Meditation
Meditation
What to Expect
With time and faith in the commitment to practice frequently, (daily meditating is
ideal), during your meditation time you may "leave the moment." A feeling of separation
exists where the mind is clear, clean and blank. You will still hear sounds around you,
but they will not interfere with your meditation.
Sometimes you may weep -- you may not even be aware of what is making you weep. It
is your own emotions having a voice of their own. Sometimes you may feel a smile across
your face -- that is contentment showing itself. Sometimes you may fall asleep and
awaken truly refreshed.
There is no right or wrong behavior during your meditation. It is your time for you.
Everyone deserves this kind of personal attention. This is a self-care activity; loving
oneself! Teach it to your children instead of a time-out in their room or corner. Teach it
to your friends, family, anyone who will listen. We can share this gift and get back as we
give. We are all better because of each person who meditates. The peace and joy felt by
those who meditate enters the world for all of us as positive energy. From it the world is
a better place. Imagine if we all practiced meditation!
Sit in a chair. It is important to have both feet on the ground.
You may choose to be barefoot. Let your arms rest comfortably by you resides.
Take several deep breaths. While letting your breathing becomes deeper and
even, picture yourself standing with your feet apart hands by your sides with your
fingers naturally open. Keep this picture in your mind as you continue.
Inhale … Exhale …
Allow your breathing to relax your body and clear your mind.
Picture a circle of energy near the base of your spine. This energy is strong. It
connects you to the earth. This energy generates instinctive feelings of survival. It
urges you to love and care for yourself.
Move up to the next circle of energy in your pelvic area – this is the center of your
emotions. Your acceptance of pleasure springs from this energy source. Accepting
the joy and contentment derived from physical pleasure will contribute to overall
balance in life.
The energy of the third Chakra is near the naval area. Your creativity will flow
from here. The essence of your spirituality begins with this positive energy
source. Your heart Chakra energy is about love. It is the source of active love that
is in everything you do. Your ability to love comes from here and includes your
capacity for empathy, sympathy, forgiveness and allows the abundance of all life
to be available to you. The positive essence is an overwhelming sense of fullness
felt as love.
The throat Chakra involves the energy of your own inner voice – guiding you to be
open and honest with yourself an others. This is your voice of wisdom. When
listened to this will lead you to take actions that will keep you balanced and true
to yourself.
The next energy level near your forehead will guide you to awareness of your
soul. Imagination is the magic of this Chakra. Let yourself free your mind and as
you accept the power and the awe of your own soul, so will you realize the soul
within everyone and everything.
Finally to the top of your head, the energy flows out and above you. It is directly
connected to your spiritual self and all spirituality in the world. With this Chakra,
flashes of enlightenment will occur -- moments of true understanding of the world
and all it contains. All events and emotions are clear and during those moments,
everything makes sense. This highest energy source is the essence of all life and
existence. It is true magic and it is yours.
Envision your whole being fully energized through your having focused on the
Chakra points. The body connection to each energy source will guide you to heed
its request for attention through physical sensations – a headache, a stiff back,
butterflies in your stomach.
Think … what is going on in your life that may be blocking the positive energy flow
– are you so busy with tasks that you must do that you have no time to be playful
and enjoy the day? Are you so involved with the technical side of daily activities
that you have no time for fantasy? Are you so busy taking care of everyone else’s
needs that you ignore your own needs and desires? Trust that these sensations
mean something. Think about it … Permit yourself to realize that as you notice
these connections, you will naturally save yourself, your soul your spirit. You will
be more vital in all that you do.
Allow your body to gently relax. Move yourself around on your chair until you feel
perfectly comfortable.
Now I want you to move your attention DOWN from your head to your chin and
DOWN from your chin to your throat and DOWN from your throat to your chest.
DOWN, DOWN to your stomach.
Now move down into that safe place deep within yourself, that place which is just
below your navel. This is your sacred sanctuary, a place that only you know about.
From that place, I want you to move into the hallway in your mind. Along the
hallway are many doors. One particular door is of golden light. You feel drawn by
that door and you move through the door of light into a place of peace, comfort
and protection.
Once through the door, you find yourself on a path through the woods. As you
move along the path, you faintly hear the sound of water. Birds sing in the trees.
The sunlight filters through the canopy of deep, green trees overhead. A warm,
gentle breeze caresses your face and blows lightly through your hair. You feel as if
you are being kissed by God. The smell of the forest and of wild flowers surrounds
you, bathing you in an essence so sweet and so wild that your senses are reeling.
You come to a body of water. Because it is part of the enchanted forest, this
water is pure, clean and clear. It is cool and inviting. You sit on the edge of the
bank and dip your cup into the sacred water and you drink. You are comforted and
refreshed.
You arise and continue moving on your path through these wondrous woods. Soon
you come to a clearing in the trees. The clearing is surrounded by stately oaks,
their branches extended to protect you. The color of the wild flowers stands out
strong against the greens of the grasses and the brown-black of the tree barks.
You breathe deeply of the sweet air. You know this place… you've been here
before. Maybe in your dreams or maybe in life - it doesn't matter. You just know
that it is your haven.
There is wonderful, soft green grass growing here and it invites you to sit down
and rest. Now you begin to hear in the distance other-worldly music, Tibetan
bells… flute music… soft chanting… You listen carefully, as you feel drawn to the
music.
You look up and see purple mountains in the distance. As you look, a tiny golden
Light appears. It draws closer and closer to you. It floats gently up the path
toward your little sanctuary. Its light is soft and gentle. Yet it shines with a
brilliance you have never seen.
As it reaches the outer edge of your sanctuary, it stops and becomes a large
pulsating crystalline light. You watch. You wait. You give the light permission to
enter your space.
The light draws forward and hovers just before you. The Light shimmers. Soft
strands of gold stream forth like a flower blossoming. As each petal of this light
unfolds, you see that something or someone is inside.
Then you see before you a wondrous being that you recognize as your spirit guide.
You know it is your spirit guide because you feel a strong surging of love pouring
out from it to you and you feel, deep in your heart, a strong answering outpouring
of love from you to it. You feel completely safe with this being. It may or may not
tell you its name, but it calls you by your name.
Spirit Guides will take any form that you need to understand right now. It can be
in the form of a human, an animal, an object or some divine form. See it! imagine
it! Know it is real!
What form is your spirit guide in? What shape is it? If it is human, is it male or
female? What does it smell like? What color is it? What does it feel like?
Begin to carry on a conversation with this wondrous being. Ask its name. What is
its purpose? Why has it come to you?
Let this being communicate itself to you and tell you why it is working with you.
Ask it for its help and guidance. Ask your guide what you need to know about your
life at this time. Tell your guide anything that is disturbing to you at this time.
Ask it how best to call upon it in the future.
Ask it to let you know it is there, consciously, within the next few days, whenever
you need help.
When you feel finished, thank your guide for the opportunity to meet and work
with it.
As the golden light folds back up around your guide, send it off with your best
thoughts and love. As it withdraws from your space, moving back up the path, you
sit back down in your spot. You understand that in this inner sanctuary you invite
any and all of your guides into your awareness.
This is exciting and you are fascinated with your experience, your experience of
expanding your horizons. You breathe deeply, relaxing and reliving in your mind,
what has happened. BREATHE.
As you do so, the path and the woods begin to fade and you find yourself gently
coming back to the present… to this room, this time and this place. When you are
ready, be sure to drink some water and maybe eat a slice of bread to ground
yourself.
Right now, it would be helpful to you if you wrote down all you have experienced,
exactly as it happened.
Bless you.
As the sun and water cascade over your body you absorb the healing
oxygen carried within your blood vessels though your whole system.
Your whole being sings with release and renewal as the source refuels
and fortifies your body and spirit.
In healing all is possible. As you heal your spirit and body your gifts to
the universe emerge.
Inhale… exhale as your re-enter the space around you. Open your
eyes and carry your renewed energy to all with whom you come in
contact.
I always take deep breaths as I start out. Big, steady strides- not
necessarily fast, but steady. Then, when I feel like I’m in sync, I
begin to consciously turn my mind off.
Walking meditation has long been practiced by people who are both
physically and spiritually enlightened. The two practices go together
naturally. Each provides the time and space to connect with your
soul. Silent or with music, anything goes.
Try it!
We are ready now for a period of relaxation.
Move your body so it can be in a comfortable position with your spine straight,
your palms facing up, and your feet flat on the floor.
Slowly close your eyes and start to breathe slowly, deeply and rhythmically.
I will help you attain a relaxation level where you will be mentally awake, but
your body will be comfortably asleep. Count from one to ten. Remember, the
higher the number the more deeply relaxed you become.
One…
Two…
Three…
Four… feel the sounds and energy in your body.
Five…
Six…
Seven… the boundaries of your body are gently disappearing.
Eight…
Nine…
Ten…
Your mind has expanded beyond the boundaries of your body, free from physical
tension and constraints where you can experience profound insights and life-
transforming breakthroughs.
Imagine a place where you feel peaceful and truly yourself. Use all your senses.
My place of peace is in a meadow by a running brook, flowers are all around. Red
rock formations are in the background, birds are singing. The sound of water
splashing on the rocks, the smell of spring flowers. There is a slight breeze on my
face. What do you see? What colors are there? What do you smell? What sounds do
you hear? What do you feel touching you? What emotions do you feel? Feel the
vibe, the peace that is here. Make it as real as possible.
And in this place of peace, imagine that coming toward you is YOU at your fullest
potential. Use all of your senses. What are you really like? What qualities do you
have within that reflect themselves to you now? What do you look like? Can you
list the qualities of your fullest potential, the love and intelligence that you are?
Can you feel the power, the goodness and the gift of life that you bring? Can you
see this potential unfolding in everything you’ve learned so far? Do you see the
mission and the courage and the path you are taking? Get a sense of it for a
minute. Tune in. Can you talk to your full potential self? Can you get the message?
Does your full potential self have a particular message for you now? How are you
doing in your life?
You’ll find that you can come back anytime you want to enjoy the peace of this
place and commune with your full potential self. As we count down from ten to
one you will be aware of an inner calm, a profound connection to your true self.
You will retain an inner knowing of who you are as you live your daily life. Count
from ten down to one. When we reach one you will be wide awake both physically
and mentally, rested, relaxed and alert.
Ten…
Nine…
Eight…
Seven… You’ll be wide awake and rested when we reach the count of one.
Six…
Five…
Four…
Three…
Two…
One…
Meditation is inner astronomy. You discover the stars, the moon, and the sun are all inside you.
What is Meditation?
Most dictionaries define the Western (Jewish, Christian, Islamic) meaning of the
word 'meditation,' but usually do not describe the Eastern (Hindu, Buddhist, Taoist)
concept of meditation. The most appropriate dictionary definition I could find reads
as follows. "If you meditate, you give your attention to one thing, and do not think
about anything else, usually as a religious activity or as way of calming or relaxing
your mind." This definition implies that meditation means thinking about something,
be it religious or mystical in nature, and that a constant thought process goes on while
one meditates. The purest Eastern definition of the word 'meditation' means not
thinking at all, but rather focusing consciousness on the cosmic whole, "the all and
the everything," as George Gurdjieff called it, without thought, judgment, or
distraction.
We can define 'meditation' as the art of consciousness becoming aware of itself on
the grand and cosmic scale. Meditation cannot be called a science as yet, because
science requires objective testing with objectively proven methods and results.
Meditation is on the road to becoming a real science, however, and not just an
intuitive art veiled in mystery. [see brain scans prove meditation changes the brain]
Why meditate?
Meditation brings a sense of fullness and completion, and is the only permanent
source of tranquility available to human beings. All other forms of serenity are
temporary and dissolve into conflict and chaos over time. The euphoria of drugs
quickly lead to misery and self-destruction. The wholesomeness of love, so beautiful
and ethereal, is a relatively short lived and fleeting experience. As J. Krishnamurti
said, meditation brings order and "That order is the order of the universe. It is
irrevocable and doesn't depend on anything." Meditation is the eternal essence of
nature taking on conscious form within the mortal human frame.
Meditation is an adventure of self-discovery. How can you live without knowing
who or what you are? If someone asks you who you are during the day, you may
state your name, as if a temporary label actually means something important. Ask
yourself who you are when you are in deep sleep, unconscious, and without even a
dream to prove that you exist at all. Ask yourself who you were ten months before
you were born, and who you will be just one moment after your body dies.
Meditation increases awareness of the natural phenomena that is actually going on
behind your own eyes. Self-knowledge has intrinsic value, even without the
indescribable bliss nature generously unleashes in those who practice meditation with
sincerity and patience.
Sitting Meditation
Classic sitting meditation is a vital part of all meditation traditions and has taken
many forms, some more effective than others. Some traditional approaches demand
that the student sit motionless for hours on end, as if becoming a frozen human statue
is the key to enlightenment. A more scientific approach does not make the human
body our enemy, but rather works with our natural physiology to allow more intense
meditation with less effort and discomfort. Masochism is not an effective path to
self-realization.
Begin by finding a relatively quiet place to meditate where you will not be
disturbed. All forms of classic sitting meditation should be done in silence, with no
background music. You can sit cross legged Asian style on a meditation pillow on
the floor, or use the Recliner Chair Method described below. Eyes may be fully
open, half open, or slightly open, letting in just two small slits of light. Meditating
with eyes fully closed is fine as long as the room remains brightly lit, so that enough
light passes through the eyelids to keep your brain alert. I use a powerful 500 watt
halogen torchiere lamp to illuminate my meditation room, and this lamp projects a
pleasing yellow-orange glow on my closed eyelids.
Meditating in a darkened room presents fundamental physiological problems.
When you sit quietly with your eyes closed in darkness, your brain interprets this
situation as a signal to start shutting itself down for sleep. Sleep inducing hormones
such as melatonin are released at the same time your heart rate and circulation are
reduced due to lack of movement. You feel swept away on a sea of quiet relaxation.
This pleasant experience may be light sleep state hypnosis, not meditation at all, and
thus does you little more good than taking a nap. Meditation means that you are
relaxed as if sleeping, but your consciousness is fully and intensely awake.
Therefore, if you meditate with your eyes closed, the room must remain brightly lit,
so that a significant amount of light passes through the eyelids.
The Sit-Stand Method
Another defense against sleepiness is to break up your formal meditation into three
fifteen minute sessions that are easy for your body to tolerate. Sit in quiet meditation
for fifteen minutes. Then stand for two minutes. Then sit for another fifteen minutes.
Then stand for two minutes. Then sit for a final fifteen minute session. This forty-
nine minute technique can be done once, twice, or three times a day for intense
practice. You can time yourself by making a tape recording with the sound of a bell
or a gong to let you known when to stand up, sit down, and begin and end meditation
sessions.
The sit-stand method largely eliminates the problem of cramps, soreness, and
numbness in legs often experienced by students attempting to sit for longer periods of
time than the body was naturally made to sit. The standing breaks increase blood
circulation which helps wakefulness. Comfort is maintained and we avoid the light
sleep state hypnosis problem mentioned earlier.
The transitions between sitting and standing in this method are an opportunity to
practice meditation in action. Normally, unless we are physically ill, our waking
lives are spent in motion and activity. Meditation must not be thought of as
something that is only done in a physically rigid state, far removed from the world of
work and play. The goal is to become meditative continuously, so that your very
being becomes cosmically conscious permanently and irrevocably. When you stand
up and sit down during meditation sessions, feel the inner flow of meditation
continue. Observe that your body is moving, but your basic existential identity
remains the same.
The Recliner Chair Method
Sitting for long periods of time in the traditional Asian cross legged position is
uncomfortable for most Western students of meditation. This physical discomfort,
which does nothing in itself to aid meditation, can be entirely eliminated through the
use of a recliner chair. The Recliner Chair Method is the most healthful method of
sitting as it avoids blocking vital blood circulation in the legs, yet has 100% of the
benefits of sitting on the floor in the full lotus position with back held rigidly straight.
Every living cell in your body produces energy, and when you increase blood flow
to your legs you increase the amount of energy produced by your leg muscles. This
is significant because during meditation sessions you become acutely aware that your
entire physical energy output is one unified phenomena. Using this method, students
who cannot comfortably sit for twenty minutes on the floor are often able to sit for
one full hour or even longer without back pain, numbness, or leg cramps. I highly
recommend the Recliner Chair Method as the first choice sitting method for all
Western students of meditation.
Contrary to popular belief, sitting with the back held rigidly straight does nothing
to aid meditation. The energy that rises up the back during meditation sessions is like
water in a garden hose. If you gently bend a hose into a mild arch, the flow of water
will not be affected in any perceptible way. With the Recliner Chair Method, the
back is held fairly straight in relationship to itself, but rests at an off-angle in
relationship to the floor rather than exactly perpendicular to the floor as in the full
lotus position.
In addition to our solid physical body that has weight and form, human beings
have a second body of energy created by the active energy content of the total human
nervous system. The electric like energy of the second body is constantly being
washed out through our hands and feet. This energy loss can be stopped by locking
the hands and feet together, creating a closed loop of energy that builds up over time.
This conserved energy is needed to strengthen the second energy body and push us
higher into meditation. The Recliner Chair Method is more effective than the full
lotus position in recycling second body energy, and is therefore the fastest acting and
most powerful sitting method available. [see explanation of the second energy body
in The Realms of Consciousness]
With this method you sit in a recliner chair that is set to a medium reclined
position. Shoes and socks should be removed for best results. If your feet get cold,
drape a towel or light blanket over your feet to keep them warm. The bare soles of
your feet should be pressed against each other and your legs relaxed, knees pointed
out to the sides of the chair. Hands can be locked together, laying comfortably in
your lap, or better yet, pressed against the center of your chest, one on top of the
other over the center of your emotional heart. By using this technique, energy that is
normally washed out through your hands is channeled directly into your heart center,
which fortifies both your heart center and your hara (belly center) simultaneously, as
all of your centers are connected. The exact internal wiring of your centers and their
electrochemical relationships to corresponding nerve bundles in the brain are not
currently understood. Fortunately, you do not have to scientifically understand the
phenomena of internal psychic centers to enjoy their benefits.
The Recliner Chair Method can be used in conjunction with any of the sitting
meditation techniques described on this web page, and usually eliminates the need for
the sit-stand method mentioned earlier. On occasion, I have had such intense
meditation sessions using this technique that I lost track of time and meditated for
two hours straight without the slightest physical discomfort. At the end of the session
I easily stood up, with no numbness, soreness, or physical discomfort of any kind.
What do you do while sitting?
The most basic approach to meditation is to relax, let go, and do nothing.
Surrender to the moment and watch yourself as a silent witness. If thoughts come to
mind, then observe the thoughts without adding to them by your active participation.
Be a detached and passive observer and simply feel your most basic fundamental
being. This inherently immense entity has been called "the ground of being."
The enlightened teacher J. Krishnamurti used the term "choiceless awareness" to
describe his own meditation method. This means being conscious without the
thought process choosing something smaller than your vast fundamental being to
focus on. Consciousness is like a glass ball floating in the depth of space. Light and
sensory input flows into the field of consciousness from all directions. When you
think, you focus your attention on just one area of sensory input, or you create a
thought from memory stored within the brain. With choiceless awareness, you are
not thinking or remembering, just floating and letting sensory input flow through you
from all directions without manipulating that input with the thought process. You
live in the moment and become totally open. This openness attracts energy from all
sides of the universe, which pushes you even higher.
Krishnamurti's choiceless awareness is the same "methodless method" that Zen
monks call "mindfulness." Hindu yogis sometimes call it "one pointed vision." A
more accurate term might be one object vision. This means that you observe
yourself, the sky, the trees, and the entire universe as one object. You no longer see
the world as a multitude of parts and disconnected events. Instead, you accurately
perceive the observer and the observed as exactly the same thing, with no artificial
wall of separation blocking the limits of consciousness. This singular entity becomes
acutely aware of itself in all its vastness. The one cosmic being, as Krishnamurti
said, is "beyond time" and is "untouched by thought." The revered sage Ramana
Maharshi described it as "infinite" and "bigger than the human race."
Another useful method is to lend special awareness to the breathing process felt in
the belly. Just behind and below your navel (belly button) lies the hara, which is felt
as an ethereal ball of energy. The hara is a natural balancing point of your
consciousness which can be thought of as the center of your being. Subjectively and
poetically speaking, the hara is where man and universe meet. It is the gateway
where we merge and become man-universe and universe-man. No one really
knows what the hara actually is, but we can use it to our full advantage. Consciously
developing a powerful hara center is the most important secret of meditation.
When your consciousness is centered in the hara instead of the head, your thinking
process slows down and you can relax in the expanded world of being. Trying to
stop distracting thoughts through will power alone leads to more thoughts and a self-
defeating inner struggle. By transferring your center of awareness to the hara,
thoughts gradually disappear on their own without inner conflict. That is why you
see Buddha statues with a big belly. It is an esoteric message that the hara is the key
to meditation.
Sit quietly and focus on your belly as it moves in and out as you breathe. Over
time the hara point will become more noticeable as your meditation grows stronger.
Sudden emergencies, such as near collisions on the highway, tend to activate the
hara center. We often get a "gut reaction" from sudden danger. You can nourish the
feeling of the hara by simply paying passive attention to it. This relaxed
concentration is very close to doing nothing, yet it is still a subtle effort. Drinking
herb tea or hot water before meditation sessions relaxes the gut and facilitates
awareness of the hara. Overeating and consuming cold drinks tends to make hara
awareness more difficult.
Here is a picture of Ramana Maharshi. If you look deeply into the photograph you
can sense his hara point. Energy from all corners of the universe is flooding into his
powerful hara center. Observe the look of sublime contentment on his face. Those
interested in the phenomena of the hara may be amused by my unproven theory about
the hara.
One can also concentrate on the heart center or the forehead center during formal
meditation sessions. The forehead center may simply be the frontal lobes of the
brain, which are known to become activated by meditation. I refuse to use the corny
old "third eye" label. The hara, heart, and forehead center are all somehow
connected, but I suggest you maintain healthy skepticism as to the old Asian
explanations of exactly how they are connected. If you activate the heart or forehead
center, the hara will automatically become energized.
The forehead center can be physically stimulated by gently rubbing the fingertips
on the skull at a centerline spot just above the hairline. The forehead center internally
feels like it is just behind the upper forehead, but I have found its most effective
finger stimulation spot to be higher into the front of the hairline. If you use the full
palm of the hand instead of just the fingertips, however, then placing the palm
directly on the upper forehead seems to work best. This may vary from person to
person as our skulls and exact brain locations are all a little different. I therefore
suggest you experiment as you gain progress. Trying to stimulate the forehead center
before you feel a great deal of inner energy is probably a waste of time. It is not the
physical touch that does the work. It is the energy coming off the palm and fingers
that reaches the target.
Sweeping House
This easy technique is designed to quickly sweep the clutter of thoughts from your mind. It is one of my favorite techniques, and I am continually amazed at how
much it helps with so little effort. It can be used at the start of formal sitting meditation sessions, or you can continue repeating the method every ten minutes during the
meditation session itself.
Begin by placing both hands behind your head. Rest your hands at the point where
the neck and head meet. Then quickly sweep your hands over the top of your head.
Imagine that your hands are gathering up all your thoughts as they move across the
top of your skull. When your hands reach just below your forehead, use a flicking
motion to throw your hands away from your face. Feel as if all of your thoughts are
being swept out of your head and thrown out into empty space. Repeat this rapidly
between ten and thirty times as needed. While accomplishing the sweeping motion,
feel that your center of consciousness is dropping down from your head to your hara
center in your belly. Rest in your hara center as you continue to meditate.
Sweeping House with a Kicker
A variation of the sweeping house technique is to add a breathing stage after the
sweeping stage is complete. Place your right palm (reverse hands if you are
lefthanded) on your upper forehead and place your left palm on the back of the right
hand. Now take four to seven deep breaths through the nose and feel as if you are
drawing the air all the way down to your belly. Fully exhale in a normal and relaxed
fashion after each breath. This breathing technique is not the bastrika method used in
traditional yoga. It is ordinary deep breathing done with intensity and fullness. After
exhaling the last breath, sit motionless for a few moments with your hands still on
your upper forehead. Cooperate with any upward flow of energy you may feel. This
energetic method can be done every ten minutes during an hour long sitting
meditation session to create a safe and effective kundalini technique.
WARNING Avoid the use of mantras and long repetitive chanting. Repeating the same
words over and over is a method of forgetfulness that will bore the mind and leads to
the light sleep state hypnosis problem mentioned earlier. I would define a mantra as
the repetition of words, usually meaningless, for a period of two minutes or more.
Mantras have traditionally been used for hours on end by students who become
mentally calmed and dulled by their use.
Mantras have proven to be medically helpful for some, because they can unleash
hormones that temporarily calm the mind. Mantras are healthier than taking
tranquilizers, but are fundamentally different from meditation, which relies on the
purifying fire of self-observation. Self-observation is a difficult task that requires
courage and an endurance of character and spirit. Real meditation has the real payoff
of leading to a naturally calm and expanded state of consciousness, not just an
artificially silenced mind that remains fundamentally shallow.
A Self-Inquiry Incantation
The use of meaningful incantations is quite different from mantra use, and can help
bring consciousness to greater clarity. Words can help because our minds are organic
hybrid analog-digital computers that process symbols, and words are symbols. The
words that deepen meditation form a strategic questioning, not a mantra.
Ramana Maharshi was a beloved Indian teacher who reached enlightenment
through self-inquiry, by asking the most fundamental question "Who am I?" Here is
a self-inquiry technique that expands Ramana Maharshi's method to make it even
more powerful. Speak out loud the following incantation with total intensity before
and/or during formal sitting meditation sessions. By the term "total intensity," I mean
the same level of intensity you would feel if you were just told that you only had one
hour left to live. Be emotional, be Italian, use your hands and body language if it
helps. Plead with the universe the following question.
What is this ball of consciousness? What is this ball of consciousness? What is this ball of consciousness? - You can repeat this question
more than three times if the spirit moves you. Go with the flow.
I am not this library of memories. I have no history. I have no biography.
I am the space. I have always been the space, and I crush these bonds of attachment now!
When speaking the words, "I crush these bonds of attachment now!," strike your upturned left palm
with the back of your right hand, like a hammer hitting an anvil, upon saying the
word "now!" Reverse hands if you are lefthanded. Do not overdo it and hurt your
hands. Just hit forcefully enough to produce a soft cracking sound, which adds drama
and helps wake up the central nervous system.
Resonate the words deep inside you without thinking of intellectual explanations
of who you are. Just asking this question is purifying and ennobling. Self-inquiry is
an innocent and fundamental endeavor, and you need an innocently naked mind to
see reality directly without the distortions of memory and thought. You can use this
questioning technique only at the beginning of formal sitting meditation sessions, or
you can repeat the incantation every ten minutes during meditation sessions to help
keep your energy focused.
Over time you will find the words become a trigger mechanism which allows you
to instantly drop all peripheral involvement and come home to your primordial
eternal being. We all have the same essential being, and that being is cosmic. No
one is left out of this universe. If you are part of the universe, you are all of the
universe! The small 'I' is dropped, and only the big 'I' remains. Then you can have a
good belly laugh, and that is the way I end most of my own meditation sessions. I
meditate until I start laughing from the hara center. Then I know I am cooked!
A gentler, less rigorous approach to this method is to mentally repeat the question,
"What is this ball of consciousness?," about a dozen times without vocalization. This small amount of repetition will
enhance and center your consciousness rather than dull it. For many students this
softer approach is all that is needed.
Word exercises are not for everyone. If you try them and feel nothing, then
concentrate on other methods first. As you slowly change your methods will change
with you. A method that is unusable now may be of great help to you in the future.
Mirror Gazing
Some students find that the use of a mirror virtually doubles the power of their
meditation sessions. Sit in front of a mirror and gaze into the reflected image, setting
your focus just above the head so that you view the wall behind you. Looking
directly at the face or eyes may be too intense an experience for many students, and
may lead to silly concern about personal appearance. Using this technique one only
views the physical body as a shadowy peripheral silhouette. Continue gazing for
twenty minutes, allowing the eyes to deeply relax their focus.
Enjoy the mirror gazing for twenty minutes, then stand for two minutes,
maintaining the heightened awareness as you change position. Then resume sitting in
quiet meditation for a further twenty minutes with eyes closed. This mirror gazing
technique takes forty-two minutes, but may be extended to one full hour if desired,
with eyes open and eyes closed sections remaining equal. Please practice this mirror
gazing method no more than once a day. Strong meditation techniques are medicine
and you should not overdose.
Mirror gazing is a form of tratak, the ancient yogic practice of fixing one's gaze
on an object with total intensity. You may practice tratak by staring at a candle's
flame, a distant tree, the picture of an enlightened teacher, or any object that is
pleasant to view. While practicing tratak, one must remain motionless and allow
oneself to become totally absorbed by the object you are viewing.
Eye Gazing
technique described above except that you look into the eyes of your loved one. Sit
together, staring softly into your partners eyes for twenty minutes. Then stand
silently for two minutes. Then sit in quiet meditation with eyes closed for a further
twenty minutes. This technique can readily lead to romantic intimacy, so pick your
partner carefully.
Cathartic Dancing Meditation
Total Awareness
This advanced method is recommended for those students who have practiced
other meditation techniques long enough to gain a feeling of floating bodilessness.
Begin this method by sitting with eyes fully open. Softly gaze at a blank wall, or
more preferably, look out a window at a distant vista. With the mind's eye (the eye of
consciousness behind your body's purely physical eyes) define your field of visual
consciousness as a circle. Imagine the top of your field of consciousness as the 12
o'clock position on a clock, and the bottom of your field of consciousness as the 6
o'clock position. With your mind's eye, not your physical eyes, slowly sweep your
attention clockwise from the top 12 o'clock position down to the 6 o'clock position,
then on to the 9 o'clock position, and then back up to the 12 o'clock position. Repeat
this process in the counterclockwise direction. Mentally strain to observe the very
outer edges of your visual field of consciousness where the light of consciousness
turns into the darkness of empty space. Go on repeating this process until you feel
you have had enough.
This is an powerful awareness exercise, not an eye exam, and that is why it is
recommended only for students with a number of years of experience in meditation.
After practicing this method for some time, you can begin to transform the method
into one of sudden expansion of awareness. You can gain the ability to perceive the
complete 360 degrees of the outer edges of your consciousness in one jump. This
feels like stepping back, literally out of your own mind, and looking back into your
mind from a close and friendly distance. You become identified with the Void, and
the perception of deep space around the flame of consciousness makes the flame
grow brighter. This esoteric method is difficult to fully explain, and there are aspects
of it that you will have to learn on your own through practice.
One discovers from this technique that our visual field of consciousness is roughly
football shaped, with greater width than height. This is because our brains evolved
out of a need to look for food and danger more on the horizontal axis than on the
vertically axis. To survive you need to be aware of what is on your right and left
more than what is directly below your feet or above your head. This powerful
awareness method has a deprogramming effect that allows one to appreciate the play
of existence as an ever changing drama. You feel as if you are in it, but also out of it
and beyond it.
You can be creative
After you have become comfortable with the meditation techniques individually,
you can learn to incorporate them simultaneously to multiply their effectiveness. For
example, combining hara awareness and the use of the self-inquiry incantation can be
an extremely powerful method. There are no rigid one-size-fits-all meditation
techniques. Follow your intuition and let the methods evolve to fit your own
individuality. Don't take the time suggestions for methods as set limits. If you desire
to extend your meditation sessions, then go with the flow.
How long should I meditate?
The time a person needs to spend in formal meditation sessions to gain maximum
benefit depends on ever-changing individual circumstances. If you are meditating
with a group, you will gain from the group energy and go further with less effort. If
you are fortunate enough to be living close to an enlightened teacher, you may be
able to absorb some of his high energy without any effort at all. If you are meditating
alone, without support from others, then you will have to do all the heavy lifting
yourself.
My general recommendation is that a single forty minute meditation session
practiced every day is a minimum effort, and scientists have proven that amount of
meditation is enough to physically enlarge portions of the brain involved in
awareness. Meditation only works for those who are hungry for it, and if you cannot
spare forty minutes a day you will probably not gain substantial benefits. If you wish
to go faster, with clearly recognizable progress, then I suggest two or three formal
meditation sessions every day. A specific recommendation for young, physically fit
beginners would be to practice Cathartic Dancing Meditation in the morning and one
of the quiet sitting meditations at night.
It is of paramount importance to practice mindfulness throughout the day. To be
of any real value, meditation must become a full-time way of living rather than a
strictly segregated activity. Choose methods that make you feel more positive.
Meditation should be a form of cosmic hedonism, not a penance one must perform as
an obligation.
The wanting mechanism
What keeps us diverted from meditation in the here and now? Look inside your
mind and find the wanting mechanism. The wanting mechanism continuously
constructs images of new experiences the mind desires, derived from memories of the
past. The mind becomes enamored with these new fantasy images and is diverted
away from what actually is, here and now. The eternal cosmic consciousness exists
here and now, never in the future, and never in the past. Future and past are illusory
and do not exist in any real physical form outside of projections of our own minds.
What exists now is everything, and you already have it.
Wanting is part of life, creativity, family building, wealth creation, and the survival
instinct. In the sense of preserving the human race on planet earth, wanting is a very
good thing. In the sense of an individual becoming an awakened Buddha, wanting is
a hindrance. Wanting creates duality, the wanter and that which is desired.
Siddhartha Gautama taught that desire is a root cause of suffering. The questions is,
how many of us can and should take the last steps to enlightenment by dropping the
wanting mechanism entirely?
Not wanting means not wanting anything, not just dropping the desire for sex,
money, and power, but also dropping the desire for justice, family, and nation. It is
not what you want that matters, it is the wanting mechanism itself that is the barrier.
Deep meditation is a giant leap beyond logic and the norms of society. It is
dissolving into infinity and oblivion and not coming back. Very few humans have
been able to manage that radical transformation totally, and that is why enlightenment
will always be an extremely rare phenomena. Ending the wanting mechanism brings
time to a halt, annihilates the future and the past, and expands consciousness to the
far reaches of the universe.
If everyone in the world suddenly became enlightened, in my opinion, the human
race would come to an end. There would be a lack of sufficient desire to keep people
motivated enough to have families, raise children, grow crops, and protect society
from all the natural threats, from disease to ecological disaster. That said, I certainly
believe that enlightenment is a desirable goal for those who really want it, but you
can see the impossibility of the situation. When you "want" enlightenment your
wanting mechanism is still active and enlightenment will not happen to you. So we
can all breathe easy that everyone in the world will not become enlightened, all at the
same time, anytime soon.
Ask yourself these questions.
1) If you want something, how can you stop thinking about it?
2) If you don't want anything, what is there to think about?
3) If you don't want anything, is there anything to be angry about?
4) If you don't want anything, is there anything to make you unhappy?
Rocks and other inanimate objects do not want and they do not suffer, but they are
unconscious and dead. How does a living human being enter a no-wanting state
while fully conscious and filled to the brim with life energy? That is the incredible
contradiction and difficulty in becoming enlightened.
At some point in your practice of meditation you may see that wanting is a barrier
to further progress. Only when you can perceive this very clearly should you try to
step back from the wanting mechanism, otherwise you will suppress desires and lead
a false life. Stepping back from the wanting mechanism is a form of intense self-
observation, not suppression.
Things to do, things to avoid, and things to consider
• Work in groups when possible as group energy can multiply the energy of an
individual many times over.
• Remember that meditation is an escape to reality, not an escape from reality.
Avoid any guru or group that asks you to deny truth.
• Don't limit yourself to just one teacher. The single guru approach can lead to
cult thinking with its small mindedness and us vs. them syndrome.
• Hatha yoga can make you more energetic and fit for long meditation sessions,
but do not take it too seriously, or become obsessed with extreme gymnastics.
The easy and basic hatha yoga exercises work best. Extreme kundalini yoga
exercises that involve fast breathing in bizarre positions may be dangerous and
are not recommended. Men should never sit with their heels pressed behind
their testicles, as some yogis and Buddhist monks instruct, as this practice is
unhealthful and can cause sterility.
• Having a separate room used exclusively for meditation can be very helpful. It
is possible to build up a vibration in a room so that the moment you enter it
your mind becomes silent and ready for deep meditation.
• Avoid fads (see New Age therapists kill girl) and complicated philosophies that
give your mind more to think about. Meditation is a step beyond the thought
process. No philosophy can adequately describe man's place in the universe.
Concentrate on meditation in this moment and not on ancient scriptures.
Many old scriptures were written by madmen and fools, and have gained
respect from society simply because they are so old and dusty.
• It is essential to maintain a nutritionally adequate diet without becoming a food
fanatic. Most people find that a semivegetarian diet supplemented with dairy
products and eggs is generally best for meditation, but not essential. If you
have a medical problem, such as hypoglycemia, you may have to eat meat just
to survive. Even the Atkins high fat, high protein diet is perfectly compatible
with meditation.
• Food should not be made the fundamental basis of your practice of meditation.
Adolf Hitler was a vegetarian, yet his diet did not make him virtuous or even
nonviolent. Most Tibetan lamas and Asian Zen monks eat meat, so obviously
meat consumption is not a serious obstacle to cosmic consciousness. There is
no scientific evidence to suggest that a vegetarian diet extends lifespan or
improves health. Nations with the highest longevity rates, such as Japan,
Sweden, and Australia, are all populated by avid meat eaters.
• Fasting is a waste of time and will weaken you physically. Like taking LSD,
fasting creates strangely entertaining short term experiences but produces no
long term benefits and can cause permanent neurological damage. When you
fast your body literally feeds upon itself. If your brain needs protein for repair
work, your body will be directed to eat away its own own muscles, or worse,
your own peripheral nerve cells. People fast because their heads feel cluttered
with thoughts and they hope planned starvation will purify their minds. The
human body is made of mud (water and dirt), so the idea of a perfect,
spiritually purified physical body is misguided. The way to end the cluttered
feeling is to change the way your brain and energy body function, and this can
be accomplished through the use of meditation techniques.
• I do not recommend solitary meditation retreats longer than seven days
duration. To maintain health one must eat a balanced diet and get rigorous
physical exercise every day. To maintain full brain function one must also get
mental exercise through interaction with other human beings and through
problem solving. If you meditate in isolation for months or years continuously,
your body and brain will become deconditioned and atrophy. You may
develop strange hallucinations and delusions, and come back physically weaker
with a measurably lower IQ.
• Avoid drugs and alcohol. Carlos Castaneda was a talented fiction writer who
misled many people. Drugs are not an effective path to enlightenment, but
they are a quick path to misery and insanity.
• Have sex when you wish and do not force celibacy upon yourself in the hopes
that it will lead to enlightenment. To meditate one must be in a very natural
and relaxed state of mind, without repression or tension. Celibacy can only be
of value if it occurs spontaneously, without effort. The majority of famous
gurus who have claimed celibacy publicly have practiced intercourse privately.
Why make sex a big secret, and why have two faces? Many fully enlightened
humans have had sexual relations even after enlightenment.
• Practice choiceless awareness (one object vision, mindfulness) throughout the
day. Meditation must become as continuous and spontaneous as breathing.
• Don't make meditation a competition, and drop any hidden agenda you may
have to use it to control others. Legitimate motives for meditation are the
desire for tranquility and ecstasy, freedom from suffering, and the adventure of
self-exploration.
• Don't turn your meditation into a business. People who make a profit from
intercourse have turned something beautiful into something ugly. Those who
make money from meditation have transformed a noble path into a sordid back
alley. Whether you are a sexual prostitute or a spiritual prostitute, the
fundamental quality of your mind is the same.
• Be completely honest and have just one face, not two.
• One of the most dangerous thoughts you can have is to think that you have lost
your ego!
• For every action there is a reaction, not just in theoretical physics, but in
ordinary human life as well. When you create positive actions you will
eventually reap positive reactions for yourself and for others. In this way what
we call ethics and morality are woven into the very fabric of the universe, right
down to the subatomic level.
Enlightenment
NCCAM classifications
1. Alternative Medical Systems
2. Mind-Body Intervention
3. Biologically Based Therapy
4. Manipulative Methods
5. Energy Therapy
See also
• Alternative medicine
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[edit] Forms of meditation
Concentration meditation is used in most religions and spiritual practices. Whereas in mindfulness
meditation, there is an open focus, in concentration mediation the meditator holds attention on a
particular object (e.g., a repetitive prayer) while minimizing distractions; bringing the mind back to
concentrate on the chosen object.[8] In some traditions, such as Vipassana, mindfulness and
concentration are combined.[9]
Meditation can be practiced while walking or doing simple repetitive tasks. Walking meditation
helps to break down habitual automatic mental categories, "thus regaining the primary nature of
perceptions and events, focusing attention on the process while disregarding its purpose or final
outcome." In a form of meditation using visualization, such as Chinese Qi Gong, the practitioner
concentrates on flows of energy (Qi) in the body, starting in the abdomen and then circulating
through the body, until dispersed.[7] Some meditative traditions, such as yoga or tantra, are
common to several religions[4] or occur outside religious contexts.
[edit] Hinduism
For more details on this topic, see Dhyana in Hinduism.
Hinduism can safely be considered the oldest religion that professed meditation as a spiritual and
religious practice. Yoga (Devanagari: य ग) is one of the six schools of Hindu philosophy, focusing
on meditation. In India, Yoga is seen as a means to both physiological and spiritual mastery.
There are several types of meditation in Hinduism. These include (but are not limited to):
• Vedanta, a form of Jnana Yoga.
• Raja Yoga as outlined by Patanjali, which describes eight "limbs" of spiritual practices, half
of which might be classified as meditation. Underlying them is the assumption that a yogi
should still the fluctuations of his or her mind: Yoga cittavrrti nirodha.
• Surat shabd yoga, or "sound and light meditation"
• Japa Yoga, in which a mantra is repeated aloud or silently
• Bhakti Yoga, the yoga of love and devotion, in which the seeker is focused on an object of
devotion, eg Krishna
• Hatha Yoga, in which postures and meditations are aimed at raising the spiritual energy,
known as Kundalini, which rises through energy centres known as chakras
Although the Founder of the Faith, Bahá'u'lláh, never specified any particular forms of meditation,
some Bahá'í practices are meditative. One of these is the daily repetition of the Arabic phrase
Alláhu Abhá (Arabic: ( )ال ابهىGod is Most Glorious) 95 times preceded by ablutions. Abhá has
the same root as Bahá' (Arabic: " بهاءsplendor" or "glory") which Bahá'ís consider to be the
"Greatest Name of God".
[edit] Buddhism
Buddha in meditation
Main article: Buddhist meditation
Meditation has always been central to Buddhism. The historical Buddha himself was said to have
achieved enlightenment while meditating under a Bodhi tree. Most forms of Buddhism distinguish
between two classes of meditation practices, shamatha and vipassana, both of which are necessary
for attaining enlightenment. The former consists of practices aimed at developing the ability to
focus the attention single-pointedly; the latter includes practices aimed at developing insight and
wisdom through seeing the true nature of reality. The differentiation between the two types of
meditation practices is not always clear cut, which is made obvious when studying practices such as
Anapanasati which could be said to start off as a shamatha practice but that goes through a number
of stages and ends up as a vipassana practice.
Theravada Buddhism emphasizes the meditative development of mindfulness (sati, see for example
the Satipatthana Sutta) and concentration (samadhi, see kammatthana), as part of the Noble
Eightfold Path, in the pursuit of Nibbana (Nirvana). Traditional popular meditation subjects include
the breath (anapana) and loving-kindness (mettā).
Most Buddhist traditions recognize that the path to Enlightenment entails three types of training:
virtue (sīla); meditation (citta); and, wisdom (paññā).[13] Thus, meditative prowess alone is not
sufficient; it is but one part of the path. In other words, in Buddhism, in tandem with mental
cultivation, ethical development and wise understanding are also necessary for the attainment of the
highest goal.[14]
[edit] Christianity
Main article: Christian meditation
Christian traditions have various practices which might be identified as forms of "meditation."
Many of these are monastic practices. Some types of prayer, such as the rosary and Adoration
(focusing on the eucharist) in Catholicism or the hesychasm in Eastern Orthodoxy, may be
compared to the form of Eastern meditation that focuses on an individual object.
Christian meditation is considered a form of prayer. Some Christian prayer is made primarily by
using the intellect, through the contemplation of the divine mysteries. However, Christian prayer or
meditation through the heart, as described in the Philokalia is a practice towards Theosis, which
involves acquiring an inner stillness and ignoring the physical senses.
According to the Old Testament book of Joshua, a form of meditation is to meditate on scriptures.
This is one of the reasons why bible verse memory is a practice among many evangelical
Christians. "Do not let this Book of the Law depart from your mouth; meditate on it day and night,
so that you may be careful to do everything written in it, then you will be prosperous and
successful." (Joshua 1:8)
The use of the word meditation in the western Christian tradition has referred generally to a more
active practice of reflection on some particular theme such as "meditation on the sufferings of
Christ".
[edit] Islam
See also: Muraqaba
Meditation in Islam is the core of Muslim mystical traditions (in particular Sufism). Meditative
quiescence is believed to have a quality of healing and creativity.[15] The Muslim prophet
Muhammad, whose deeds devout Muslims follow, spent long periods in meditation and
contemplation. It was during one such period of meditation that Muhammad began to receive
revelations of the Qur'an.[16]
There are two concepts or schools of meditation in Islam:
• Tafakkur and Tadabbur, literally meaning reflection upon the universe. Muslims feel this is
a form of intellectual development which emanates from a higher level, i.e. from God. This
intellectual process through the receiving of divine inspiration awakens and liberates the
human mind, permitting man’s inner personality to develop and grow so that he may lead
his life on a spiritual plane far above the mundane level. This is consistent with the global
teachings of Islam, which views life as a test of our practice of submission to Allah, the one
God.
• The second form of meditation is the Sufi meditation, it is largely based on mystical
exercises. However, this method is controversial among Muslim scholars. One group of
Ulama, Al-Ghazzali, for instance, have accepted it, another group of Ulama, Ibn Taymiya,
for instance, have rejected it as a bid'ah (Arabic: ( )بدعةreligious innovation).
Sufism relies on a practice similar to Buddhist meditation, known as Muraqaba or Tamarkoz which
is taught in the Oveyssi-Shahmaghsoudi Sufi order. Tamarkoz is a Persian term that means
‘concentration,’ referring to the “concentration of abilities”. Consequently, the term concentration is
synonymous to close attention, convergent, collection, compaction, and consolidation.
Muslims meditate during the second stage of Hajj at "Mount Mercy", from noon to sunset.[17]
[edit] Jainism
[edit] Judaism
Main article: Jewish meditation
There is evidence that Judaism has had meditative practices that go back thousands of years.[21]
For instance, in the Torah, the patriarch Isaac is described as going "( "לשוחlasuach) in the field—
a term understood by all commentators as some type of meditative practice (Genesis 24:63).
Similarly, there are indications throughout the Tanach (the Hebrew Bible) that meditation was
central to the prophets.[21] In the Old Testament, there are two Hebrew words for meditation: hāgâ
(Hebrew: )הגה, which means to sigh or murmur, but also to meditate, and sîḥâ (Hebrew: )שיחה,
which means to muse, or rehearse in one's mind.
In modern Jewish practice, one of the best known meditative practices is called hitbodedut (
)התבודדותor hisbodedus is explained in Kabbalah and Hassidic philosophy. The word
hisbodedut, which derives from the Hebrew word "boded", ( בודדa state of being alone) and said to
be related to the sfirah of Binah (lit. book of understanding), means the process of making oneself
understand a concept well through analytical study.
Kabbalah is inherently a meditative field of study. Kabbalistic meditative practices construct a
supernal realm which the soul navigates through in order to achieve certain ends. One of the most
well known types of meditation is Merkabah, from the root /R-K-B/ meaning "chariot"(of God).
New Age meditations are often influenced by Eastern philosophy and mysticism such as Yoga,
Hinduism and Buddhism, yet may contain some degree of Western influence. Examples of such
meditations include:
• Passage Meditation, a modern method developed by spiritual teacher Eknath Easwaran,
involves silent, focused repetition of memorized passages from world scripture and the
writings of great mystics.
• Transcendental Meditation, a form of meditation taught and promoted by Maharishi Mahesh
Yogi.
• FISU (Foundation for International Spiritual Unfoldment) was established by Gururaj
Ananda Yogi's prime disciples Rajesh Ananda and Jasmini Ananda whom are the leaders
ever since.
• Ananda Marga meditation was propounded by a Mahakaula Guru Shrii Shrii Anandamurtiiji
in India, who said that it revived sacred practices taught by SadaShiva and Sri Krs'na. His
system of meditation, he said, is based on original Tantra as given by Shiva and has
sometimes been referred as "Rajadhiraja Yoga". He revised many yogic and meditative
practices and introduced some new techniques.
[edit] Sikhism
Main article: Nām Japō
In Sikhism, the practices of simran and Nām Japō encourage quiet meditation. This is focusing ones
attention on the attributes of God. Sikhs believe that there are 10 'gates' to the body, 'gates' is
another word for 'chakras' or energy centres. The top most energy level is the called the tenth gate
or dasam dwar. It is said[attribution needed] that when one reaches this stage through continuous
practice meditation becomes a habit that continues whilst walking, talking, eating, awake and even
sleeping. There is a distinct taste or flavour when a meditator reaches this lofty stage of meditation,
as one experiences absolute peace and tranquility inside and outside the body.
Followers of the Sikh religion also believe that love comes through meditation on the lord's name
since meditation only conjures up positive emotions in oneself which are portrayed through our
actions. The first Guru of the Sikhs, Guru Nanak Dev Ji preached the equality of all humankind and
stressed the importance of living a householders life instead of wandering around jungles
meditating, as was popular practice at the time. The Guru preached that we can obtain liberation
from life and death by living a totally normal family life and by spreading love amongst every
human being regardless of religion.
[edit] Taoism
Main article: Taoism
Taoism includes a number of meditative and contemplative traditions. Originally said to have their
principles described in the I Ching, Tao Te Ching, Chuang Tzu and Tao Tsang among other texts;
the multitude of schools relating to Qigong, Neigong, Daoyin and Zhan zhuang are a large, diverse
array of breath training practises in aid of meditation with much influence from later Chinese
Buddhism and with much influence on traditional Chinese medicine and the Chinese as well as
some Japanese martial arts. The Chinese martial art T'ai Chi Ch'uan is named after the well-known
focus for Taoist and Neo-Confucian meditation, the T'ai Chi T'u, and is often referred to as
“meditation in motion”.
Often Taoist Internal martial arts, especially Tai Chi Chuan are thought of as moving meditation. A
common phrase being, "movement in stillness" referring to energetic movement in passive Qigong
and seated Taoist meditation; with the converse being "stillness in movement", a state of mental
calm and meditation in the tai chi form.
[edit] Other
Sahaja Yoga is a meditative practice started by H.H. Shri Mataji Nirmala Srivastava. Sahaja Yoga
focuses on awakening the Kundalini, so that practitioners can achieve Self-realization.
[edit] Secular
Forms of meditation which are devoid of mystical content have been developed in the west as a way
of promoting physical and mental well being.
Jacobson's Progressive Muscle Relaxation was developed by American physician Edmund
Jacobson in the early 1920s. Jacobson argued that since muscular tension accompanies anxiety, one
can reduce anxiety by learning how to relax the muscular tension.
Autogenic training was developed by the German psychiatrist Johannes Schultz in 1932. Schultz
emphasized parallels to techniques in yoga and meditation, however, autogenic training is devoid of
any mysticism.
Australian psychiatrist Dr Ainslie Meares published a groundbreaking work in the 1960's entitled
Relief Without Drugs, in which he recommended some simple, secular relaxation techniques based
on Hindu practices as a means of combating anxiety, stress and chronic physical pain.
Herbert Benson M.D., of Harvard Medical School, conducted a series of clinical tests on meditators
from various disciplines - mainly Transcendental meditation and Tibetan Buddhism. He first
described the results in his 1975 book The Relaxation Response where he outlined a secular
approach to achieving similar results.
Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche founded Shambhala Training in 1976, a secular program of meditation
with a belief in basic goodness and teaching the path of bravery and gentleness. The 1984 book
Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior contains student-edited versions of Trungpa's lectures
and writings.
The book Sensual Meditation (1980) which was written by the founder of the Raëlian movement
outlines a sequence of non-ascetic meditation exercises which emphasize a Sensual Meditation
involving a physical and sensual awareness connected with current knowledge of how the body and
mind are organized.
The 1999 book The Calm Technique: Meditation Without Magic or Mysticism by Paul Wilson has a
discussion and instruction in a form of secular meditation.
Biofeedback has been tried by many researchers since the 1950s as a way to enter deeper states of
mind.[25]
Half-lotus position.
Different spiritual traditions, and different teachers within those traditions, prescribe or suggest
different physical postures for meditation. Sitting, supine, and standing[28] postures are used. Most
famous are the several cross-legged sitting postures, including the Lotus Position.
[edit] Spine
Many meditative traditions teach that the spine should be kept "straight" (i.e. that the meditator
should not slouch). Often this is explained as a way of encouraging the circulation of what some
call "spiritual energy," the "vital breath", the "life force" (Sanskrit prana, Chinese qi, Latin spiritus)
or the Kundalini. In some traditions the meditator may sit on a chair, flat-footed (as in New
Thought); sit on a stool (as in Orthodox Christianity); or walk in mindfulness (as in Theravada
Buddhism). Some traditions suggest being barefoot, for comfort, for convenience, or for spiritual
reasons.
Other traditions, such as those related to kundalini yoga, take a less formal approach. While the
basic practice in these traditions is also to sit still quietly in a traditional posture, they emphasize the
possibility of kriyas - spontaneous yogic postures, or perhaps repetitive physical movements such as
swaying etc., which may naturally arise as the practitioner sits in meditation, and which should not
be resisted but rather allowed to express themselves in order to enhance the natural flow of energy
through the body, which is said to help purify the nadis and ultimately deepen one's meditative
practice.
[edit] Mudra/Hand
[edit] Eyes
In most meditative traditions, the eyes are closed. In some such as some Zen sects, the eyes are half-
closed, half open and looking upwards. In others such as Brahma Kumaris, the eyes are kept fully
open.
Quiet is often held to be desirable, and some people use repetitive activities such as deep breathing,
humming or chanting to help induce a meditative state. Practitioners of the Soto Zen tradition
meditate with their eyes open, facing a wall, but most schools of meditation assume that the eyes
will be closed or only half-open.
In Sufism meditation(muraqaba) with eyes closed is called Varood while with open eyes is known
as Shahood or Fa'tha.
Scenes of Inner Taksang, temple hall, built just above the cave where Padmasambhava meditated
In their review of scientific studies of meditation, published in the International Journal of
Psychotherapy, Perez-De-Albeniz and Holmes[7] identified the following behavioral components
of meditation:
1. relaxation,
2. concentration,
3. altered state of awareness,
4. suspension of logical thought processes, and
5. maintenance of self-observing attitude.
The medical community has studied the physiological effects of meditation[29][30][31][32] Many
concepts of meditation have been applied to clinical settings in order to measure its effect on
somatic motor function as well as cardiovascular and respiratory function. Also the hermeneutic
and phenomenological aspects of meditation are areas of growing interest. Meditation has entered
the mainstream of health care as a method of stress and pain reduction. For example, in an early
study in 1972, Transcendental Meditation was shown to affect the human metabolism by lowering
the biochemical byproducts of stress, such as lactate, decreasing heart rate and blood pressure and
inducing favorable brain waves.[33] In 1976, the Australian psychiatrist Ainslie Meares, reported in
the Medical Journal of Australia, the regression of cancer following intensive meditation. Meares
wrote a number of books on the subject, including his best-seller Relief without Drugs.
As a method of stress reduction, meditation is often used in hospitals in cases of chronic or terminal
illness to reduce complications associated with increased stress including a depressed immune
system. There is growing agreement in the medical community that mental factors such as stress
significantly contribute to a lack of physical health, and there is a growing movement in mainstream
science to fund research in this area (e.g. the establishment by the NIH in the U.S. of 5 research
centers to research the mind-body aspects of disease.)
Dr. James Austin, a neurophysiologist at the University of Colorado, reported that Zen meditation
rewires the circuitry of the brain in his landmark book Zen and the Brain (Austin, 1999). This has
been confirmed using functional MRI imaging which examines the activity of the brain.[34]
Dr. Herbert Benson of the Mind-Body Medical Institute, which is affiliated with Harvard and
several Boston hospitals, reports that meditation induces a host of biochemical and physical
changes in the body collectively referred to as the "relaxation response."[31] The relaxation
response includes changes in metabolism, heart rate, respiration, blood pressure and brain
chemistry. Benson and his team have also done clinical studies at Buddhist monasteries in the
Himalayan Mountains.
Other studies within this field include the research of Jon Kabat-Zinn and his colleagues at the
University of Massachusetts who have studied the effects of mindfulness meditation on
stress.[35][36]
C H A P T E R 1
"The first thing I do every morning, before I exercise and eat breakfast, is Transcendental
Meditation. When I get home after a long day at the office, the first thing I do, before dinner, is
Transcendental Meditation. The technique is extremely relaxing. It provides me with a practical,
efficient, powerful respite from my very high levelof activity. I absolutely count on it to keep me
clear-headed, rested, and healthy."
-- John Zamara, M.D., a specialist in cardiology and internal medicine, Orange County, California.
Dr. Zamara has been practicing Transcendental Meditation for 21 years.
"I have long, complex days with many demands and many continuing pressures that spill over
from day to day and week to week. I direct a clinical unit, take care of patients, teach medical
students and residents, and carryout my research into neuro-imaging. What I find is that
Transcendental Meditation gives me a clearer mind, and I am able to focus my attention on areas
that require the greatest amount of work. Stress doesn't accumulate; I return to each day with a
freshness. Transcendental Meditation has enhanced my career and my life."
-- Kelvin O. Lim, M.D., Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford
University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California. Dr. Lim has been practicing Transcendental
Meditation for 13 years.
"Transcendental Meditation is like a daily vacation. It's a renewal for my body and calms my
mind. I do a lot of writing and speaking, and it has given me a flood of creativity.
"I've always felt that Transcendental Meditation was an aid to my Christian growth. It never
replaced my Christian growth, but it was an aid to it. In fact, I decided to commit my life to Christ
after I'd been practicing Transcendental Meditation for 3 months.
"I would say to any Christian -- to anyone of any religion - that Transcendental Meditation would
benefit your life. It's a technique, a simple process that requires no belief. It is not a religion. There
are so many thoughts that clutter the mind, and Transcendental Meditation is like taking a bath --
it's very cleansing and very refreshing."
-- Rev. Dr. Craig Overmyer, a pastoral counselor in Indianapolis, Indiana. Dr. Overmyer received
his Master of Divinity in 1982 and his Doctorate of Ministry in 1985 from the Christian Theological
Seminary in Indianapolis. He has been practicing Transcendental Meditation for 22 years.
"I wouldn't be able to fulfill my responsibilities as a rabbi to the level I expect of myself without
Transcendental Meditation. I am better able to deal with the stresses of being with the sick and the
dying, and the pressures of funerals, weddings, and bar mitzvahs because I have within me a
considerable reservoir of calm. I am able to walk into a tense situation and naturally settle people
down. They appreciate the ease and calm I bring to situations. But even more important,
Transcendental Meditation has made me a better rabbi because it has given me an experience and
insight into the profound depths of life. As a result, I am able to express a true depth of knowledge
about my own tradition."
-- Rabbi Alan Green of Beth Israel Synagogue in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Rabbi Green has been
practicing Transcendental Meditation for 20 years.
"Transcendental Meditation is a tremendous stress buster. It's the most potent form of
relaxation that I know of. After meditating just a few days, I noticed mental sharpness, less worry,
and increased tolerance and ability to get along with people. It's one magnificent stroke that benefits
my life in so many different ways."
-- Glenn Pilling, actor, Los Angeles. Mr. Pilling has been practicing Transcendental Meditation for
14 months.
"I really appreciate the portability of Transcendental Meditation. I travel a lot, and I'm able to
gain the benefits of meditating no matter what is happening around me. I recently was on a plane
with very rambunctious children racing up and down the aisles. I just sat there enjoying my
meditation. Afterwards, one of the parents came over and sat down next to me and said, 'What are
you doing? You seem so peaceful!' Transcendental Meditation gives you equanimity. You can
move through all kinds of situations during the day, coming from a place of peace, and then impart
some of that peacefulness to others."
-- Merrily Manthey, M.S., Director of the Institute for Executive Stress Management in Kent
(greater Seattle area), Washington. She has been meditating for 22 years.
"I was out shopping recently with my husband -- buying bikes for our kids at a mall. It was late,
the mall was chaotic, and I was starting to get tired. On top of that, our son was coming home from
college that night with three friends for dinner. Then I realized, I have nothing to worry about. I can
go home and do my Transcendental Meditation, and I won't be tired anymore. I did -- and I felt
great, really refreshed afterward. I just wish I started when my friend first told me about it more
than 20 years ago."
-- Denise Droese, mother of four children, ages 4, 10, 12, and 20, Carmel, Indiana. Ms. Droese has
been practicing Transcendental Meditation for one month.
Unfolding Full Potential --
and Using it
It's 8:30 a.m. and the phones are ringing off the hook on the seventh floor of the World Financial
Center in Manhattan. What do you think? What do you think? What do you think? What do you
think?
"That's what I hear all day long," says Walter Zimmermann, first Vice President at Lehmann Bros.
"Customers want to know what you think. There's a lot at stake. If you're wrong, they can lose a lot
of money. And if you're right, they love you for it."
Mr. Zimmermann works in Lehmann's Global Energy Department. For him each work day actually
starts the night before when he develops an "outlook" for the next day. Where does he think any
rally will fail? Where does he think any decline will stop? Does he think it will be an uptrend or a
downtrend, or does he expect a "congestion" day? On that basis he decides:" How bullish am I?
What's the best way of taking advantage of that up move? Should I stay with what I have? Should I
add on? Should I reverse my position?"
Mr. Zimmermann must develop an outlook for each hour, each day, each week, each month, and
each quarter. Most of the people he deals with are short-term traders. They rarely hold anything for
more than a week. They need to know from Mr. Zimmermann at each moment during the day,
"Isthis still your outlook? What do you think?"
Mr. Zimmermann has been practicing Transcendental Meditation for 23 years.
"My kind of work requires a unique combination of analytical skills and intuitive clarity. My tool is
not the price charts or the news wires. My tool is the clarity of my awareness, with which I can pick
up on things sooner than other people. I'm competing with some of the best minds out there.
Everybody has the same information; everybody can look at the same price charts; everybody reads
the same newspapers. But success comes to the person whose awareness can penetrate more deeply
and, at the same time, be more sensitive to the onset of trend changes. If you haven't developed that
kind of awareness, you're going to get crushed by the oil markets.
"Unfolding your mental potential is not simply time well spent; it's absolutely necessary if you're
going to succeed. Transcendental Meditation gives me the clarity of mind and inner calm that does
not get overshadowed or shaken by the high level of emotions and tension and anxiety that
characterize this kind of work place."
Mr. Zimmermann started out with E.F. Hutton in Manhattan in 1984. The company was bought out
by Shearson and has gone through several name changes to its current name, Lehmann Bros. Mr.
Zimmermann has been highly successful through it all.
"This is a very stressful work environment. The petroleum market is the most volatile market out
there, by a wide margin, and that volatility takes its toll. Normally you just don't last as long as I
have. The people I started off with have burned out and gone on to other things. I attribute my
endurance to Transcendental Meditation. Endurance has its advantages. If you endure, you
remember things that other people weren't there to experience. You gather wisdom. If you've 'seen
it all,' you basically know how to deal with it all.
"If someone asks me about Transcendental Meditation, I ask them, 'How valuable is mental clarity
to you? How valuable are insight and innovation to you? How valuable is it for you to be able to see
what other people don't see? If that's of value to you, then Transcendental Meditation is something
you can do to get as much clarity and insight as you require.' "
Is There Time?
We have to be practical when it comes to time. Every day there are pressures, deadlines, and
responsibilities to meet. There's a business deal to close, children to send off to school, a term paper
to write. And tomorrow will probably be even busier.
So is it practical to take time to consider developing mental potential-- much less do something
about it -- when there's so much to accomplish with so little time?
Perhaps intuitively we've always known that we weren't using our full potential in life, but due to
the pressing demands on our time and energy today, we've had to put these considerations off until
tomorrow -- or to a distant future.
Is this being practical? Hardly.
If There's a Choice
Psychologists and psychiatrists estimate that we use between 5% and 10% of our mental potential.
And there are days when even that figure may seem generous.
If you had a choice, wouldn't you prefer being able to draw upon more of your creativity and
intelligence to resolve a problem at work, or organize your household, or take a test at school?
What could be more practical than having a clear, organized mind; or the ability to learn quickly
and remember things accurately; or the capacity for broad comprehension along with the ability to
focus sharply, for long periods of time?
Nothing could be more practical, and therefore nothing is more important than developing full
mental potential -- and using it.
How do you unfold mental potential through Transcendental Meditation?
Quite naturally. You simply gain access to the unlimited reservoir of energy, creativity, and
intelligence that is located at the most settled, silent, fully awake level of your mind -- the source of
thought.
To understand how this is possible and to see how simple and natural it is, first we'll start with a few
common experiences in daily life.
Excited Mind/Settled Mind
Two business professionals are reviewing the draft of a transaction over lunch at a crowded
restaurant.
A high school student is working on a calculus problem with the television on.
Neither the business professionals nor the student are finding much success. Why? There is too
much noise. Where there is more noise, there is more confusion. Where there is more silence, there
is more order, more intelligence.
So the business professionals meet later in a quiet conference room to complete the details of the
transaction, and the student goes to his room to study.
Whenever we have something important to do, like study for a class or work out a business deal, or
whenever we have something important to say, like a heart-to-heart talk with a family member or a
close friend, we try to find a quiet place. Because when the mind is allowed to settle down, it
naturally gains in clarity, comprehension, and decisiveness.
The Purpose of Transcendental Meditation
What is the purpose of Transcendental Meditation? Just this: Because of the constant demands on
your time and energy, it's not often that you can get away to a quiet place for a long period of time.
And even if you're able to get away, then because of the build-up of stress and tension, it can take a
long while before your mind really begins to settle down.
What you need is a way to develop the ability for your mind to always remain clear and settled, a
way to use the full potential of your mind at all times -- even in the midst of the most hectic
activity.
That's the purpose of Transcendental Meditation. It's a simple technique that allows the active mind
to settle down -- and continue settling down-- until it reaches its own perfectly calm, collected state,
where the body is deeply rested and the mind is silent, unbounded, and fully awake.
Transcendental Meditation is also very practical. It can be practiced anywhere at any time. Whether
it's been an intense day at work or school, or a lazy Sunday, whether you're just home from an all-
day downtown business meeting or a weekend boating trip, you can practice Transcendental
Meditation and benefit from this settled state of awareness.
And exactly what is this most settled state?
It's the full potential of consciousness -- a silent reservoir of unlimited creativity and intelligence
found deep within your mind. And this reservoir, as we'll see later, is the same as the source of
unlimited creativity and intelligence found deep within nature itself.
Dr. Christopher Hegarty is a management consultant, who speaks at more than 100
business conferences a year, on developing the fundamentals of competence. His client
list includes chief executives at IBM, AT&T, Blue Cross, Xerox, and the United
Airlines Pilots Association. He has been practicing Transcendental Meditation for over
20 years.
"The world is changing so fast, with so much new information to process, that to
survive in business today -- much less succeed -- demands an optimal level of mental
competence," says Dr. Hegarty.
John S. Hagelin, Ph.D., a member of an elite group of scientists who are at the
forefront of research in unified field theories, agrees.
Dr. Hagelin is an expert on supersymmetric unified quantum field theories and has
published over 90 papers on the subject in leading physics journals. Dr. Hagelin
received his doctorate in physics from Harvard and has conducted research at two of the
top laboratories in the world for advanced particle physics -- the European Laboratory
for Particle Physics (CERN) in Geneva, Switzerland, and the Stanford Linear
Accelerator Center (SLAC) in Palo Alto, California.
Since 1976 Dr. Hagelin has studied Maharishi's descriptions of pure consciousness in
the light of modern physics. Recent advances in quantum physics, Dr. Hagelin says,
provide "substantial evidence that the unified field and pure consciousness are not two
separate fields, but one and the same."
"It is clear that the unified field is ultimately the origin of all attributes in the universe,"
Dr. Hagelin says. "Any property of existence -- electric charge or color charge -- must
have its dynamical origin in the structure of the unified field itself.
"When one examines the properties of the unified field in detail, one discovers all the
properties of pure consciousness."
"Being able to go to that silent place within me and experience the unified field every
day has unlocked an incredible storehouse of creativity," says Chris Boas, a third-year
law student at the University of San Francisco Law School. "Since I've been meditating,
good ideas just seem to come easily. I feel that there's no end to what I can accomplish."
"The main requirement for success in law school is to be able to think clearly under
pressure. People who do well here are those who handle that pressure, especially during
final exam time. Since I've been meditating, my mind is relaxed and alert, and I can
think through things clearly and logically, even under pressure. I retain information
more easily, and I can access it more quickly whenever I need it."
Sportswriters called the World Series one of the most exciting in recent memory, and it
turned Buddy Biancalana into a national hero. Kansas City faced off against the St.
Louis Cardinals. The Royals fell behind three games to one and then stormed back to
win it in seven games. Buddy's sparkling, acrobatic defense and unexpected clutch
hitting helped propel Kansas City to the world championship. It was the best 7 games of
baseball in Buddy's professional career, and it came when hundreds of millions of
people all over the world were watching on television.
"I was deep in the 'zone' during the whole World Series," Buddy recalls. "I had a
tremendously deep level of focus, to the point where I felt I couldn't do anything wrong.
I felt like every play was going to go my way -- and it did. It was a level of clarity I had
never experienced playing baseball prior to that time -- or in any other aspect of my life
-- and I never reached it again until I learned Transcendental Meditation."
Today, Buddy is a players' agent, scouting and signing professional baseball players and
negotiating their contracts. He has been meditating for 8 months.
"Now, when I get up in the morning, I know it's going to be a great day. There may be
obstacles, I may have things to work out in my business, but the core of me is always
feeling fabulous, no matter what is going on around me. Every day is a great day."
"The most powerful benefit that I've experienced from Transcendental Meditation
is that it makes my mind much sharper. It allows the haziness in my mind to be cleared
away so that everything makes sense to me and connects to my own ideas. From that
level it's much easier to study, and every subject that I study has a much more
penetrating effect. I can't imagine being a student without it. I've also found that once I
have that clarity, all good things in life are drawn to me. When I'm feeling clear and the
stress is gone, everything just naturally supports me and comes my way."
-- Jennie Rothenberg is a 1993 National Merit Scholar and a first-year literature major
at Maharishi International University in Fairfield, Iowa. (Maharishi International
University integrates the arts, sciences, and professions with the study and development
of consciousness through the practice of Transcendental Meditation. Maharishi
International University is accredited to the Ph.D. level by the North Central
Association of Colleges and Schools.)
"For me the experience of settled inner wakefulness and expanded awareness during
Transcendental Meditation is the real foundation for successful decision-making. After
meditating I have the mental clarity and alertness for laser-like focus on the details and,
at the same time, for broad comprehension so I don't get lost in the details. I find myself
continuously growing in insight and intuition, as well as in the ability to focus and
analyze. In my experience, if you can have those qualities together at the same time,
you're going to make the right decisions -- not only for your own success, but for the
progress and well-being of others. Over my years in business, Transcendental
Meditation has been a real competitive advantage."
-- Steve Rubin, Chairman and CEO, United Fuels International, Inc., one of the world's
largest international energy brokerage firms.
The following research charts represent a few of the many studies conducted on the effects of
Transcendental Meditation for developing mental potential. The charts represent the average
benefits of the group studied.
• Greater Orderliness of Brain Functioning
• Broader Comprehension and Improved Ability to Focus
• Increased Creativity
• Improved Perception and Memory
• Development of Intelligence
C H A P T E R 3
Mr. Fitzgerald directs a newly formed department with a $700 million annual budget,
420 employees, and a broad and diverse range of responsibilities.
On a typical day Mr. Fitzgerald will help the governor and the state legislature
formulate their policies on GATT and NAFTA. He'll make decisions on what kind of
taxation package his department will put to the legislature to give incentives for small
businesses. He'll meet with a group of community leaders to try to determine how to
restructure a local economic development grant that will allow them to take new
initiatives in their community. He'll also meet with local government representatives to
determine how to improve and expand access to the state's early childhood education
programs.
"I notice, almost instantly after meditating, a relief from the pressures of the day, and a
new clarity, a new freshness, and a new energy," says Mr. Fitzgerald, whose day starts
at 5:30 a.m. and ends at 7:30 p.m. when he gets home to his family in Issaquah, a city
10 miles east of Seattle.
"I'm in very good physical shape, and Transcendental Meditation has helped me a lot
with that because it keeps stress at a minimum. I don't overeat. Meditating also helps to
keep me calm and thoughtful and restful and reflective. It's my lifeline in a very chaotic
world."
Mr. Fitzgerald says Transcendental Meditation can play a key role in solving social ills.
"The tendency of our society is to deal with events and symptoms, not causes," he says.
"We deal with the symptoms of too much violence, not the causes of it. We deal with
the symptoms of disease, not the causes of it. The basic cause is that people are full of
stress. Transcendental Meditation goes to the heart of the problem. It releases stress and
makes individuals healthier and more self-reliant, and puts them in a position where
they can start to solve their own problems."
"It is fortunate for the field of health today that one technique exists to take
care of the very basis of an individual's life -- pure consciousness -- and
thereby to restore and maintain perfect health on all levels of mind, body,
and surroundings." -- Maharishi
The United States has one of the most technologically sophisticated and advanced
health care systems in the world. Each year we spend over one trillion dollars on health
care -- more than 12% of the entire gross national product (GNP). By the year 2000 that
amount could spiral to as much as 18%.
What are the trillion dollars used for? Preventing illness? Securing the health and well-
being of every American?
No. As just about everyone knows, that huge sum of money is used mainly for treating
disease. And according to many health experts, up to 90% of those diseases could have
been prevented.
What Is Stress?
To understand how you can reduce stress and therefore prevent disease, first we should
define it. Stress is not a deadline to meet at work, a term paper, or even a traffic tie-up
during rush hour. Stress is how we react, physically and mentally, to these experiences.
Some days we're better at it; some days we're not. If we've slept well at night and wake
up fresh and rested, we're apt to handle any demand during the day far better than if we
run into it, headlong, on a Friday afternoon at the end of a long week.
Stress, then, can be understood to be any structural or material abnormality in the body
(tight neck muscles, high blood pressure, tension headaches, etc.) that is caused by
overloading the machinery of experience, the senses.
Any overload can cause it. The sudden flash of a bulb from a camera can create stress in
the eyes. Too much exertion or excitement can cause stress -- or not enough rest. Any
experience, positive or negative, can create stress if the system is unable to handle it.
Is Stress the Spice of Life?
Some say that stress is the spice of life. People who thrive on the continual stimulation
of new challenges, new responsibilities, new pressures would hate to live without stress.
It's true that new opportunities and new challenges are essential for a fulfilling life.
Eliminating stress from your life does not mean eliminating these challenges. Rather, it
means eliminating their negative side-effects -- chronic fatigue, anxiety, headaches,
indigestion, insomnia, etc. -- which severely restrict your capacity to be healthy,
successful, and enjoy what you do.
How, then, can you live your life fully and not be victimized by stress?
There are many "stress management techniques" available today that try to minimize
stress by training people how to better organize their time, their responsibilities, and
their work and home environments.
No. They may be helpful in their own right, but they are not the "bottom line" on stress
management.
Rest. The very deep rest gained during 20 minutes of Maharishi's Transcendental
Meditation allows the body to rejuvenate itself and throw off the accumulated stress and
fatigue that has built up over years.
It helps to normalize high blood pressure, reduce high cholesterol levels, improve
bronchial asthma, provide relief from insomnia -- even improve reaction time and
athletic performance.
Without this rest, you can only hope to "manage" stress and struggle to organize your
schedule to cope with growing stress in life, not eliminate it.
With this rest you don't just manage stress, you prevent new stress from accumulating
today and you eliminate stress built up from the past. Research shows that you'll
improve your health, increase your energy, and promote the clarity of your mind and the
creativity and orderliness of your thinking. Then you'll be better prepared to meet all of
the responsibilities in your life without creating more stress and strain and without
reducing or shying away from any new commitment or challenge. At the same time
you'll grow in the capacity to enjoy life to its fullest.
"I have been using Transcendental Meditation in my practice as a stress-
reduction modality for the past 20 years," says Steele Belok, M.D., clinical
instructor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. "I have found that it is
not only an effective tool to use in anxiety-related disorders, but it also has
significant physiological effects. I have seen positive effects on
hypertension, cholesterol, asthma, and insomnia. In addition, for patients
who are healthy and who are interested in prevention and health promotion,
I have found Transcendental Meditation to be highly effective in enhancing
their physical and mental well-being. These effects have been corroborated
by a growing body of scientific literature showing the effectiveness of
Transcendental Meditation in these and other areas."
There are the normal stresses and strains of daily life -- and then there is the devastating
impact of traumatic stress. Transcendental Meditation has also been found to be a potent
antidote to the effects of extreme stress -- what doctors have termed "post-traumatic
stress syndrome." For example, a 3-month study of Vietnam veterans found that
veterans who learned Transcendental Meditation improved significantly compared to
veterans who were participating in a counseling program. The veterans practicing
Transcendental Meditation were found to be less emotionally numb and had reduced
alcohol abuse, insomnia, depression, and anxiety. They also showed a decreased
severity of "delayed stress syndrome" (Journal of Counseling and Development 64:
212-214, 1985).
Transcendental Meditation also helps those who are recovering from the trauma of a
serious illness, and those who have suffered through the stress of other major traumas,
such as a serious auto accident.
Martha Gray, 48, is a data architect who develops computing systems for
the Boeing Company in Seattle. In March 1992 Martha was diagnosed as
having breast cancer. She had surgery -- a lumpectomy -- and afterwards
underwent six months of chemotherapy and then radiation treatments.
Doctors told Martha that her prognosis was good. But by the end of her
treatments, Martha was in a deep depression.
"I went to a breast cancer support group, and I discovered that depression
was almost an accepted way of life," Martha recalls. "The majority of the
women -- and I mean the majority of the women -- who were in that group
were on some sort of anti-depressants. After all that I had been through, I
realized that I just did not want to live my life in anxiety and fear."
Martha had been doing a lot of reading and had heard about Transcendental
Meditation. She learned the technique at the Transcendental Meditation
Center in Seattle on June 19, 1993.
"It has absolutely changed everything for me," Martha says. "My outlook is
completely different. I'm positive; I'm happy. Transcendental Meditation
releases the stress. That's been the key. Before I would try to laugh off the
anxiety, or disregard it, or stuff it back down, or try to ignore it, or try to be
brave -- all the things you try to do to manipulate the fear and try to keep
going. With Transcendental Meditation the stress is released and it's gone.
It's been tremendously freeing.
"When people talk about all the problems that a cancer patient faces, they
forget to realize that the family and spouse also go through a tremendous
amount of anxiety and anguish and fear. Because my husband, Fred, started
Transcendental Meditation also, it's been a wonderful thing for him, too."
Martha has just had a 2-year check-up and her doctors say that everything is
fine.
"It helps so much to be able to sit down twice a day and just quiet
ourselves," Martha says. "Transcendental Meditation has created a stress-
free, happy way of life for both of us."
"I had so much physical and emotional stress from the accident," says
Gail Tomura, an artist living in West Los Angeles. "Transcendental
Meditation is the first thing that helped because it gives me such profound
rest. It's finally allowing that deep stress to be released. In the 3 months I've
been meditating, I've made more progress with all of my treatments than I
have in the past 8 years."
Gail was a bright 28-year-old graduate student working towards a masters'
degree in fine arts at Claremont College in southern California. On July 18,
1986, she was driving at dusk along a narrow winding road near Fullerton
when she was hit head-on by car speeding at 60 miles an hour.
Gail was lucky to be alive. She broke a leg, an arm, and two ribs, fractured
her skull, and suffered what her doctors called a "mild-to-moderate" head
injury. She began an intensive program of physical therapy and cognitive
therapy. She said that she felt like she was walking with a thick fog around
her head. She had to relearn to read, concentrate, follow directions, and find
things on a map. She had been an avid reader, devouring three to four books
a month. Now, if she was lucky, she could read three to four books in a
year.
Determined to recover, she made slow but steady progress for 6 years. She
wasn't back to 100% yet, but she was getting close, when on June 24, 1992,
Gail was in another car accident. It was minor-no broken bones-but it
somehow brought back her old symptoms. Her headaches returned and so
did her backaches and neckaches. Gail's doctor put her on an intensive
program of 4-days-a-week physical therapy and recommended counseling.
It didn't help. She tried some alternative therapies. She didn't get any better.
She said that she lost hope and began to sink into a depression.
"The fog is gone," Gail says now. "My mind is clearer than it has been since
the accident. I am able to read more, and my comprehension is excellent.
Gail's art career is taking off. She does painting and drawing, and for the
first time she is finding that she doesn't have to solicit shows; curators are
starting to call her, and collectors are buying more of her work.
We know that stress-normal daily stress and severe traumatic stress -- is at the basis of
almost all diseases and disorders. We also know that stress greatly accelerates the aging
process. Nearly 15 years ago, researchers began to study the effects of Transcendental
Meditation on aging. Not surprisingly, considering the role of stress in aging,
researchers found that long-term practice of Transcendental Meditation can promote a
significantly younger biological age.
To understand how this could happen, first it helps to understand a little about the aging
process.
People age at different rates. According to most theories, the causes of aging are
complex. They include heredity, the stress of daily living, and prior illnesses. But it all
adds up to wear and tear on the system. For example, Charles is 48 years old according
to his birth certificate, but his doctor knows otherwise. His doctor knows that because of
intense job stress, Charles has the physiology of an average 60-year-old. The doctor
recommends that Charles cut back on his workload and stop smoking, and he prescribes
special medication for his high blood pressure.
Paul, on the other hand, is 49 years old and in good shape. Paul's doctor says that he has
the physiology of a man 5 years younger. He gets a clean bill of health.
There is a difference between chronological age and biological age. Chronological age
is fixed; it's your age based on your birth certificate-the number of years you have lived.
Biological age isn't fixed; it is an indication of your overall state of health compared to
the norm in the general population.
Scientists can use several tests, such as measurements of systolic blood pressure,
auditory threshold, and near-point vision, to distinguish an individual's biological age
from his actual chronological age.
The first scientist to study the effects of Transcendental Meditation on aging was Dr.
Robert Keith Wallace, the same physiologist who pioneered Transcendental Meditation
research as a graduate student at UCLA in 1968. Twelve years after his first
Transcendental Meditation study was published in Science, Dr. Wallace published his
research on Transcendental Meditation and aging in the International Journal of
Neuroscience (16: 5358, 1982).
12 Years Younger
Dr. Wallace found that subjects with an average chronological age of 50 years, who had
been practicing Transcendental Meditation for over 5 years, had a biological age 12
years younger than their chronological age. That means a 55-year-old meditator had the
physiology of a 43-year-old.
Several of the subjects in the study were found to have a biological age 27 years
younger than their chronological age. This study has since been replicated several times.
Other studies have also shown the beneficial effects of Transcendental Meditation on
the aging process.
Are these findings surprising? "No, not when you consider that all the major factors
associated with longevity, such as hypertension and cholesterol, have been shown to
improve with the regular practice of the Transcendental Meditation technique," Dr.
Wallace says.
"I'm never tired since I started meditating," says Ann Hurley, 75. "I've
got a lot of energy. I work at my son's law office, and I run circles around
the two women in the office. It's two stories, and I run up and down the
stairs all day. One of the women said to me, 'Don't you ever get tired?' I
stopped and thought, and I realized that this hasn't happened to me since
Transcendental Meditation. I'm not tired anymore."
Ann worked for DuPont for 33 years before taking an early retirement in
1983. Then, in 1987, she went to work for her son in Wilmington,
Delaware. She started by filling in as a temporary receptionist over the
lunch hour, and now she works from nine o'clock in the morning until five
or six o'clock at night, doing filing, legal work, and accounting. She brings
extra work home and does accounting on her computer. She started
meditating in 1988.
"Transcendental Meditation has made my mind clearer. Now I've got this
desire to study; I want to know more. Before I just goofed off like
everybody else. Now people ask me, 'Why do you read all the time?' I say,
'Transcendental Meditation has woken up my mind. I want to know more
about everything.'
"I'm enjoying life, really enjoying life. That's what I do now. I go to work
and I go on trips and I look forward to the next day and how beautiful it's
going to be, which I never did before. Transcendental Meditation has
changed my whole outlook on life-that life is really worth living."
An Effective Solution to Spiraling Health Costs
What are the combined benefits of reduced stress, better health, and a younger
biological age? Among the many advantages is a dramatic reduction in health care use
-- and with it, an effective answer to the crisis of spiraling health care costs.
admissions and outpatient visits of other professional groups. They also had lower
sickness rates in all categories, including 87% less hospitalization for heart disease and
55% less for cancer. In addition, people practicing Transcendental Meditation who were
over 40 years of age had an even higher percentage reduction in insurance utilization
compared to the norm for their age group (Psychosomatic Medicine 4: 493-507, 1987).
On the basis of this insurance study, and hundreds of other findings on the technique,
physicians and other health care professionals now see Transcendental Meditation as a
practical, cost-effective solution to the health care crisis.
"We are trying to solve the health care crisis by rearranging who pays
for the sickness," says Hari Sharma, M.D., F.R.C.P.C. "What we need to
do is keep people from falling sick in the first place. That is true health care
reform; then we'll save money in the best possible way by keeping people
healthy."
"In truth, the health care crisis is a crisis of stress. There's an epidemic of
stress, both in individuals and in society as a whole. Stress breaks down
physical and mental health in the individual and creates biochemicals that
are destructive to the physical body.
"I used to get real stressed in college. I knew that medical school would
be even more stressful. Transcendental Meditation has been perfect for me.
It's so relaxing. It's a very efficient way for me to get re-charged, be able to
spend more time studying, and get more out of my day."
-- Sam Marasco, Sr., 67, Advertising Sales Manager at the San Diego Sports
Arena, San Diego. Thirty-three members of Mr. Marasco's extended family
have learned Transcendental Meditation, including his 95-year-old mother-
in-law, Grandma Macri.
The following charts represent just a few of the numerous research studies conducted on
the physiological effects of Transcendental Meditation, and their benefits to health.
C H A P T E R 4
Ideal Relationships
Bruce Brooks is a versatile and prolific award-winning author who has written 11 books
-- 5 novels and 6 non-fiction -- in 10 years. He has won the national Newbery Honor for
two of his children's books, and he recently completed a sports biography and a
collection of essays on fatherhood. Bruce travels throughout the country, giving several
hundred presentations a year, to children, teachers, librarians, and parents, on reading
and writing -- how to use literature in education and for personal enrichment.
Bruce's wife, Penelope, is an accomplished artist, housewife, and mother of their 10-
year-old son, Alex, and their 16-month-old son, Spencer. Penelope does three-
dimensional art work in sculpture and lighting, and for several years she taught art and
was assistant art director at the Jewish Community Center in the Greater Washington,
D.C. area.
Bruce and Penelope have been married 16 years. They live in Silver Spring, Maryland.
"Transcendental Meditation allows you to discover just how vast an amount you have to
give. You become more secure in yourself by discovering how big you really are; that,
in fact, you are infinite. You can give and give and give and you will never exhaust
yourself. In my experience that is the secret of relationships, and that has been the secret
to raising our children -- the capacity for complete giving. And just as you practice
Transcendental Meditation as the basis for action, for bringing more of yourself into
your work, so, too, in a relationship, you meditate as the basis for bringing more of
yourself into the relationship. Only by giving more will you receive more."
Bruce: "Marriage and raising children have gotten easier and easier because we are
meditating and growing toward enlightenment."
It's a common experience: One morning you wake up as tired as when you went to
sleep. The day moves slowly; complications arise; problems seem to be overwhelming.
You feel worried; relationships suffer.
But the next morning, after a deep sleep, you feel fresh and alert. The circumstances of
the previous day may remain the same, but your evaluation of them differs dramatically.
You are more relaxed, yet more energetic, more productive. Relationships are smoother,
more harmonious.
Why the difference? Basically, it's because the world is as you are. Put on green glasses
and everything appears green. Put on yellow glasses and everything is yellow. Look
through tired eyes with an anxious mind and your vision is clouded with problems,
many of which, in reality, may not exist.
Look through fresh eyes with an alert, creative mind and you are better able to see
solutions to the problems that do exist. When you are rested and fresh, you have the
stability, adaptability, energy and intelligence to solve problems and make
improvements in all areas of your life.
In his book Science of Being and Art of Living, Maharishi writes, "Really good social
behavior between people will only be possible when their awareness is broadened, when
they are able to see the whole situation, to understand each other more thoroughly, to be
aware of each other's need and attempt to fulfill that need. This naturally necessitates a
fully developed consciousness, a right sense of judgement, and all the qualities that only
a strong and clear mind possesses."
"Small minds always fail to perceive the whole situation and in their narrow vision
create imaginary obstacles that are neither useful to themselves nor to anyone else,"
Maharishi writes. "Then their behavior towards others only results in misunderstanding
and increase of tension."
It's also a common experience that relationships thrive on giving. At home it's the father
giving time and attention to his children. At work it's the manager giving enough
supervision and support to the sales staff.
But we can only give from what we have. The father who returns home from work
exhausted can hardly give his children the love and help they need. Likewise, the
manager who is anxious and short-tempered can hardly give the necessary patience and
insight to properly train his staff.
If you're able to think more clearly, you'll be better able to properly evaluate situations
and circumstances as they arise. With broader vision you'll be naturally more
understanding and patient.
Because you have an effective way to eliminate stress and develop your own unlimited
potential, you'll be more fulfilled within yourself, and you won't suffer from the build-
up of tension and fatigue. The result? More happiness, less worry, more energy, and a
fuller heart. Relationships spontaneously improve, and life naturally becomes much
more enjoyable, much more satisfying.
Ralph and Dian Gumpf have been married for 38 years. Ralph and Dian
and their two grown daughters, Sara and Julie, learned Transcendental
Meditation in Madison, Wisconsin. Ralph is a learning coordinator at Black
Hawk Middle School in Madison; Dian is a homemaker; Sara is married and
has gone back to college; and Julie is a senior at the University of
Wisconsin, majoring in wildlife ecology. The Gumpfs have been meditating
for one year.
Ralph: "I think the interactions with my wife and daughters are much
better, much easier, since we've been meditating. We always had a good
relationship, but now we are able to tell each other things that are accepted
in a more positive way. In addition, my physical check-up was better. My
blood pressure always used to run a little high, but this year it was down,
and I hadn't taken any medication for it."
Dian: "I was always the anxious type. I had this free-floating anxiety,
butterflies in my stomach. The first thing I noticed after learning
Transcendental Meditation was that the anxiety left. I am much calmer now.
I've also seen definite changes in my husband. He has a very stressful job.
There's quite a bit of difference in him now when he comes home from
work. He's more relaxed; he's a lot easier around the house. And I also think
he has a lot easier time at work.
"We look forward to life more each day. We see fewer things as problems.
We have a growing sense of 'We can handle this, whatever comes along.'"
"As someone who has treated thousands of people who have suffered from
the disease of substance abuse, I cannot make a stronger recommendation
than this: The government should research Transcendental Meditation,
understand it, and put it into practice
The following charts are just a few of the research studies on the effects of
Transcendental Meditation for reducing anxiety, increasing self-esteem and self-
actualization, as well as for reducing substance abuse.
• Reduced Anxiety
• Increased Self-Actualization
• Increased Strength of Self-Concept
• Decreased Cigarette, Alcohol, and Drug Abuse
C H A P T E R 5
"We needed a new approach to everything -- a new attitude, new thinking, new energy
to revitalize the company and get it to take off again."
"We would go to weekend or week-long seminars, and we'd return with these huge
books, and we'd still be plagued with the same problems. We'd forget what we learned,
or we didn't have time to restudy what we'd learned, due to the demands of the job, and
so we just went back to our old routine.
"I was looking for a tool that my employees could utilize every day, that would allow
them to change their thinking, allow them to have more energy, be more creative on
their own, and use more of their potential on the job. I found Transcendental Meditation
to be the tool that would work."
Buck sat down with his senior staff and came up with a plan. First, Transcendental
Meditation would be offered at company expense to anyone interested among the
managers. They would meditate twice a day for 6 months. They would be asked, on a
monthly basis, to write progress reports, pro or con, on what they thought of the
program and how it was affecting them in their daily life -- both at the office and at
home. Then they would decide if the program would go company-wide.
"After 6 months there was 100% agreement among that management group to offer the
program throughout the company," Buck says. "Transcendental Meditation was then
introduced into research, manufacturing, sales, marketing, and administration."
Buck encouraged his managers and employees to meditate at least once a day -- in the
morning or in the late afternoon -- on company time at the plant.
In 1987 Buck sold the company and retired. He now spends his time with his family and
consults with companies that are looking for new avenues for success. He is often asked
to speak on the success of the Transcendental Meditation program at the former H.A.
Montgomery Company to executives who are interested in repeating that success in
their own firms.
"The individual is the most important resource a business has," Buck says. "You've got
to improve the capacity and capabilities of the individual. If you take a tired individual,
or one who is not motivated or who doesn't feel he has any creativity, no matter what
tools you put in his hands, it's a waste of time. First you have to improve the individual,
increase his potential; then you can give him other tools to work with. The only
program that I know that will do that is Transcendental Meditation. The small amount
of money it costs today will be of immeasurable benefit to the company on the
profitability line and on a morale line -- and everything else you can imagine. This is
success."
U.S. business is being crippled by stress. Up to $200 billion is lost -- wasted, actually
-- each year due to stress in the work place, according to a 1993 report by the United
Nations International Labor Organization.
Worse yet, research indicates that none of the programs for stress reduction/personal
development widely in use in business and industry today provide a solution to the
problem. Despite intensive efforts to curb the impact of stress in the work place,
medical care utilization costs continue to escalate, and job performance, productivity,
and employee turnover rates continue to suffer.
"In this era of increased competition and downsizing, businesses have asked people
to do more and more work in less and less time," says Gerald Swanson, Ph.D.,
Professor of Management at Maharishi International University, who has introduced
Transcendental Meditation in several U.S. corporations and has written a book,
Enlightened Management, on the use of the technique in business. "This puts more
stress on the employees and leaves them burned out and unable to have a good time
with their families.
"Today most people in business are looking for some way to re-establish the balance
between home and work. They are torn between the need to maintain their financial
stability and security and the need to come home and nurture their family. This is
especially true now that there is such a large number of two-career marriages and
single-parent families. Both the mom and the dad are being called upon to be bread
winners and still provide that nurturing value to their family.
"How can you do that unless you have some way of not being overwhelmed by the
stress of working? The only way to do that is to have a stronger, more resilient
physiology.
"We know from research and experiences in business that that's precisely how people
feel when they practice Transcendental Meditation," Dr. Swanson says.
In the past 36 years, Maharishi's Transcendental Meditation has been learned by tens of
thousands of business professionals. The technique has also been offered company-wide
to executives, managers, and employees in hundreds of large corporations and small
businesses throughout the world.
Scientific research in several of these business settings has found that Transcendental
Meditation offers a cost-effective solution to problems caused by job stress. The
research shows that sickness, absenteeism, and health care utilization decrease;
productivity and job satisfaction improve; and relationships between co-workers and
supervisors improve.
Researchers found that compared to controls, the Transcendental Meditation group had
significantly
The research showed that the effects of Transcendental Meditation on anxiety, alcohol
and cigarette use, and in enhancing personal development, were much larger than for
other forms of meditation and relaxation found in previous studies.
Worry over the negative impact of rising job stress led employees at the Puritan-
Bennett Corporation, the world's leading maker of respiratory care products, to ask the
company to address the problem.
The benefits were immediate, according to Dr. Stevens. After just a few days, managers
reported that they felt more relaxed and less anxious, were thinking more clearly, and
were able to organize themselves better and accomplish much more.
Diana Trompeter is payroll supervisor for the Puritan Group at Puritan-Bennett. She has
been with the company for 13 years. Diana learned Transcendental Meditation because
she had been under extreme stress from the death of her mother and increasing
pressures at work. After 4 weeks of practicing the technique, Diana wrote a letter to Dr.
Stevens, assessing her progress:
"In the beginning I wasn't sure what TM would do for me, and when I shared the idea
with my staff, they had doubts, too. I decided to try it, and it is one of my best decisions.
"TM immediately changed things for me. I became calm and clear-minded after my first
session, and it works as well for me now, 4 weeks later, as it did that first day. TM is
one of the few things that is truly effortless and yet you can see the benefit.
"My employees have commented on the difference in me and in other meditators they
often work with. Of all the good benefits the company has offered us through the years,
this is by far the most beneficial for me. I feel better, more confident about my
decisions, and most important, I feel a peace and calm that seems to get me through the
most difficult times.
"Thank you for introducing TM to us, and I would like to see it offered to all our
employees."
Ten months after learning the technique, Diana reported that the benefits were
continuing to grow.
In the project design a research component was included to evaluate objectively the
effects of the program on 38 meditating executives compared with 38 matched controls.
The findings: Over a 3-month period, the meditators reduced psychological and
physical symptoms of stress, reduced total blood cholesterol, gained vitality, and
enhanced mental health and well-being.
Dr. Stevens said that Puritan-Bennett was very satisfied with the results and that she
strongly recommends Transcendental Meditation to other companies. "If you want your
employees to eliminate stress and not just cope with it -- which is what companies
spend a great deal of time doing today -- then having them learn Transcendental
Meditation is the best way to do it."
The following charts are just a few of the research studies on the effects of
Transcendental Meditation for improving productivity and relationships, reducing
stress, and promoting health, on the job.
• Increased Productivity
• Improved Relations at Work
• Increased Relaxation and Decreased Stress
• Improved Health and More Positive Health Habits
C H A P T E R 6
Life Supported by Natural Law
The more years that I meditate, the smoother my life goes, and the more good luck, the
more support I get in my activity from the environment and from people around me,"
says Fred Gratzon, chairman of Telegroup, Inc., a long distance international discount
carrier. Founded in 1989, Telegroup is now one of the fastest growing companies in
America. The firm has clients in 114 countries.
"If you favor natural law, natural law will favor you." -- Maharishi
One day everything is a strain. You feel worried and tense and out of-step with the day.
You just miss an important phone call, hit all the red lights when you're rushing for an
appointment, and can't find a parking place anywhere.
Another day you feel quite good. Everything seems to go right and click into place. You
find the perfect parking place, reach the right person on the phone, and come up with a
workable solution to a problem at the office. The day seems to go effortlessly and you
wonder why every day can't go at least as smoothly.
Here's how.
Throw a tennis ball up in the air and it falls to the earth: gravity, a law of nature.
Water a plant, give it proper food and sunlight and it grows: laws of nature.
The entire world, the entire universe is governed by laws of nature. Everywhere we look
-- at DNA through an electron microscope or at the galactic life through a high-powered
telescope -- everything in the universe is permeated by intelligence; all activity is
governed by natural law.
What does natural law have to do with you? Everything -- because not only are
electrons and galaxies subject to the laws of nature, but so are you.
There are, for example, countless laws of nature that govern the functioning of your
body. If you align yourself with those laws -- eat the right foods, exercise properly, get
enough rest, etc. -- your body maintains its health.
Therefore, the key to better health -- actually the key to perfect health -- is to attune
yourself with all the laws of nature that naturally promote growth and evolution. It's also
the key to skill in action in life.
Living in accord with natural law is simple through Transcendental Meditation, and
we'll see how in a moment. But first, let's analyze the ways that you can't gain this
alliance:
Why? Because there are far too many laws of nature to understand, much less
remember. And, even if you were able to gain some knowledge about specific laws of
nature, it's no guarantee you'll be able to abide by them.
For example, there's the medical doctor, a noted authority on the causes of stress-related
diseases, who nevertheless gets sick from overwork and worry. He's fully aware of the
causes and consequences of stress, yet he is unable to follow his own professional
advice. He works too long and too hard.
Or the factory supervisor with a heart condition who's placed on a strict diet and
exercise program by his physician. How long does it take before he begins to
compromise on his regimen even though it's in his own best interest to maintain it?
How? By allowing the conscious mind to settle down to its most silent, wakeful, and
fully expanded state, Transcendental Meditation opens the awareness to pure
consciousness, which is the unified field of all the laws of nature.
When you open your awareness to the unified field during Transcendental Meditation,
you draw upon the unlimited potential of nature at its source. Your mind naturally
becomes clearer and more creative. Your body becomes healthier and more energetic.
Your thoughts, feelings, and actions are spontaneously more in tune with the
evolutionary power of natural law. And then you enjoy more success and satisfaction in
everything you do.
"I believe that you get back what you give," says Michael Reed, Ph.D., manager in
business development for Glaxo Inc., a pharmaceutical company in Research Triangle
Park, near Raleigh, in North Carolina. "Transcendental Meditation has allowed me to
give more, do more, and live and enjoy my life more fully. At the same time, because I
meditate I feel that I am having a positive influence on the people I live with, the people
I work with, and society in general.
"Some people just call it good luck, but since I've been meditating I've found that
spontaneously good things happen, often without any directed thought or effort on my
part. Nature spontaneously delivers opportunities and situations to enhance my job, my
family, and my social life.
"I have a wonderful life. I have a beautiful wife, a new baby, a job that is very
satisfying, and I live very comfortably. I feel that I'm living the fruits of support of
nature every day in many, many ways."
"Everyone has had this happen: You want something and suddenly 5 minutes later,
or a day later, it's there and you didn't seem to do anything," says Channler Drawdy,
chairman and part-owner of Atherton Technology, a computer-aided software
engineering company in Fremont, California. "Most people think this kind of good luck
is coincidental, but it doesn't have to be that way. Since I've been practicing
Transcendental Meditation these things are occurring with more and more frequency in
my business and in my personal life. The amount of support I seem to be spontaneously
receiving has reached the point where I can no longer say it's a coincidence. I am able to
do less and accomplish more. Life has become simpler and much more enjoyable."
Before acquiring controlling interest in Atherton Technology in 1993, Mr. Drawdy was
a software engineering director for Sun Microsystems. Atherton Technology had not
been successful since its founding in 1986, but the company turned a profit the first year
after Mr. Drawdy and his associates came in. Now we're into an explosive growth
period," he says. "We're really taking off fast."
"In my experience, success comes from support of nature. There are laws of nature, like
the laws of physics, and you can either violate those laws or you can live in harmony
with them. If you live in harmony with those laws, then every aspect of your life is
fuller, richer, more successful. If you violate them, then you experience a lot of pain and
failure and discomfort. The easiest, fastest way to cultivate harmony with the laws of
nature is through Transcendental Meditation."
"Education is responsible," Maharishi has said. "No educational system in the world is
capable of training an individual to function spontaneously in accord with natural law.
This lack in education is the cause of all problems in every area of life."
The solution to all problems then, as Maharishi has said, is spontaneous alliance with
natural law. Why? Because when you closely examine them, all problems in life
originate from the violation of natural law. It is violation of natural law that causes
stress. Stress in an individual's life is the cause of sickness and suffering, and the build-
up of stress among all the individuals in society is the cause of crime, violence, conflict,
and war.
On the other hand, life spontaneously lived in harmony with natural law is the basis for
a healthy, prosperous, and fulfilling life for the individual, and the foundation for lasting
peace and progress for the whole world.
C H A P T E R 7
"Some of my students and former students have been shot; some of my former students
have been killed. That brings about tremendous stress in me because I know these kids,
and I have to worry that my school is safe for my students and staff. I have to make sure
that I don't have the outside forces coming in. In order to do that I've got to be able to
think clearly enough to run my building and still try to assure youngsters that this is a
safe haven.
"Transcendental Meditation is the best thing I have ever done to help myself. I have
more energy.
I am less stressful. I can think clearer, and I believe I have become a better principal.
My tolerance level is higher, so I am able to talk clearer to youngsters and understand
the things that are affecting them.
"My health is outstanding. If I had not started Transcendental Meditation, I'd have left
the school system or I'd be dead because of all the pressure. It has made me much
stronger physically and much stronger mentally.
"I truly feel that Transcendental Meditation is a vehicle that we can use to reduce or
eliminate the violence in our community. It will help to remove all the baggage that
young people bring to school with them that makes them ready to jump and fight at the
first moment anyone touches them. If they can meditate at home, it will help them
remove the stresses that they have each and every day -- and that is from hearing
gunshots at night and seeing people get killed -- family members and friends.
Transcendental Meditation is going to eventually remove that kind of behavior.
"Only a new seed can yield a new crop. Only new knowledge, new
principles, and new programs can put an end to conflict, sickness, and
suffering, and prevent such problems from arising in the future. Only
new knowledge can create a healthy, prosperous, harmonious society
and a peaceful world." -- Maharishi
Crime spreads at an alarming rate through our cities. Regional conflicts rage in many
parts of the globe.
Billions of dollars urgently needed for education, health care, etc., are allocated to build
more prisons and hire more police, but no one is safe from the threat of rising violent
crime.
Peacekeeping forces are sent, at considerable risk and expense, to far-off lands to quell
conflicts. Experienced diplomats hammer out peace accords between opposing factions.
Yet order is not maintained, and lasting peace is not delivered.
What's wrong, according to Maharishi, is that the root cause of violence -- both in crime
and war -- has not been addressed. Both are the outburst of built-up stress in society.
And stress in society is created by all the people in society continually violating the
laws of nature.
"As long as individuals continue to violate the laws of nature, they will continue to
create stress in their own lives and create stress in the collective consciousness of the
whole nation," Maharishi says. "As a result, governmental efforts to promote peace will
prove ineffective, and the world will face violence and conflict everywhere. Peace will
only remain an abstract, unattainable ideal."
Like smokestacks pouring pollution into the atmosphere, individuals suffering from
stress pour stress into the environment, creating the ground for crime, violence, and
conflict in society.
The approaches that have been tried repeatedly -- more police, longer prison terms,
military force, peace agreements -- have ultimately failed because they fail to solve the
problem of high levels of stress in society.
Only a new seed can yield a new crop. A completely new approach is needed that can
reduce the dangerous rise of stress and crime in our cities and, at the same time, reduce
the dangerous rise of stress and conflict in the world's trouble spots.
Fortunately, such an approach exists. It has been developed during the past 36 years,
and it has been found to work. What follows is a brief explanation of this approach,
including a history of its development, a discussion of its mechanics, and the research
that shows that it works.
When Maharishi first started teaching Transcendental Meditation in 1958, he said that
the technique was a way for the individual to grow in health and happiness, and for the
world to rise in peace.
"For the forest to be green, every tree must be green," Maharishi said. "The individual is
the basic unit of world peace. For the world to be at peace, every individual has to be at
peace."
Maharishi said that Transcendental Meditation was the key to producing a peaceful
individual, and therefore was the basis for creating world peace.
At that time, in the early 1960s, there were too few meditators in the world to test
Maharishi's prediction, even on a small scale. But by the end of 1974, more than
250,000 people were meditating in the United States, and many small cities in the
country had 1% of their population practicing the technique.
The first study to test Maharishi's prediction occurred in December 1974, when
scientists measured quality-of-life indicators in 4 cities where 1% of the population was
practicing Transcendental Meditation. They examined such standard and publicly
accessible indices as crime statistics, accident rates, and hospital admissions.
When these findings were compared with similar research from four control cities
matched for population density, geography, economic conditions, etc., a remarkable
discovery was made.
The researchers then expanded their study to include eleven 1% cities and eleven
control cities. They found a 16.6 percent reduction in crime rates among the 1% cities
compared to the non-one-percent cities.
What did it mean? It was the first scientific validation of Maharishi's prediction that the
quality of life could be improved through a small percentage of a population practicing
Transcendental Meditation.
On January 12, 1975, in the presence of leading scientists, doctors, educators, business
leaders, and the world press, Maharishi hailed the significance of this discovery by
inaugurating "the dawn of the Age of Enlightenment" for the world.
The research continued. The 11-city study was expanded to include 48 cities, with
similar results. The study, entitled "The Transcendental Meditation Program and Crime
Rate Change in a Sample of Forty-Eight Cities," was published in the Journal of Crime
and Justice (Vol. IV, 1981).
"This demonstration has confirmed the theory that large assemblies of people practicing the
Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program reduce social stress and tension, as measured by
decreased violent crime, increased governmental cooperation and efficiency, and improvements in
other sociological indicators," says Dr. John Hagelin, Director of the Institute of Science,
Technology and Public Policy at Maharishi International University. "It shows definitively that any
government can reduce crime and other social problems, and prevent new problems from arising, by
establishing 'A Group for a Government' -- a large group of experts practicing the Transcendental
Meditation and TM-Sidhi program. Governments now have a practical means to prevent costly
problems and dramatically improve the quality of life for the whole population."
"I think the claim can be plausibly made that the potential impact of this research exceeds that of
any other on-going social or psychological research program," says David Edwards, Ph.D.,
Professor of Government at the University of Texas at Austin, referring to the many studies
conducted on effects of the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program on society. "The
research has survived a broader array of statistical tests than has most research in the field of
conflict resolution. I think this work, and the theory that informs it, deserve the most serious
consideration by academics and policy makers alike." Dr. Edwards does not practice
Transcendental Meditation.
"There is growing recognition that we have been thinking too narrowly about the causes,
dynamics, and means of resolving conflicts," says John Davies, Ph.D., Research Coordinator for the
Center of International Development and Conflict Management at the University of Maryland.
"This thinking hasn't given us sufficiently effective options to be able to manage and minimize
conflict in the world."
Dr. Davies is an expert on the prevention, analysis, and resolution of conflict. He is currently
developing the most advanced and sophisticated global event data system for tracking daily
international and intra-national events worldwide. International peace-keeping organizations will
use the data system for developing early warning systems and evaluating the success of attempts to
prevent or resolve conflicts.
Dr. Davies, who practices Transcendental Meditation, has conducted his own study to test the effect
of group practice of the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program on conflict resolution.
His findings replicated several earlier studies showing a positive correlation between the number of
people collectively practicing this technology in a society and the reduction of conflict throughout
the entire population. His research also indicated a significant increase in the level of cooperation
between opposing parties who were involved in conflict during the experimental period.
"The advantage of this approach to conflict resolution is that it doesn't require any intrusive
intervention to resolve the conflict," Dr. Davies says. "It appears to make use of a fundamental level
of interconnectedness among all members of the community to reduce stress and create coherence
in the conflict area. The evidence is there that this approach warrants inclusion in any government's
multilevel repertoire of concurrent approaches to promote the development and quality of life at
every level -- city, national, and international. It expands the range of tools for federal government.
Leaders should be aware of it. They should be trying it."
The following charts represent a few of the more than 40 studies on the effects of the
Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program on society.
• Increased Positivity, Decreased Crime
• Improved Quality of Life
• Decreased Violent Fatalities
• Improved Quality of Life and Reduced Crime
C H A P T E R 8
The Next Step: How to Start
My wife, Jane, started Transcendental Meditation before me, and I saw changes in her
right away," recalls Barry Pitt, president of a large retail business in Redford, a suburb
of Detroit. "She was happier and much more outgoing. So I decided to learn, too."
That was 24 years ago -- a year before Barry and Jane got married. At the time, Barry
was a special education teacher in Detroit, teaching emotionally disturbed boys, 12 to
16 years old.
"It was a real stressful environment. My class was the last stop for those kids in the
public school system. After that they went to Wayne County Juvenile Hall. Every
morning when I would go to school, I would grab my keys, my wallet, and two aspirin.
By noon I would have a splitting headache, and I would have to take the aspirin.
"The day I started meditating was the last time I ever took the aspirin. I never got
headaches again."
Today, Barry runs a 25,000-square-foot hardware and automotive store with 120
employees. "A real pressure cooker," he says. All day Barry is talking with vendors
about merchandise, attending meetings to set advertising and marketing programs,
dealing with employees over personnel issues, and spending a lot of time on the floor
working with customers.
Barry practices Transcendental Meditation twice a day. He says that it's part of his
routine, like brushing his teeth or taking a shower. "It's essential. Physically, it keeps me
strong, and mentally, it keeps me clear and alert. Because I meditate, I enjoy my life a
lot."
In 1970 Jane Roman Pitt was a junior at the University of Michigan, studying
education. She had heard about Transcendental Meditation from a friend, and when she
saw a poster announcing an introductory lecture, she decided to attend. After the lecture
she decided to start.
"At the time, I had been drinking about six cups of coffee a day just to keep going. I was
in school and working full-time as a waitress. I learned Transcendental Meditation, and
a few days later I didn't need the coffee anymore. And after I would meditate in the
afternoon, I could study at night without falling asleep. It really made a difference. I felt
much happier and more settled inside."
Today Jane is the mother of two teenagers: Jesse, 17, and Joanna, 14. She is also a
composer whose works are performed by choirs and chamber groups around the
country. Jane says the benefits of Transcendental Meditation are the same today as
when she started 24 years ago -- "only much more so. The only way I could handle all
the roles and responsibilities that I have as a working mother -- let alone enjoy them --
is through the deep rest, energy, and mental clarity that I get from meditating twice a
day."
Regardless of the reasons one has to learn Transcendental Meditation, with the regular
practice of the technique, all of the overall positive benefits to the mind, body, and
behavior naturally develop. Transcendental Meditation is one procedure that
simultaneously strengthens all aspects of life. It's like watering the root of a plant to
nourish the entire plant in one simple stroke.
The first step is a public lecture that provides an introduction to the Transcendental
Meditation program and presents a vision of possibilities from practicing the technique.
The lecture is about 90 minutes and includes:
The second step is also a public lecture, which provides an explanation of the mechanics
of the Transcendental Meditation technique. It lasts about 90 minutes and includes a
discussion of:
The third step, a personal interview with a trained teacher of the Transcendental
Meditation technique, provides an opportunity to ask any additional questions you
might still have and to make an appointment for personal instruction. The interview
takes about 15 minutes.
The fourth step is the actual instruction in the Transcendental Meditation technique,
which is held on a one-to-one basis with a qualified Transcendental Meditation teacher.
In this step you'll actually learn to practice the technique. Personal instruction takes
about 2 hours.
The fifth step begins a 3-day series of 2-hour checking seminars following your
personal instruction in Transcendental Meditation. This fifth step is held the day after
personal instruction. It is to review the mechanics of the technique and to verify and
validate the correctness of your practice. This seminar is attended by all the other people
who received personal instruction the previous day.
Step 6 -- Second Day of Checking Seminar
The sixth step is held on the second day after your personal instruction. In this session
you get the answer to any new questions you might have, verify the correctness of your
Transcendental Meditation practice, and discuss the mechanics of stabilizing the
benefits of Transcendental Meditation.
The seventh step is held on the third day after your personal instruction. Its purpose is to
answer any new questions you might have, verify the correctness of your practice, and
gain a vision of the goal of the Transcendental Meditation program -- the development
of full human potential in higher states of consciousness. The complete follow-up
program is also outlined.
There are a few practical requirements to start the technique, including the time needed
to learn the technique -- 2 hours a day over 4 consecutive days -- and a course fee. For
details on both, please attend a free introductory lecture on Transcendental Meditation
in your area.
"This is a large university, and there are a lot of very competent people here, so
you can easily feel that your work doesn't matter," says Joelle Tamraz, 21, a third-year
social studies major at Harvard. "It takes a lot of belief in yourself, a lot of self-
confidence. Some students fall by the wayside when they're not given positive
reinforcement. It also takes an open and flexible mind and discipline and commitment
to your work to be successful."
"After I meditate in the morning, I go to my classes and out into the world, and I feel
confident and calm. I feel more prepared for the tasks at hand, which are often difficult
and many.
"And although my studies are extremely important to me, since I have been meditating I
feel that my life has a deeper sense of purpose. The experience of my inner self has
allowed me to put what I do every day into a larger, more meaningful whole. As a
result, my relationships with people have dramatically improved. I've developed much
more loving and profound friendships, which I trace to the growing balance and
peacefulness I have from Transcendental Meditation. And because I meditate regularly,
I don't feel a lot of stress even when I have a lot of work. I am able to put things in
perspective."
To other students facing the challenges of high school or college, Joelle strongly
recommends Transcendental Meditation.
"It will give you a greater sense of stability and happiness and make you feel that you
can easily tackle your day-to-day challenges."
Woody started Transcendental Meditation along with his wife, Bobbie, an interior
decorator, and his 17-year-old daughter, Frannie, a junior at Mountain Brook High
School. The family has been practicing the technique for 6 months.
Bobbie: "I had bad hip pain. Whenever I drove for more than an hour, I had to stop and
walk around. It had bothered me a lot for 2 years. My physical therapist said that a lot of
the pain was due to stress. I remember one day after practicing Transcendental
Meditation for a few weeks, I suddenly realized that the stress and the pain had
completely gone away! And 6 months later it hasn't returned. My mind is a lot clearer
and calmer now, too. And for me that's saying a lot. I am calm even when things around
me are hectic. And because Frannie, who is my step-daughter, and I sometimes practice
the technique together, I think it has brought us a lot closer."
Frannie: "I love meditating. It's really relaxing. It's like taking a nap, except that your
mind is awake, and you don't feel groggy or heavy afterward. It's very refreshing and
gives me peace of mind. It has also helped me in school. I am able to cope with things
better and I am able to remember more and concentrate better in my classes. Before I
learned Transcendental Meditation, I used to get mostly B's, but now I get B-pluses and
A's. Transcendental Meditation has also made it more peaceful around the house. There
was always a lot of love in my family, but now there is a nicer, quieter atmosphere."
Woody: "Learning the technique has been wonderful. The teachers of Transcendental
Meditation are great people, and the follow-up program has been absolutely
outstanding."
What do you do now, after reading this book, if you want more information about the
technique? The next step is to attend an introductory lecture.
And if you have some questions about material covered in this book? Contact your local
Maharishi Vedic University or School and speak to a Transcendental Meditation
teacher. Or ask your questions at the introductory lecture. All Transcendental
Meditation teachers have received extensive training -- up to a year of study -- to teach
this very simple, yet very precise technique. They will be happy to answer all of your
questions.
C H A P T E R 9
Questions and Answers on the Technique
Maharishi's Transcendental Meditation provides the mind and body with a unique and
profound state of restful alertness. The body gains an extraordinarily deep state of rest
while the mind settles down to a state of inner calm and wakefulness. This process
dissolves deeply rooted stress and tension, rejuvenates the entire system, infuses the
mind with creativity and intelligence, and provides the basis for dynamic, successful
activity.
I play tennis to relax. A friend of mine listens to music. Doesn't exercise or simple
relaxation do the same thing as Transcendental Meditation?
Tennis, jogging, fishing, golf, gardening, reading a book, listening to soothing music,
bowling, etc. are all relaxing, enjoyable activities. They provide a welcome change of
pace, a break in the routine.
But the important question is: While they may seem relaxing, do these activities
actually release deeply rooted stress and tension? No.
This is because even though they may feel relaxing, nonetheless, they keep the mind
and body engaged in some activity.
What is nature's antidote to stress? Deep rest -- and the deeper the better.
Transcendental Meditation is unique. It is not just another form of activity or recreation.
Transcendental Meditation is a scientifically validated technique for providing the entire
system with very deep rest -- far deeper than ordinary eyes-closed rest or relaxation.
This deep rest has been shown to release accumulated stress and tension that nothing
else comes close to eliminating -- not a good night's sleep, a restful vacation, relaxation
exercises, a great tennis match, or a stroll in the park.
Just the opposite. By eliminating stress and tension, and increasing energy and
intelligence, Transcendental Meditation provides an effective basis for dynamism and
success in life.
Transcendental Meditation is like pulling an arrow back on a bow. Draw the arrow back
2 feet, and the arrow flies forward 50 yards. Transcendental Meditation naturally draws
the mind back to its own source, a reservoir of energy, creativity, and intelligence. After
20 minutes of the technique, you can plunge into activity refreshed and rested, with
more creativity and intelligence.
The result: Do less and accomplish more with greater energy, success, and satisfaction
in everything you do.
No. Each person is unique; each person has a different nervous system and therefore a
different pace of learning. Ensuring that you learn the technique properly requires
personal instruction from a qualified Transcendental Meditation teacher. Reading a
book or listening to a tape cannot provide the experience of pure consciousness and the
corresponding profound state of restful alertness; nor can a book anticipate or answer all
of the questions, at the right time, that every person might have while learning the
practice. With proper personal instruction, you can enjoy the technique for the rest of
your life -- as well as all of the benefits it naturally unfolds.
Transcendental Meditation is easy to learn and effortless to practice. Over one million
Americans -- and four million people worldwide -- of every age (10 years and up),
profession, education, and religion have learned Transcendental Meditation and enjoy
its benefits.
No. Once you've learned Transcendental Meditation, you practice the technique on your
own. There is, however, a complete, optional, lifetime follow-up program, available to
all meditators, to ensure that they continue to practice Transcendental Meditation
correctly and gain maximum benefits. You can take advantage of this program at your
convenience.
Transcendental Meditation is practiced sitting comfortably with the eyes closed for 20
minutes twice a day. It can be done anywhere -- at home, in your office, on an airplane,
on a camping trip. Anywhere.
Extensive scientific research and the experience of teaching the technique to more than
four million people around the world do show that correct practice of Transcendental
Meditation on a regular, twice-daily basis is very important for gaining the most from
the technique.
Yes. Anyone of any age, profession, education, religion, or culture. It doesn't matter if
you believe in Transcendental Meditation or not. You can be 100 percent skeptical
about the technique, and it will still work perfectly.
Transcendental Meditation is natural. It's just like gravity. If you don't believe in
gravity, and you drop a tennis ball, the ball still falls. In the same way, Transcendental
Meditation is automatic. It does not require any belief. It works for everyone.
And for those who think, "I could never sit still for 20 minutes," or "I'm too high strung,
I could never relax," or "I'll probably be the first person in the world who won't be able
to learn it," don't worry. Everyone can learn to meditate. See for yourself.
A P P E N D I X A
Questions and Answers on the Scientific Research
Many people have questions about specific benefits of Transcendental Meditation. The
following topics provide a more detailed discussion of the scientific research conducted
on Transcendental Meditation. It gives you a concise reference guide to the benefits of
the technique in the areas of mental potential, health, relationships, business, and
society.
• Levels of rest
• Compared to other techniques
• Blood pressure
• Cholesterol
• Health care use
• Aging
• Mental health
• Education
• Business
• Traumatic stress
• Substance abuse
• Criminal rehabilitation
• Quality of life
No. All meditation and relaxation techniques are not the same. Four studies were
conducted that compared findings of research on different meditation and relaxation
techniques. These meta-analyses found that Transcendental Meditation is the most
effective technique for reducing anxiety; increasing self-actualization; reducing alcohol,
cigarette, and drug abuse; and improving psychological health.
HYPERTENSION
Does Transcendental Meditation lower high blood pressure?
Yes. More than 30 million Americans suffer from high blood pressure, one of the most
serious risk factors for heart disease. Sixteen studies have clearly demonstrated the
positive effects of Transcendental Meditation on hypertension.
For example, a recent study was conducted on 128 inner-city, elderly African-
Americans with hypertension. They were randomly assigned to either the
Transcendental Meditation technique, progressive muscle relaxation, or a usual-care
control group. All subjects followed the same diet and exercise regimen. After 3 months
Transcendental Meditation produced an 11-point decrease in systolic blood pressure and
a 6-point decrease in diastolic blood pressure, compared to untreated controls, and more
than twice the reduction in blood pressure produced by progressive muscle relaxation.
(Personality, Elevated Blood Pressure, and Essential Hypertension, Johnson, Gentry,
and Julius (eds.). Hemisphere, Washington, D.C., 291-312, 1992.)
CHOLESTEROL
Does Transcendental Meditation reduce cholesterol levels?
Yes. Cholesterol is also a major risk factor in heart disease. A longitudinal study
showed that cholesterol levels significantly decreased through Transcendental
Meditation in hypercholesterolemic patients, compared to matched controls, over an 11-
month period. (Journal of Human Stress 5 (4): 24-27, 1979.)
Yes. Spiraling health care costs in the U.S. pose a dangerous threat to the health and
financial well-being of individuals, institutions, and the government. The only
permanent solution to the health care crisis is to make people healthier. Transcendental
Meditation has been shown to be most effective in promoting health and reducing health
care utilization and medical fees, compared to other wellness and health promotion
programs.
AGING
What effect does Transcendental Meditation have on aging?
Successful aging is the best indication of how effectively an individual handles the
stresses of life. Transcendental Meditation has proven highly effective in promoting
successful aging.
MENTAL HEALTH
Has there been research on the effects of Transcendental Meditation on mental
health?
Yes. Transcendental Meditation has been found to improve mental health by reducing
biochemical indicators of stress, decreasing anxiety, and enhancing psychological
development.
EDUCATION
Is there research on the effects of Transcendental Meditation in the schools?
Yes. Over 30 years of experience in schools, colleges, and universities in the U.S. and
around the world, and extensive scientific research, have shown that Transcendental
Meditation improves basic learning skills, increases intelligence, improves grades, and
improves moral reasoning in students.
BUSINESS
What effect does Transcendental Meditation have in a business?
Transcendental Meditation has been used in hundreds of businesses in the U.S. and
around the world. Research in several business settings has found Transcendental
Meditation to be a highly effective corporate development program.
TRAUMATIC STRESS
Has research been done on the effects of Transcendental Meditation on traumatic
stress?
Yes. In a Vietnam veterans center, 18 men suffering from severe and apparently
intractable post-traumatic stress syndrome were randomly assigned to either the
Transcendental Meditation technique or psychotherapy (multiple modalities). After 3
months of treatment, the counseling had no significant impact, but Transcendental
Meditation reduced emotional numbness, alcohol abuse, insomnia, depression, anxiety,
and severity of delayed stress syndrome. Veterans practicing Transcendental Meditation
also showed significant improvement, compared to controls, in employment status.
(Journal of Counseling and Development 64: 212-214, 1985.)
SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Has Transcendental Meditation been used to prevent and treat cigarette, drug, and
alcohol abuse?
Yes. Cigarette smoking is the largest, non-genetic cause of death in the U.S. (400,000
people per year), and alcohol is the third largest cause of death (100,000 per year).
Experts estimate that nearly 80% of crime is drug or alcohol related. Research has found
Transcendental Meditation to be highly effective in both the treatment and prevention of
substance abuse.
CRIMINAL REHABILITATION
Has Transcendental Meditation been used in prisons?
Currently, about 1.4 million Americans are behind bars, and experts agree that
conventional approaches to rehabilitating prisoners have failed. In fact, nearly two-
thirds of all inmates who are paroled return to prison within 3 years -- often after
committing further violent crimes. In the past 20 years, Transcendental Meditation has
been taught to thousands of adult inmates in 18 U.S. correctional institutions and to
hundreds of incarcerated juveniles in 8 U.S. facilities. It has also been used in prisons in
12 other countries. Research has found Transcendental Meditation to be very effective
in rehabilitating offenders and reducing recidivism (the rate at which offenders return to
prison).
QUALITY OF LIFE
Is there evidence that people practicing Transcendental Meditation have a positive
effect on society as a whole?
Yes. More than 40 studies have shown that group practice of Transcendental Meditation
and the more advanced TM-Sidhi program reduces social stress, as indicated violence,
crime, and international conflict in society and improves economic vitality and
governmental efficiency. (For a discussion of the mechanics of this effect, please see
Chapter 7, "Reducing Crime in Society and Creating World Peace.")
How did scientists measure this? To evaluate the potential impact of the Transcendental
Meditation and TM-Sidhi program on society, researchers assessed many variables,
including crime rate, violent fatalities (homicides, suicides, and motor vehicle
fatalities), armed conflict, economic indicators, and broad quality-of-life indices, which
include the above variables as well as rates of notifiable diseases, hospital admissions,
infant mortality, divorce, cigarette and alcohol consumption, and GNP.
The results indicated that the effects for each of these variables, or for overall indices,
consistently changed in the direction of improved quality of life when a sufficiently
large group of people were practicing the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi
program in society.
The accuracy of the results of these and other studies was strengthened through
the use of sophisticated methods, including:
Moreover, the results of the studies assessing the effect of group practice of the
Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program on society are highly statistically
significant. The probabilities that these positive effects could have been due to chance
are very small.
A P P E N D I X B
Selected References on the Scientific Research on Transcendental
Meditation
These and other research papers have been compiled in Scientific Research on
Maharishi's Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi Program, Collected Papers,
Vols. 1-6 (4,400 pages). Reprints of individual research papers, as well as volumes of
the Collected Papers, are available from the Institute of Science, Technology, and
Public Policy at Maharishi International University, Fairfield, Iowa 52557.
PHYSIOLOGY
Metabolic, Biochemical,
and Cardiovascular Changes
Adrenocortical activity during meditation. Hormones and Behavior 10(1): 54-60, 1978.
Muscle and skin blood flow and metabolism during states of decreased activation.
Physiology and Behavior 29(2): 343-348, 1982.
Electrophysiological and
Electroencephalographic Changes
Frontal EEG coherence, H-reflex recovery, concept learning, and the TM-Sidhi
program. International Journal of Neuroscience 15: 151-157, 1981.
EEG Coherence and Power during Yogic Flying. International Journal of Neuroscience
54:1-12, 1990.
Health
Systolic blood pressure and long-term practice of the Transcendental Meditation and
TM-Sidhi program: Effects of TM on systolic blood pressure. Psychosomatic Medicine
45(1): 41-46, 1983.
Aging
The effects of the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program on the aging
process. International Journal of Neuroscience 16: 53-58, 1982.
PYSCHOLOGY
Creativity, Intelligence, Perception,
Learning Ability, and Academic Performance
Development of Personality
SOCIOLOGY
Business and Productivity
The effects of the Transcendental Meditation program on stress reduction, health, and
employee development: A perspective study in two occupational settings. Anxiety,
Stress and Coping: International Journal 6: 245-262, 1993.
Rehabilitation --
Drug, Alcohol, and Tobacco Abuse
The patterns of reduction of drug and alcohol use among Transcendental Meditation
participants. Bulletin of the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors 2(1): 28-33,
1983.
The use of the Transcendental Meditation programme in the prevention of drug abuse
and in the treatment of drug-addicted persons. Bulletin on Narcotics 40(1): 51-56, 1988.
Treating and preventing alcohol, nicotine, and drug abuse through Transcendental
Meditation: A review and statistical meta-analysis. Alcoholism Treatment Quarterly 11:
13-87, 1994.
Rehabilitation -- Prisons
Collective Consciousness
Change in the quality of life in Canada: Intervention studies of the effect of the
Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program. Psychological Reports (in press).
The Transcendental Meditation program and crime rate change in a sample of forty-
eight cities. Journal of Crime and Justice 4: 25-45, 1981.
International peace project in the Middle East: The effect of the Maharishi Technology
of the Unified Field. Journal of Conflict Resolution 32(4): 776-812, 1988.
Test of a field theory of consciousness and social change: Time series analysis of
participation in the TM-Sidhi program and reduction of violent death in the U.S. Social
Indicators Research 22: 399-418, 1990.