Harvard neuroscientist concurs: Meditation not only reduces stress, it fundamentally changes your brain!

harvard neuroscientist concursSara Lazar, a neuroscientist at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, was one of the first scientists to take the many claims about the benefits of meditation and mindfulness and test them in brain scans. What she found really surprised her!

Initially looking for a way to stretch, Lazar was drawn to yoga and meditation… and, despite her scepticism, she quickly found out that meditating was literally retraining her brain and nervous system – for the better, of course!

This won’t be much of a relevation for those who already meditate and practice yoga – but many people still don’t because it’s not ‘their thing’, or it’s too ‘woo woo’.

Well, here’s the hard evidence…

Lazar started looking at meditation and mindfulness and the brain because she and a friend were training for the Boston marathon. She injured herself, and her physical therapist told her to stop running and just ‘stretch’.

As a result, Lazar started practicing yoga mainly as a form of physical therapy, but then realised it was very powerful, and that it really had tangible benefits. This was before the ‘yoga explosion’ we see all around us today.

Yet isn’t this always the way?  Self-inquiry leads to key ‘aha’ moments which then leads (finally) to serious external investigation. Science is then able to measure some of what is being seen, felt and observed internally.

Yoga teachers and meditators already know that a dedicated practice increases compassion because yoga isn’t just about the physical.

However, for Lazar, being trained in reductionist science, she would pooh-pooh it, thinking, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah, I’m here to stretch.’

Although it’s categorised under ‘science fiction’, the latest blockbusting movie from Marvel ‘Dr. Strange‘ maybe closer to reality than we care to admit! I found it funny that Dr. Strange had similar thoughts to Lazar… he could not accept that there was a reality beyond his very limited training.

Lazar couldn’t help but notice that she was calmer. She was better able to handle more difficult situations; she was more compassionate and open hearted, and able to see things from others’ points of view.

Her doubting mind then interjected, and she figured it might be a “placebo response” – again, a bit of a misnomer, since body and mind are connected, and the physical and mental planes of existence are not separate in truth, only in school text books.

Luckily the tangible proof she wanted already existed in a format she could understand! She did a literature search of the existing science, and saw clear evidence that meditation practices were strongly associated with decreased stress, decreased depression, anxiety, pain and insomnia, as well as increased quality of life. Something we hear time and again today.

As she was doing a PhD in molecular biology, Lazar switched and started doing meditation research as a post-doc instead.

The first study looked at long term meditators vs a control group. It found that long-term meditators have an increased amount of gray matter in the insula and sensory regions, the auditory and sensory cortex.

“Which makes sense. When you’re mindful, you’re paying attention to your breathing, to sounds, to the present moment experience, and shutting cognition down. It stands to reason your senses would be enhanced.”

They also found they had more gray matter in the frontal cortex, which is associated with working memory and executive decision making.

goal of meditation

 

It’s well-documented that our cortex shrinks as we get older, so it’s harder to figure things out and remember things. But does it have to?

In this one region of the prefrontal cortex, 50-year-old meditators had the same amount of gray matter as 25-year-olds!  This is yet another confirmation that we are not machines subject to wear and tear!

The first question was maybe the people with more gray matter in the study had more gray matter before they started meditating. So they did a second study.

They took people who’d never meditated before, and put one group through an eight-week mindfulness- based stress reduction program.

In just that short space of time, they found differences in brain volume after eight weeks in five different regions in the brains of the two groups. In the group that learned meditation, they found thickening in four regions:

  1. The primary difference, they found in the posterior cingulate  which is involved in mind wandering, and self relevance.
  2. The left hippocampus, which assists in learning, cognition, memory and emotional regulation.
  3. The temporo parietal junction, or TPJ, which is associated with perspective taking, empathy and compassion.
  4. An area of the brain stem called the Pons, where a lot of regulatory neurotransmitters are produced.

The amygdala, the fight or flight part of the brain which is important for anxiety, fear and stress in general. That area got smaller in the group that went through the mindfulness-based stress reduction program!

The change in the amygdala was also correlated to a reduction in stress levels!

How long does someone have to meditate before they begin to see changes in their brain

People will always want to know ‘how much’ do they have to do to get a particular result – that’s just the way we’ve been conditioned…

Lazar says:

“Our data shows changes in the brain after just eight weeks. In a mindfulness-based stress reduction program, our subjects took a weekly class. They were given a recording and told to practice 40 minutes a day at home. And that’s it.”

Bear in mind that the ’40 minutes’ was highly variable in the study. Some people practiced 40 minutes pretty much every day, some people practiced less., with some only doing it a couple times a week. This is to be expected.

The average was 27 minutes a day, or half hour a day.

Whilst there isn’t enough data on “how much” someone needs to practice in order to benefit, a more enlightened consciousness would say it’s the quality of your practice that counts, not the length! So, just 5-10 minutes of alert, conscious meditation a day could be enough to see cumulative benefits over time.

Studies by other scientists have shown that meditation can help enhance attention and emotion regulation skills but most were not neuroimaging studies. Lazar hopes to bring that behavioral and neuroimaging science together.

Meditation has had a very profound influence on her life over the last 20 years.

“It’s very grounding, it reduces stress, helps her think more clearly, and is great for interpersonal interactions.”

Lazar admits she definitely has more empathy and compassion for people because of it. Something our world could do with more of, don’t you agree?

Expand Your Awareness:

Enjoyed this article and want to know more?  Here are some easy steps you can take right now…

  1. Book a life changing “remote healing session” with Soul Guidance with Jaime: https://www.energytherapy.biz/energy-healing-with-jaime-tanna/
  2. Join Jaime’s fantastic 1 year Energy Coaching Program: Total Frequency Shift — Discover Radiant Health & Freedom
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February 22, 2017
aging , brain , cognition , grey matter , mindfulness , Yoga , 

Jaime Tanna

Jaime Tanna is an international teacher and energy therapist specialising in the healing arts. As the visionary founder and director of Energy Therapy, Jaime is an experienced Spiritual Teacher/Mentor, Reiki Master, Yoga Teacher, Sound Healer and Intuitive, and brings a wide array of different skills to the healing table. Coming from a family of pharmacists and doctors, Jaime grew up with a strong allopathic model of the world but quickly saw the limitations of that paradigm. Today, with clients and students throughout the world, Jaime specialises in personal and spiritual development, yoga and meditation, and clearing and rebalancing the human energy field inspiring clients and students to connect to their deepest being to create a life lived on purpose, and with joy!

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2 responses to “Harvard neuroscientist concurs: Meditation not only reduces stress, it fundamentally changes your brain!”

  1. daiana boriga says:

    Hi, is it normal that my pulse rate drop after I meditate? I started meditate 2 weeks ago (80 was my pulse rate before) and now is always at 58/62. I’m scared… 🙂
    Thank you for replying

    • Jaime Tanna says:

      Hi Dalana, yes, quite normal… nothing to be worried about usually. When you meditate, the mind will slow down and the heart rate drops. However, if you are concerned, then seek medical advice. Peace.

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