Showing posts with label Meditation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meditation. Show all posts

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Meditation May Reduce Pain


Brain Imaging Shows Impact of 
Brief Mindfulness Meditation Training  
by Salynn Boyles
WebMD Health News
Reviewed by Laura J. Martin, MD

Source: www.webmd.com

April 6, 2011 

Even very brief instruction in meditation appears to help people cope with pain, and a newly published brain imaging study may explain why.

After just four, 20-minute instructional sessions in mindfulness meditation, most participants in the small study experienced big reductions in pain intensity and unpleasantness when subjected to painful stimuli.

Prior to learning the meditation technique, brain imaging showed significant activity in a key area of the brain when the participants were subjected to intense heat, but this activity was reduced when they were meditating.

This is the first study to show that 
only a little over an hour of 
meditation training can 
dramatically reduce both 
the experience of pain and 
pain-related brain activation,” 
 said researcher Fadel Zeidan, PhD, 
who is a postdoctoral fellow at 
Wake Forest University School of Medicine.

 
Meditation Helped Block Pain

The researchers recruited 18 healthy young adults who had never meditated prior to joining the study. 

Over the four, 20-minute training sessions, the study participants were taught a meditation technique known as focused attention, which involves paying close attention to breathing patterns while acknowledging and letting go of thoughts that distract from this practice, Zeidan says. 

Before and after mindfulness meditation training, brain activity was measured using a special type of magnetic resonance imaging that captures longer-duration brain processes, such as meditation, better than standard MRI. 

While the MRIs were being performed, a device was placed on each participant’s right calf that delivered 120 degrees of heat — a temperature that most people find painful. The heat was kept on the skin for 12 seconds and then taken off the skin for the same amount of time over a total of 5 minutes. 

Even though the MRI was very loud, most of the participants were able to successfully block out the noise and the pain from the heat source and focus on their breathing. 

Pain intensity ratings were reduced after meditation by an average of 40%, and pain unpleasantness rating were reduced by 57%. 

Meditation was shown to reduce activity in key pain-processing regions of the brain. 

The study appears in the April 6 issue of the The Journal of Neuroscience.

 

Meditation 101: 
Accept the Distractions

The study confirms that mindfulness meditation can have a real and measurable impact on the experience of acute pain, even in people with very little formal training, Wake Forest associate professor of neurobiology and anatomy Robert C. Coghill, PhD, tells WebMD. 

He says meditation could prove useful for the management of postoperative pain and in other acute pain settings. 

It remains to be seen if the brief instruction can help people with chronic pain. 

Meditation has been used to 
treat chronic pain for a long time, 
but patients tend to 
have a lot more training,”
he says. 

“It is not clear if the brief 
training sessions like 
the ones used in this study 
would be useful for these patients.” 

Zeidan says meditation distracts the mind and reduces the emotional response to pain. 

In the training phase of the study, the participants were instructed to close their eyes and focus on the changing sensations of their breath and they were told to bring their consciousness back to their breathing each time their minds wandered. 

“Usually this happens within the first minute when people first start meditating,” he says. “It is perfectly normal.” 

He says the goal is to acknowledge these distractions, accept them for what they are and simply let them go by gently bringing the attention back to the breath without any judgment. 

“Many people think they are doing something wrong at first because their minds keep wandering,” he says. “But becoming aware of how busy the mind is is part of the process.”


Books on mindful meditation brings therapeutic benefits 

Saturday, January 29, 2011

The Dhamma Brothers Trailer


The Dhamma Brothers tells a dramatic tale of human potential and transformation as it closely follows and documents the stories of the prison inmates at Donaldson Correction Facility who enter into this arduous and intensive program. This film, with the power to dismantle stereotypes about men behind prison bars also, in the words of Sister Helen Prejean (Dead Man Walking), "gives you hope for the human race." 

Dhamma Brothers


Also book title related to The Dhamma Brothers

 Letters from the Dhamma Brothers: Meditation Behind Bars



Friday, June 25, 2010

Meditation Retreat Up North - Tum Woa Monastery, Thailand

















Brochure designed and supplied by Phra Mick Ratanapanyo (PM). If you have any queries, feel free to post a comment.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

'The Gentle Way of Buddhist Meditation' is back on popular demand

'The Gentle Way of Buddhist Meditation' by Godwin Samararatne, one of our popular books to give away has been reprinted. If you are interested, please order a FREE copy through the catalogue website below. Postage applies.











Other titles about buddhist meditation

Buddhist Meditation for Beginners    Joyful Mind: A Practical Guide to Buddhist Meditation   Taming the Tiger Within: Meditations on Transforming Difficult Emotions

Friday, May 21, 2010

Dharma Seed - Joseph Goldstein's Dharma Talks (Website Link)



About the speaker

Joseph Goldstein has been leading insight and lovingkindness meditation retreats worldwide since 1974. He is a cofounder of the Insight Meditation Society in Barre, Massachusetts, where he is one of the organization's guiding teachers. In 1989, together with several other teachers and students of insight meditation, he helped establish the Barre Center for Buddhist Studies.

Joseph first became interested in Buddhism as a Peace Corps volunteer in Thailand in 1965. Since 1967 he has studied and practiced different forms of Buddhist meditation under eminent teachers from India, Burma and Tibet. He is the author of A Heart Full of Peace, One Dharma: The Emerging Western Buddhism, Insight Meditation: The Practice of Freedom, The Experience of Insight, and co-author of Seeking the Heart of Wisdom and Insight Meditation: A Correspondence Course.

Follow the link below and listen to great talks from Joseph
http://www.dharmaseed.org/teacher/96/talk/6162/



'Anyone who is serious about meditation should have a good understanding of Satipattana Sutta.' - Chien Hoong




Other titles by Joseph Goldstein

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Dhamma books to be released for the coming Vesak Day 2010






For those who are interested to sponsor these titles, please contact Mr. Lim Hock Eng, contact number: 012-4302893, email address: sunandahelim@gmail.com

SADHU, SADHU, SADHU!!



Thursday, April 15, 2010

Annoucement on the Resume of Meditation session


This is to inform/remind that our regular
Metta Meditation Session at
Inward Path, 52 Rangoon Road
will resume on
Tuesday April 27.


However,
we won't be having our

Vipassana session on
Thursday April 29.



Instead we will, after April 27, have our

Metta Session
every M O N D A Y
beginning from
the Monday of May 3

and


Vipassana Session
every T U E S D A Y
beginning from
the Tuesday of May 4.


We are unable to have our session on Thursday as
the Charismatic Church on the first floor is now
having activity every Thursday and
their loud drumming and music
will disrupt our meditation.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

LOOKING for this book?


We received some new stock from the sponsor but not many.
Check the link by click on the book below.

BEAUTIFYING THE MIND
The Buddha's Teachings on Effort
by Sayadaw U Pandita
transciption by Sayalay Daw Bhadda Manika
translated and edited by Bhikkhu Vivekananda
edited by Dr Penny Gray
ISBN 983-3512-26-7
IJ131/07
Size: 5.5” x 8.25”
Pages: 148 pages
Weight: 240gsm


“Effort is a vital theme in the Buddha’s teachings on mental development. Many passages from the Tipitaka account for this. In a masterly manner the Venerable Sayadaw U Panditabhivamsa of Myanmar has knit the relevant teachings into an inspiring presentation drawn from the Buddhist canon. The Venerable Sayadaw is an exemplary manifestation of someone who consistently applies heroic effort. Even at the age of eighty he is still travelling far and wide throughout the year to teach insight meditation and spread the Dhamma. This book is based on a series of talks given during an insight meditation retreat conducted at the Panditarama Vipassana Meditation Centre, Lumbini, Nepal, in February 2000. The talks were delivered to a mixed audience of Western meditators and a larger group of Newari Buddhists from the Kathmandu valley, some of whom would be direct descendants of the Sakyamuni clan of the Buddha. The talks contain reference to both groups as the Venerable Sayadaw endeavours to encourage the individual meditators in their practice.”
from FOREWORD by Bhikkhu Vivekananda

Thursday, August 6, 2009

NEW RELEASE

THE VIPASSANA RETREAT

A Guide Book on Vipassana Meditation
with an Audio Guide to the practice on

Compact Disc (CD)
in MP3 format (AF405) -->

by VENERABLE PANNYAVARO

ISBN 978-983-3512-67-6
Size: 5.5” x 8.25”
Pages: 136 pages

As a guidebook it offers a framework for the teachings based on the source material: The Four Establishments of Mindfulness. It includes sections on mindfulness of the body, being aware of feelings, orientating to the sense doors, the supportive practice of loving-kindness, how to report the practice in the daily interview, difficulties facing meditators and how to work with them, as well as advice on continuing the practice at home.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Venerable Pannyavaro is an Australian Buddhist monk who has devoted his life to the meditational aspects of the Buddha's teachings. During his meditation training he practiced under several meditation masters in Sri Lanka and Burma including Venerable Sayadaw U Janaka of Chanmyay Meditation Centre, Rangoon, who is the foremost disciple of the renowned Burmese meditation master, the late Venerable Mahasi Sayadaw.

Pannyavaro was involved in the beginnings of a number of the very early Buddhist communities in Australia. He later received full ordination at Wat Borvornivet in Bangkok under Venerable Phra Nyanasamvarva, the Sangha Raja of Thailand.

For the past twenty-five years, he has from time to time studied and practiced meditation in most of the major Theravada Buddhist countries, including long periods of intensive practise of Satipatthana-Vipassana meditation at the Mahasi Sayadaw centres in Burma.

As a Western meditation teacher, Ven. Pannyavaro naturally empathizes with the concerns and needs of meditators in their own culture. His long training and life experience combine to bring a practical in-depth approach to the teaching of insight (vipassana)meditation in contemporary life.

Pannyavaro is the resident teacher with the Buddha Dharma Education Association at its Centre at Surry Hills in Sydney and gives retreats from time to time at the Blue Mountains Insight Meditation Centre, Medlow Bath.



BODHI TREE

Bodhi Tree Forest Monastery and Retreat Centre was founded by Venerable Pannyavaro Mahathero. He is better known as the founder and webmaster of BuddhaNet.net.

Venerable Pannyavaro plans to develop a meditation community to serve both lay and monastic practitioners on ninety-five acres of beautiful land at Tullera five minutes from Lismore in the Northern Rivers of New South Wales, Australia. This land has been purchased as a sanctuary and hermitage — known as Bodhi Tree Forest Monastery and Retreat Centre. Site works and development are being planned.

Supportive conditions for ordained and lay practitioners to undertake long term intensive meditation practice are hard to find in western countries. To assist people to penetrate the heart of the Buddha's teaching The Buddha Dharma Education Association is planning a 'hermitage' area in addition to a large meditation hall and an individual accommodation area at Bodhi Tree.

ALSO BY VEN. PANNYAVARO
Published by INWARD PATH PUBLISHER

THE ART OF ATTENTION: Meditating for Insight
ISBN 983-9439-19-7 (IJ021/98/05)