the worst thing that's ever happened to you, losing a job or getting fired is something that nearly everyone faces at one point or another. Accepting the situation and channeling your energy into your next steps can lead you to even bigger and better opportunities -- just look at these eight successful women who have been fired. Let the loss be an opportunity to ignite your fire of self-worth, fine-tune your personal brand, and start searching for a place where you'll ultimately be far happier and more successful.

Ending a relationship?
breakup
Discover gratitude.
Whether you're dealing with a tough break-up or messy divorce, saying goodbye to someone you love can feel like saying goodbye to a part of yourself, too. It can be one of the most painful experiences you ever encounter, but that doesn't necessarily have to be a bad thing. Take this time to cultivate a sense of gratitude for the good times you shared, the lessons (both good and bad) you learned from the experience, and the opportunities that await you in the future. Searching within to find the things you are most thankful for in life can help you reframe your perspective, realize how lucky you are, and appreciate the good things in life that aren't dependent on another person.


Starting over from scratch?
mindfulness practice
Practice mindfulness.
Whether you're moving across the globe, ending a bad relationship or starting a new job, redesigning your life and making a major transition can be exciting, but also a major source of stress and anxiety. Instead of getting lost in endless thoughts, emotions and worries about the future, take this as a chance to practice finding stillness through cultivating a focused awareness on the present moment. Letting your thoughts go as easily as they arise will help you stay calm, collected and focused on the new path unfolding in front of you. There's no better time to meditate and get to know yourself through the practice of mindfulness than when you're actively rewriting your own personal definition. Instead of living in the future, learn to embrace the now




Monday, 26 May 2014

Harvard Yoga Scientists Find Proof of Meditation Benefit

  Nov 22, 2013 
Scientists are getting close to proving what yogis have held to be true for centuries -- yoga and meditation can ward off stress and disease.

Photographer: Luis Acosta/AFP via Getty Images
People take part in a meditation day for peace in Colombia at Bolivar Square in Bogota,... Read More

John Denninger, a psychiatrist at Harvard Medical School, is leading a five-year study on how the ancient practices affect genes and brain activity in the chronically stressed. His latest work follows a study he and others published earlier this year showing how so-called mind-body techniques can switch on and off some genes linked to stress and immune function.
While hundreds of studies have been conducted on the mental health benefits of yoga and meditation, they have tended to rely on blunt tools like participant questionnaires, as well as heart rate and blood pressure monitoring. Only recently have neuro-imaging and genomics technology used in Denninger’s latest studies allowed scientists to measure physiological changes in greater detail.
“There is a true biological effect,” said Denninger, director of research at the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, one of Harvard Medical School’s teaching hospitals. “The kinds of things that happen when you meditate do have effects throughout the body, not just in the brain.”

Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg
A man practices yoga on the waterfront at Nariman Point in Mumbai.

The government-funded study may persuade more doctors to try an alternative route for tackling the source of a myriad of modern ailments. Stress-induced conditions can include everything from hypertension and infertility to depression and even the aging process. They account for 60 to 90 percent of doctor’s visits in the U.S., according to the Benson-Henry Institute. The World Health Organization estimates stress costs U.S. companies at least $300 billion a year through absenteeism, turn-over and low productivity.

Seinfeld, Murdoch
The science is advancing alongside a budding “mindfulness” movement, which includes meditation devotees such as Bill George, board member of Goldman Sachs Group and Exxon Mobil Corp., and comedian Jerry Seinfeld. News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch recently revealed on Twitterthat he is giving meditation a try.

As a psychiatrist specializing in depression, Denninger said he was attracted to mind-body medicine, pioneered in the late 1960s by Harvard professor Herbert Benson, as a possible way to prevent the onset of depression through stress reduction. While treatment with pharmaceuticals is still essential, he sees yoga and meditation as useful additions to his medical arsenal.
Exchange Program
It’s an interest that dates back to an exchange program he attended in China the summer before entering Harvard as an undergraduate student. At Hangzhou University he trained with a tai chi master every morning for three weeks.
“By the end of my time there, I had gotten through my thick teenage skull that there was something very important about the breath and about inhabiting the present moment,” he said. “I’ve carried that with me since then.”
His current study, to conclude in 2015 with about $3.3 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health, tracks 210 healthy subjects with high levels of reported chronic stress for six months. They are divided in three groups.
One group with 70 participants perform a form of yoga known as Kundalini, another 70 meditate and the rest listen to stress education audiobooks, all for 20 minutes a day at home. Kundalini is a form of yoga that incorporates meditation, breathing exercises and the singing of mantras in addition to postures. Denninger said it was chosen for the study because of its strong meditation component.
Participants come into the lab for weekly instruction for two months, followed by three sessions where they answer questionnaires, give blood samples used for genomic analysis and undergo neuro-imaging tests.

‘Immortality Enzyme’
Unlike earlier studies, this one is the first to focus on participants with high levels of stress. The study published in May in the medical journal PloS One showed that one session of relaxation-response practice was enough to enhance the expression of genes involved in energy metabolism and insulin secretion and reduce expression of genes linked to inflammatory response and stress. There was an effect even among novices who had never practiced before.
Harvard isn’t the only place where scientists have started examining the biology behind yoga.

In a study published last year, scientists at the University of California at Los Angeles and Nobel Prize winner Elizabeth Blackburn found that 12 minutes of daily yoga meditation for eight weeks increased telomerase activity by 43 percent, suggesting an improvement in stress-induced aging. Blackburn of the University of California, San Francisco, shared the Nobel medicine prize in 2009 with Carol Greider and Jack Szostak for research on the telomerase “immortality enzyme,” which slows the cellular aging process.
Build Resilience
Not all patients will be able to stick to a daily regimen of exercise and relaxation. Nor should they have to, according to Denninger and others. Simply knowing breath-management techniques and having a better understanding of stress can help build resilience.

“A certain amount of stress can be helpful,” said Sophia Dunn, a clinical psychotherapist who trained at King’s College London. “Yoga and meditation are tools for enabling us to swim in difficult waters.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Makiko Kitamura in London at mkitamura1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Phil Serafino at pserafino@bloomberg.net

Wednesday, 21 May 2014

Tune Into The Wisdom Within!

21 May 2014 by Carmen Burby



Our body is intelligently equipped with everything it requires to serve us efficiently and effectively during the journey that is our physical existence. 

Recall

We need to recall times in which we felt wonderfully in tune with ourselves, when we felt at ease with our environment at home, at work, or with friends and so forthFor example, it could be a simple walk in nature on a sunny day, a sunset or sunrise, your favourite place, sharing a meal with friends, sitting in a garden bathed in warm sunshine, watching a child at play, a successful meeting with a client, a party you attended looking beautiful and radiant or just remembering the look of people on a sunny day.  Hold that memory and feel it, sense it, savour it, smell it, touch it, see it and embrace the recollection of that beautiful experience.  Would you agree with me that we feel and look more relaxed, happier and friendlier when we recall happy moments?

Spring Cleaning 
             Our Subconscious / Conscious Mind 
                       (In The Broad Sense)

  •  Subconscious Mind

It would be good if from time to time we try to do some mental spring cleaning, decluterring our minds as it were, disposing of unwanted material that does not serve us anymore.  It could be said that since our early formative years we have been storing memories in a generally random and indiscriminate manner. 

We stored everything, both good and bad events.  This is the work of the Subconscious Mind, which acts like a sponge.  Cannot reason, receives impressions and simple absorbs and works as it were on autopilot.  It does not actively filter or discriminate between the negative and positive impressions it receives.  It is like a bin in which you put anything.  It is the reservoir of all that we experience in life.  It accepts whatever is thrown into it!

  • Conscious Mind or The Intellect

As we develop we start to reason and challenge certain beliefs and principles that do not serve us anymore.  This is the work of our Conscious Mind, which reasons, discriminates, takes action and does not work on autopilot like a machine, but it is fallible and prone to make mistakes.  In taking action we make mistakes.  We did not perform as well as we hoped, we failed and felt disappointed but we can and will do better with perseverance, and we can correct a mistake.  However, if we do nothing at all we do not have anything to correct.  Therefore, we must draw our own personal conclusions on what changes we need to make and what needs to be done in order to effect those changes!  Thus, we need to adjust, and make the necessary corrections and in this way we start to grow.  Mistakes may seem like obstacles to success, but they can propel us towards our ultimate goal if we choose to learn from them.

  • Would I be right in saying that at this stage you are thinking that I know these two concepts already, but how can I start cleansing my subconscious of the unwanted material which is no longer beneficial to me?
To answer this question, I will base my reply on Swami Visnu-devananda’s book The Complete Illustrated Book of Yoga.  At page 267 he says that “instead of guiding and giving proper suggestions with the developed intellect, man interferes with the natural work of the subconscious through wrong suggestions and thus adds miseries to his life.  However, with the help of the subconscious mind, we can change vicious nature by cultivating healthy, virtuous qualities that are opposed to undesirable ones.  If we want to overcome fear, we must concentrate on the opposite quality, courage.  The positive always overcomes the negative.  Even distasteful tasks and duties can be changed by cultivating a desire and taste for them.  All actions, pleasures, and experiences leave subtle impressions on the subconscious mind”.

In this way, by depositing opposite positive impressions in our subconscious mind we are burning as it were the negative impressions, which are impeding our development and causing us misery.  So, in this way the more spring-cleaning we do the more room we make for more positive impressions. 

Conclusion

In our daily lives, when we experience some daunting and trying times, no matter how busy we might be, we can just close our eyes for a few seconds to bring inner awareness and tune into ourselves with our active conscious mind to access the positive deposits we made in our subconscious mind. 

Hold a memory and feel it, sense it, savour it, smell it, touch it, see it and embrace the reminiscence of that beautiful experience.  Would you agree with me in saying that we feel and look more relaxed, happier and friendlier when we recall happy moments?

NB:
This blog is based on the teachings of Swami Visnu-devananda as outlined in his book The Complete Illustrated Book of Yoga and of Swami Jyotirmayananda, who is the Director of the Sivananda Yoga Centre in London who recently led a workshop on Yoga and Stress management.  The workshop was like a beacon, which enlightened me and inspired me to write a few lines on this subject, but in reality I am only skimming the surface of the theme.


© 2014 Carmen Burby.   htpp://www.energysprings.blogspot.com


Wednesday, 7 May 2014

Yoga At Home - Ten Steps

10 Steps of Yoga at Home

8 May 2014 by Carmen Burby

          It is an understatement to say that time is our most precious commodity.  There are times when we literally try to manage it more efficiently by eliminating certain activities that we believe are less fundamental to our regimented life style.  We tend to give priority to our immediate, most pressing external responsibilities, thus neglecting ourselves, sometimes reaching the inevitably point of exhaustion. 

With this in mind, the Ten Steps of Yoga at Home was created to assist you in your personal journey of discovery towards a healthier and happier way of life. 

1. 
Choose A Space For Your Practice. 

Arrange a small area in your home where you can place your mat and that allows you to lay your arms alongside your body, above your head and stretched out on the floor at 90 degrees to your body.  Nearby obstacles should be avoided to allow total freedom of movement.

2. 
Purchase a CD or DVD

If you are a beginner an instructional CD or DVD or MP3 / MP4 will guide through your initial practice.  However, if you are an experienced yogi you may like to create your own practice.  You can choose your media depending on what you would like to achieve from your class.  Maybe you would like to have a dynamic class, which will include fast paced exercises, or maybe you would prefer to have a relaxing class with gentle, meditative and therapeutic exercises.  So, choose the appropriate accompaniment for your personal journey.

3.
Establish A Regular Daily Routine

Choose a time, which you can devote entirely to yourself without external interruptions.  If you have limited time available you may allow yourself between 15 – 30 minutes, with the ultimate aim of maintaining a full two-hour session.  This time, solely dedicated to yourself, will nurture you and promote your well being by creating a more relaxed, peaceful and energised person.  

4. 
Create An Intention

Decide what your intention is for the day’s practice.  What do I want to achieve?  To attain a balanced mind?  To manage daily stress? To stay relaxed so I am able to handle anything in a calm manner? To develop compassion?  To empower myself to change my life style?  To heal? Or do I want to dedicate my practice to a friend who is in need?  Throughout your practice try to focus on your intention.

5.
Concentrate On A Mantra

Start your practice by chanting your preferred mantra or your own mantra if you have one, or you may simply repeat the universal mantra OM three times.  The focus on the mantra prepares us mentally and spiritually for the class.

6. 
Breathing Exercise

I believe it is a good practice to perform a breathing exercise at the beginning of your practice as it prepares you for your session by helping the body eliminate large quantities of carbon dioxide and other impurities.  This permits the red blood cells to absorb more oxygen, increasing the richness of the blood as Swami Sivananda mentions in his new book of yoga.  Thus, you will feel alert and inspired for the practice to come.

7. 
The Practice

Depending on how much time you have allowed for your day’s practice, start by focusing on your intention, then your mantra, the breathing exercise and Sun Salutation followed by the main postures (asanas).  If your time is very limited try doing the Sun Salutation, which consists of 12 bending and stretching postures (asanas).  It is aimed at warming up, adding flexibility to the spine and toning the entire body and its performance assists greatly in the subsequent execution of the asanas.  Always conclude with the final relaxation.

8. 
Final Relaxation

The session ends with the final relaxation.  Lying down in Savasana (corpse pose) for at least 10 minutes to relax every part of your body.  Swami Sivananda says “It is vital that you integrate this relaxation time into your asana session right from the start.  Otherwise the mind may find an excuse to leave it out and you will not absorb the full effects of the asanas”  (The New Book of Yoga – The Sivananda Yoga Centre).

9.
Patience Is A Virtue

Be consistent in your practice and avoid self-criticism.  At whatever stage you are at in your practice try to concentrate on your own experience.  There are a number of magazines, which depict experienced practitioners in advanced postures and on seeing them one may think I will never be able to achieve these postures.  Be patient with yourself, your practice is a personal journey.  

10.
Closing Your Practice / Gratitude

Feel grateful for having given yourself the opportunity to have this new experience and acknowledge the benefits you are accumulating within.

Close your practice by chanting OM 3 times.
Om Namah Sivaya
(I salute the divine within you)

Addendum


I hope you will be consistent in your practice to give yourself the opportunity to fully understand and feel the benefits of this beautiful practice.  Approach every class with curiosity.   The guidance outlined above is just a template on which to build your practice.  


Wishing you an enlightened journey along the road to discovering the richness of Yoga!

© 2014 Carmen Burby.   htpp://www.energysprings.blogspot.com