Sample Beginner Mindfulness Session
The most important thing to remember when studying mindfulness is to remember to give yourself permission to take time for yourself. Set aside your worries and responsibilities for a few minutes while you complete your session. We often forget that step and it is actually an important step. In this world we are often criticized for not being productive but we forget that we can not pour from an empty cup. We need our mental and emotional health balanced if we are going to do our best work and take care of our responsibilities most efficiently.
Find a nice quiet space to practice your meditation. Somewhere free of distractions. Make sure the temperature is comfortable. Find a body position that is comfortable but not so much that you will fall asleep. I like to sit and have my back straight and tall. Holding this position keeps me from getting sleepy.
Take a few moments to find your breath. Place your hand on your stomach, where your belly button is. Breathe deep enough to feel your stomach move up and down with the breath. Often we are breathing too shallow and don’t use our lungs to the capacity they are made for. Breathing deeply puts more oxygen in the the blood and also more oxygen in your body tissue.
When a thought pops up simply notice it, let it go and return back to your breath. If you like you can count. One breath- one, the second breath- two. Every time a thought pops up, start back at one. Don’t get discouraged if you keep having to start over. People that train for years and years have a hard time getting to 20. It’s an exercise and just like any exercise you get better with practice.
Your session should last at least five minutes but if you wish you can go even longer. When you are done simply relax your focus and return to your day.
Every pivot towards good health is a step in the right direction, no matter how big or how small. Please call to schedule your complimentary initial consultation and sample 1 on 1 mindfulness training session.
Call or text: 407-205-7488
- Published in Mindfulness Resources, Public Blog
Mindfulness for depression
Mindfulness holds promise for treating depression
New research suggests that practicing mindfulness may help prevent a relapse.
By Stacy Lu
Monitor Staff
2015, Vol 46, No. 3
Print version: page 50
“Depression is not only the most common mental illness, it’s also one of the most tenacious. Up to 80 percent of people who experience a major depressive episode may relapse. Drugs may lose their effectiveness over time, if they work at all.
But a growing body of research is pointing to an intervention that appears to help prevent relapse by altering thought patterns without side effects: mindfulness-based cognitive therapy, or MBCT.
A new study on the approach to be published in a forthcoming issue of The Lancet found that MBCT helped prevent depression recurrence as effectively as maintenance antidepressant medication did. The study also found that MBCT had a larger effect on people with histories of more severe childhood abuse, which has been associated with a greater risk of relapse, than on participants overall. An “Evidence Map of Mindfulness” prepared for the Department of Veterans Affairs on all types of mindfulness interventions found the most consistent effect on depression versus other health conditions (Evidence-based Synthesis Program Center, 2014).
“People at risk for depression are dealing with a lot of negative thoughts, feelings and beliefs about themselves and this can easily slide into a depressive relapse,” says the Lancet study’s lead author, Willem Kuyken, PhD, a professor at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. “MBCT helps them to recognize that’s happening, engage with it in a different way and respond to it with equanimity and compassion.”
Growing evidence
The simplest definition of mindfulness is paying attention to one’s experience in the present moment. It involves observing thoughts and emotions from moment to moment without judging or becoming caught up in them. During a practice session, when the mind wanders, the meditator ideally takes note of where it goes, and calmly returns to the moment at hand, perhaps focusing on breath, bodily sensations or a simple yoga move.
Over a decade ago, three psychologists — Zindel Segal, PhD, J. Mark G. Williams, DPhil, and John Teasdale, PhD — developed MBCT. In particular, MBCT seeks to teach people to disengage from the deeply ingrained dysfunctional thoughts that are common with depression.
As currently designed, MBCT is an eight-week, group-based program that incorporates mindfulness exercises including yoga, body awareness and daily homework, such as eating or doing household chores, with full attention to what one is doing, moment by moment. The protocol derives from Jon Kabat-Zinn’s Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction curriculum, and includes elements of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) targeted to people with prior histories of depression.
Segal and colleagues studied 84 people in remission and found that MBCT could help prevent recurring depressive episodes as well as medication and better than placebo (JAMA Psychiatry, 2010). A review Madhav Goyal, MD, of The Johns Hopkins University wrote for JAMA Internal Medicine (2014) looked at different types of mindfulness meditation among 47 studies, finding that it had the same moderate effect on treating depression as medication, and had moderate effects on anxiety and pain as well.
Evidence also suggests that MBCT may be of more help to patients most vulnerable to relapse: People with a greater number of prior episodes or who had residual depressive symptoms. In a 2011 meta-analysis by Jacob Piet, PhD, and Esben Hougaard, PhD, of the University of Aarhus in Denmark in Clinical Psychology Review, MBCT was more effective in preventing relapse among people with three or more episodes, reducing risk by 43 percent versus 34 percent for participants overall.
In another study, Williams and colleagues found that participants who had depression at earlier ages, or who had more adversity or abuse in childhood, were more likely to benefit from MBCT (Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2014). Kuyken, who led the Lancet study, speculates that these patients may be more motivated and invested in the treatment.
“They’ve been depressed more, they’ve had all these unpleasant things happening to them and they’ve often tried antidepressants and other kinds of therapy, so they’re willing to meditate 40 minutes a day and to do something quite different in terms of mindfulness practices like mindful movement,” he says. “Those who do best are those ready to engage fully.”
While evidence suggests mindfulness works to help prevent depression relapse, researchers don’t yet know how.
“It may be that mindfulness leads to an increase in self-compassion and a decrease in experiential avoidance,” says Stuart Eisendrath, MD, professor and head of the Depression Center at the University of California, San Francisco. “It may be selective attention — if you focus on your breath, you have less bandwidth to ruminate. There are a lot of factors that are operative and we’re just beginning to tease out and deconstruct them. It’s like tasting a soup with 10 spices. Is there one main ingredient or is the flavor a combination of things?”
For example, one characteristic of depression is a habit of thinking negatively about experience, one’s self or the future. Mindfulness trains people to be more aware of these thoughts and to stand back and simply observe their thoughts passing through their minds — ‘Oh, there I go again, calling myself an idiot’ — instead of trying to control their emotions. Or, in the case of people who have recovered from depression, blaming themselves for feeling down again or worrying about a relapse.
MBCT’s emphasis on cultivating awareness and acceptance of the present moment also seeks to harness ruminating and mind wandering, both of which are implicated in depression, says Stefan Hofmann, PhD, a Boston University professor whose lab studies anxiety and related disorders.
“Why worry about the future and ruminate about the past?” says Hofmann. “Live for the here and now. It’s comfortable. It’s the joyful experience of being alive.”
Researchers also mention that the group aspect of MBCT may help clients breach the wall of solitary shame and guilt that depression can build.
“By practicing with others, people realize that the way their minds generate depressive and ruminative thoughts is really no different from others, like that builder over there, or my neighbor. These are just thoughts — not facts in my life,” Kuyken says.
A benevolent therapy
Among MBCT’s strengths is its lack of side effects, and that it can be used as an adjunct therapy.
“For people with residual symptoms, or who have treatment-resistant depression, MBCT can be sequenced with antidepressant medication and with cognitive-behavioral therapy to help prevent the recurrence of relapse,” Segal says.
Eisendrath is analyzing data from a large randomized trial of people with treatment-resistant depression that compared MBCT to an active control incorporating movement, music therapy and nutritional advice.
“It was said people with active depression couldn’t concentrate, but we didn’t find that at all. They practiced it pretty actively. They’re often interested in getting treatment other than more medications, too. [Mindfulness] may give them a greater sense of self-efficacy,” he says.
Women at high risk of depression who may want to avoid taking drugs during pregnancy may also benefit. Sona Dimidjian, PhD, associate professor at the University of Colorado, studied MBCT for pregnant women with a history of depression, finding significant improvement in self-reported depression symptoms and an 18 percent relapse rate six months postpartum, which compares favorably to the 30 percent found in an earlier study by collaborator Sherryl Goodman, PhD, professor at Emory University (Archives of Women’s Mental Health, 2014). The women in her study were interested in learning mindfulness techniques and enjoyed the practice, she says, an attitude that may boost its success.
Mindfulness may also be helpful for children and adolescents. In a study by Filip Raes, PhD, of the University of Leuven and colleagues, 408 13- to 20-year-olds participated in a school-based MBCT program in Belgium. Of these, 16 percent reported some symptoms of depression, anxiety or stress six months post-training, versus 31 percent in a control group (Mindfulness, 2014). Randye Semple, PhD, assistant professor at the University of Southern California, who developed a modified MBCT protocol for children, says they have no problem mastering its concepts.
‘The kids get it,’ Semple says. ‘They understand the activities, practice and talk about them; the group format is excellent for that.’
Although her program doesn’t involve sitting still for long periods, children are able to make mindfulness part of their lives, she says, in the same way adults can. ‘It doesn’t take additional time to do it; it’s just doing things in a different way.’”
Source: http://www.apa.org/monitor/2015/03/cover-mindfulness.aspx
- Published in Mindfulness Resources
Mindfulness for PTSD
Potential of Mindfulness in Treating Trauma Reactions
Written by: Vujanovic, Niles, Pietrefesa, Potter, & Schmertz
“Mindfulness is most commonly conceptualized as involving attention to and awareness of the present moment, and nonjudgmental acceptance (1-3). Awareness of the present involves observing thoughts, feelings, and sensations by focusing one’s attention on the current moment (2). While attending to the present, mindfulness also entails a stance of acceptance, or willingness to experience an array of thoughts and emotions without judgment (4).
Clinical utility of mindfulness for treatment following trauma
The potential clinical utility of integrating mindfulness-based exercises in extant PTSD treatments has yet to be examined empirically (5). However, given the beneficial effects of mindfulness practice on enhancing emotion regulation as well as decreasing anxiety and depressive symptoms (6-9), mindfulness has been increasingly discussed in the context of PTSD and its treatment (10-12). The relevant theoretical and empirical literature suggests that mindfulness may serve clinically meaningful functions in alleviating PTSD symptoms.
Regular mindfulness practice can lead to a greater present-centered awareness and nonjudgmental acceptance of potentially distressing cognitive and emotional states as well as trauma-related internal and external triggers (5, 13). Awareness and acceptance of trauma-related thoughts and feelings may serve as an indirect mechanism of cognitive-affective exposure. This may be especially useful for individuals with PTSD, as it may help decrease experiential avoidance, reduce arousal, and foster emotion regulation. For instance, among trauma-exposed individuals evaluated at a single time point, greater levels of acting with awareness and accepting without judgment were associated with lower levels of posttraumatic stress symptoms (11). Regular mindfulness practice has also been shown to decrease physiological arousal (14- 15).
Adjunct to empirically-supported treatments for PTSD
Empirically-supported treatments for PTSD, such as Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT, 16) and Prolonged Exposure (PE, 17), are effective in decreasing symptoms for many individuals who suffer from PTSD. Both of these treatments direct the client to recall traumatic events in a controlled fashion. For the last decade, exposure to and processing of trauma-related thoughts, feelings, and memories have been considered important components of effective treatment for PTSD. However, a significant proportion of sufferers either do not seek help, drop out of treatment, refuse these treatments, or are not substantially helped by them (5, 18-19).
Combining mindfulness or other skills to strengthen emotion regulation with existing empirically-supported PTSD treatments may improve outcomes in the following ways:
Engagement. Mindfulness may appeal to clients who do not pursue evidence-based treatments or cannot tolerate them (5, 20-21). Mindfulness practice may improve symptoms and it may also help such clients become engaged with a therapist or treatment process.
Preparation. Mindfulness practice could be introduced prior to treatment. Learning to observe internal reactions without judgment and to accept feelings, sensations, and thoughts as they arise might usefully prepare patients to tolerate the unpleasant emotions that trauma processing elicits.
Less rumination. If implemented as an adjunct to CPT or PE, mindfulness could be encouraged throughout the treatment course. Increased awareness of trauma-related re-experiencing symptoms may allow patients to break a ruminative cycle by gaining some distance from trauma-related intrusive thoughts and feelings. It may foster acceptance rather than avoidance.
Compliance. Patients using mindfulness skills during treatment may be better able to persevere through trauma processing and benefit more fully from trauma-focused treatments.”
Source: http://www.ptsd.va.gov/professional/treatment/overview/mindful-PTSD.asp
- Published in Mindfulness Resources
Mindfulness for Anxiety
Mindfulness: A Wonderful Anxiety Cure You Ought to Know
Written by Jordan Bates
Excerpt of article:
“Anxiety inevitably finds us, but rather than allowing it to multiply, we should be quick to recognize it and seek a cure.
Enter Mindfulness
Although there are plenty of tactics you can use to relieve anxiety, I want to focus this post on a single, highly effective practice: mindfulness.
If used correctly, Mindfulness is nearly infallible for helping to alleviate stress and worry. So what is it?
Mindfulness is a conscientious activity. It is an effort to do the opposite of what our brains naturally do.
As we go about our days, our minds drift about, unchecked, and think about any number of things. When you’re being mindful, you actively work against this phenomenon.
Being mindful means focusing wholly and completely on the present task and present moment.
Mindfulness While Working
When performing a task, mindfulness means directing our entire focus to that one task. No multi-tasking. No daydreaming. Just an active effort to be absorbed in whatever we’re doing.
While washing dishes or sweeping, direct your attention to the rhythm of the action. Listen closely to the swishing or scratching noises, smell the soap suds, or concentrate on your contracting muscles.
The goal is for your mind to be transfixed on the action of the second.”
Source: http://www.refinethemind.com/mindfulness-cure-anxiety/
- Published in Mindfulness Resources