Meditation Techniques for Beginners
You've no doubt heard that meditation is good for you. It can help you feel calmer, and has a host
of other benefits. However, for many people descriptions of meditation
aren't appealing, and it sounds like just another thing you don't have time to
do.
Here are five meditation techniques
for beginners that will help overcome the problems of (1) lack of appeal, and
(2) it seeming too daunting.
1. Start small with 3-5 minutes (or less).
Some great new data collected from users of the Lift
goal-tracking app* shows that most beginner meditators started with 3-5
minutes. Even three minutes can feel like a darn long time when you first start
meditating, so you could even start smaller. For example, paying attention to
the sensations of taking 3 breaths
2. Understand what meditation can do for you if you have
issues with stress,
anxiety, irritability, or overthinking.
Meditation is a great way to increase your resilience to stress. If you have anxiety, it
will help reduce your general tendency towards physiological over arousal and
calm your nervous system.
In my therapy practice, the clients who've found
meditation the most helpful have generally been people who are prone to
rumination (unwanted overthinking). This makes sense given that meditation is
about focusing your attention on something "experiential" (e.g.,
sensations of breathing) and bringing your attention back to this focus when
you notice it has drifted to "evaluation" (e.g., "Am I breathing
too fast?") or to another topic (e.g., "I've got so much to do
tomorrow.")
Meditation can help with irritability partly because it helps you
learn how to recognize you're having irritable thoughts before you've blurted
them out in ways that end up generating stress for you (e.g.. nitpicking your
partner in a way that causes a fight).
3. Understand the principles of meditation.
Beginning meditators often think the goal of meditation is to get
to the point that they can focus without becoming distracted.
A more useful goal is becoming aware of when your mind has drifted
sooner.
Becoming aware of what you're thinking is the basis of successful Cognitive Therapy. You
can't restructure your thoughts if you haven't first developed the
ability to identify your thoughts.
Another useful goal for meditation beginners is being able to
redirect your attention back to your point of focus without criticizing
yourself.
4. Do meditation your own way.
Most of my clients don't like meditation mp3s. They usually report
finding them too "new agey."
Since walking helps
people concentrate and reduces distractibility, a meditation that involves
walking can be a great place to start.
Follow this with 5 minutes of open awareness where you allow
anything you can observe/sense to rise up into your awareness. Don't go looking
for things to hear, see, feel etc. Just let whatever rises up into your
awareness to do that and be naturally replaced by something else whenever that
happens.
During the open awareness portion, if your attention drifts to
past, future or evaluative thoughts, briefly go back to one of the points of
focus to stabilize your attention.
You can adapt these instructions however you want. Make your
practice your own. You're in charge! For example, do a walking meditation in
which you focus on one of the above points of focus for 3 minutes and then do 3
minutes of open awareness.
[source= http://hubpages.com/health/Best-Meditation-Techniques-for-Beginners
]
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