“Meditation is like having … you know, your phone has a charger, right? It’s like having a charger for your whole mind and body.” – Jerry Seinfeld
We all lead stressful lives. It doesn’t matter if you’re a student, parent, doctor, retail sales person, or a world-famous comedian. Stress, anxiety, and inflammation can be draining and leave you feeling hopeless. Maybe you’ve tried medication for stress and anxiety and haven’t experienced results. Or maybe you just don’t know what to do anymore?
You want peace. You want to live your life the way you should be able to. Meditation can help you achieve reduced stress levels and decrease inflammation that leads to chronic disease. It’s natural and better yet – it’s free. All it takes is some dedication to a daily practice.
Here’s how meditation works to lower your stress levels, stabilize your mood, and reduce inflammation:
- Increases awareness that allows you to rationalize obstacles rather than react to them
- Slows down breath rates which create a relaxing emotional response
- Reduces adrenaline from releasing excessively that leads to heart disease
- Decreases the activation of cortisol, the stress hormone
- Helps reduce and even reverse chronic pain symptoms
- Lowers your biological age and keeps you young
What Is Meditation?
Meditation is a practice that is often associated with yoga. According to yoga tradition, the practice’s purpose is rooted in discovering the unity in all living things. Though the exact date for when meditation was discovered is unknown, archeologists do know that meditation has been practiced for thousands of years.
However, you don’t have to subscribe to a certain lifestyle, religion, or thought process to discover the benefits of meditation. You don’t have to wear yoga pants or get a nose ring.
Meditation is for everyone. It can help you reduce stress and anxiety in your life and reduce chronic inflammation.
Maybe you’ve tried meditation before and found it annoying and frustrating. Your mind wandered. You told yourself to empty your mind. But, instead you found your mind spinning with thoughts or at the very least constantly repeating the words “stop thinking” to yourself.