Meditation News June 2007
|
Our Meditation News Desk stays up-to-date with all the meditating events and news items from around the globe. This is the news archive of June 2007. Get your daily meditation news updates right here. You can use the Display Mode changer below to view our news in different formats:
|
|
Display Mode:
|
# News Items: 23 |
|
Page: 1/5
|
|
|
|
SATURDAY, 30 JUNE 2007
|
|
The Zen Stick |
| |
Meditation, being an act which requires focus, may be difficult in our modern world that thrives on sensory overload. Proper meditation requires a lot of space, and quiet space at that.
Enter the Zen Stick, a so-called “meditation tool” designed to replace the spatial requirements for effective meditation. One simply tosses the stick from one hand to another to aid in his focus, reaching
Read Full Story
|
FRIDAY, 29 JUNE 2007
|
|
Meditate To Concentrate |
| |
Meditation, according to Penn neuroscientist Amishi Jha and Michael Baime, director of Penn's Stress Management Program, is an active and effortful process that literally changes the way the brain works. Their study is the first to examine how meditation may modify the three subcomponents of attention, including the ability to prioritize and manage tasks and goals, the ability to voluntarily
Read Full Story
|
THURSDAY, 28 JUNE 2007
|
|
Meditation Changes Minds, Increases Attention |
| |
Tibetan monks and other religious people have used meditation to calm the mind and improve concentration. This week, a new study shows exactly how one common type of meditation affects the brain.
Using a scanner that reveals which parts of the brain are active at any given moment, the researchers found that meditation increased activity in the brain regions used for paying attention and mak
Read Full Story
|
WEDNESDAY, 27 JUNE 2007
|
|
Putting Feelings into Words Help us Feel Better |
| |
Why does putting our feelings into words — talking with a therapist or friend, writing in a journal — help us to feel better? A new brain imaging study by UCLA psychologists reveals why verbalizing our feelings makes our sadness, anger and pain less intense.
Another study, with the same participants and three of the same members of the research team, combines modern neuroscience with ancien
Read Full Story
|
TUESDAY, 26 JUNE 2007
|
|
Debbie Cohen Presents Experiential Workshop |
| |
Yoga, meditation and breathing techniques have been in the news frequently discussing the benefits on one's physical and mental health including stories related to reduction of high blood pressure, insomnia help and elevation of moods. Recently, researchers at Boston School of Medicine announced their findings that yoga may elevate brain gamma-aminobutyric (GABA) levels and help reduce depress
Read Full Story
|
|
# News Items: 23 |
|
Page: 1/5
|
|
|
|
|