Welcome to YLOAN.COM
yloan.com » Meditation » Should we make time for meditation?
Health Medical Acne Aerobics-Cardio Alternative Anti-Aging Build-Muscle Chronic-Illness Dental-Care Depression Diabetes Disability Exercise Eye-Care Fitness-Equipment Hair-Loss Medicine Meditation Nutrition Obesity Polution Quit-Smoking Sidha Supplements Yeast Infection H1N1 Swine Flu SARS herpes therapy panic surgeon hurts teeth remedies eliminate chiropractic arthritis ingredients syndrome binding anxiety surgery medication psychic dental reflux doctor relief premature emotional stress disorder implants wrinkles vision infection aging liposuction seattle stunning sweating hair treatment tinnitus

Should we make time for meditation?

Author: John Scott

Author: John Scott

There is always a point where science collides with belief systems and sparks fly. Looking around the US right now, the continuing confrontation over the teaching of evolution is a classic example. At a slightly lower level of intensity is the continuing conflict between the "hard science" doctors and those who are persuaded that there are alternative approaches to treatment with equally good outcomes. Take acupuncture as an example. This comes out of nearly two thousand years of medical experience in China. Even though some of the Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) methods have been displaced in favor of Western methods, the healthcare service in many Asian and ASEAN countries continues to rely on acupuncture as an effective treatment for a range of different problems. Putting TCM to one side, there are also major claims made for different forms of meditation. Some are explicitly rooted in religions. Others are directly adapted to the management of pain. Unfortunately, the Enlightenment and the adoption of the scientific method by Western doctors leads them to a quick dismissal of everything not backed up by their science. Even when shown perfectly respectable research proving some of the claims for "unscientific" methods, they still refuse to even consider them. Their prejudices are deep-seated. In the case of meditation, there is a growing body of Western-based research using the scientific method which shows excellent outcomes when people suffering from chronic pain are taught how to meditate. In essence, the point is to change the attitude of people towards their pain. Put another way: the level of intensity of the pain stays the same but the people change their emotional reaction to it. At some level, this represents a form of intellectual distraction. People are trained how to disconnect themselves from the pain and to search for ways to live their lives without worrying about it. Too often, people allow the pain to dominate their every waking moments. They fear the pain will always be there and this becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy that blights their lives. Avoiding this fear and focussing instead on positive ways to cope with the reality of the pain allows people to rebuild their daily lives and to function more effectively. There is an old saying: give a starving man a fish and he eats well that night, but teach him how to fish and he can eat well every night. Teaching people how to meditate is the latter. It gives them a path to follow for the rest of their lives. For some there is a problem. It's not a quick fix. rather it relies on them to invest time and effort into solving their own problems. At first, there may be a place for painkillers and tramadol is probably the best for relieving moderate to severe pain. But as people begin to feel the benefit flowing from this new discipline for the mind, the need for drugs will diminish. The ideal is to live without the help of any drug. If your private health insurance includes meditation for pain management, get an early appointment. If you have some savings, it is a good investment. Otherwise, buy tramadol. It will give you relief while the healthcare service catches up with the best research.About the Author:

Find John Scott's other contributions at http://www.tramadolpillsonline.com/should-we-make-time-for-meditation.html where he gladly shares his opinion on many different subjects and helps people around the globe find a better understanding of the things they're interested in.
Guided Meditation Techniques High Blood Pressure Medications Antibodies And Proteomics Most Important Meditation Teacher's Training Tips What Are Antibodies? Polyclonal And Monoclonal Antibodies What Is The Difference? Ginko Biloba Side Effects About Meditation - how to meditate to reduce stress and improve mental abilities by:Knut Holt Meditation and You by:David Snape How To Practice Meditation by:Sharon Hopkins Meditation Can Also Make Your Heart Happy by:Ng Peng Hock Walking Meditation Is Meditation In Action by:Sarah Thomas Meditation An Overall View by:Jason Story
print
www.yloan.com guest:  register | login | search IP(18.217.108.153) Hovedstaden / Copenhagen Processed in 0.008638 second(s), 7 queries , Gzip enabled , discuz 5.5 through PHP 8.3.9 , debug code: 5 , 3855, 208,
Should we make time for meditation? Copenhagen