What is Depression

Clinical depression is a state of sadness or melancholia that has advanced to the point of being disruptive to an individual's social functioning and/or activities of daily living....

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Can Meditation Help Ease Depression?
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Meditation is a systematic method of regulating your attention, often through focusing on your breathing, a phrase, or an image. It may include calmly dismissing distracting thoughts and feelings while sitting in a relaxed position with your eyes closed.

Meditation is used to relieve stress and elicit the relaxation response, a state of profound rest and release. Some experts believe that by regularly practicing techniques that evoke the relaxation response, such as meditation, you can help your body erase the cumulative effects of stress, which has been linked to health problems such as high blood pressure, heart disease, a weakened immune system, and asthma. As noted earlier, there appears to be a link between stress and depression (see Hormones and the HPA Axis).

Studies have found that meditation can help prevent relapse in people who have had three or more episodes of depression. For example, in one study, while 78% of depressed people given normal treatment for depression relapsed in the following year, only 36% of those people who got meditation training in addition to regular treatment did. For people with fewer than three episodes of depression, meditation has not been found to be as effective.

There is evidence that meditation has distinct effects on the brain. In one study, researchers measured brain electrical activity before, immediately after, and four months after a two-month course in mindfulness meditation. They found persistent increased activity on the left side of the prefrontal cortex, which is associated with joyful and serene emotions.

Another goal of meditation is to facilitate personal change — much the same goal as psychotherapy. Some therapists, particularly those in the cognitive behavioral field, have incorporated meditation techniques into therapy, either as part of the session or as homework for patients to do on their own. If meditation appeals to you, ask your therapist about how best to use it. Going to a class or listening to a meditation tape may be a good first step.
Posted on 09/14/07, 12:09 am
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Reply #1 - 09/14/07  12:29am
" my brain will not shut up long enough for me to even try this, but it is a nice thought...I wish I could "
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Reply #2 - 09/14/07  12:39am
" DesertDancer, this is a great post. I meditate every day. I also have really bad back pain and it helps with that too. It used to take awhile to shut down enough to ease into the alpha state, but it's gotten easier. It's helped my pain and overall depression symptoms along with my medication. I find myself needing less pain meds now. "
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Reply #3 - 09/14/07  12:39am
" dazed....Batman knows how. He can teach you. "
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Reply #4 - 06/19/08  3:40am
" I like your post. I bought the book "the Complete Idiot's Guide to Meditation," by Joan Budilovsky and Eve Adamson. It is interesting but I need to do tapes or such to hep counterbalance my "obsessive thinking" while meditating. Thanks for your informative post.

Craig "
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Reply #5 - 06/19/08  3:44am
" it would completely depend on the form of depression i should imagine.

certain forms are caused by a distinct chemical imbalance in the brain that is uaually best solved by anti depressants.

Milder forms may benefit from it though...

Either way.. its a good way to unwind "
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Reply #6 - 06/19/08  7:14am
" cognitive behavioural theraphy IS mindfulness meditation with psychology terms ;)

y, meditation is a powerful tool but Adam89 is partly right there in saying that it depends on the depression. My experience is that it depends more on severity of depression (as opposed to kind). When an episode is particulary bad, the brain looses its ability to focus, neither CBT nor traditional meditation is possible in that state.

however, both can work wonders for mild depression (of either kind) and daily negative emotion generating circumstances.

basically will make you more content and happy overall. "
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