Anyone try mindfulness meditation?

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In reading other threads on this forum, I feel so close to so many others in their post-treatment anxiety and PTSD.  I am trying to find the answers for managing my feelings and living the best life that I can live now.  Years ago, my family physician referred me to a program called Mindfulness Meditation for Stress Reduction which was developed in Boston for the management of chronic conditions.  The program included yoga, guided imagery, body scans and mindfulness meditation. When I faithfully do the different components, I feel so much better and so much less anxious but it requires consistency and commitment.  Does anyone else use a similar program or practices and find it helpful?? I thought this program was interesting because it was targeted to just ordinary people, not those who are accustomed to alternative medicine/nutrition.

Comments

  • barbe1958
    barbe1958 Member Posts: 19,757
    edited April 2009

    Hmmm, sounds like bio-feedback combined with the power of positive thinking, combined with meditation, it's gotta work!

  • smithlme
    smithlme Member Posts: 1,322
    edited April 2009

    Janet,

    I work out at my gym 5 days a week and attend Yoga classes twice a week. I also attend a group called, "Attitudinal Healing." Before cancer I wouldn't have set foot in a gym, let alone a Yoga class. After everything my body, spirit and mind have been through, I now feel I have some control over my body and mind. I eat well, exercise and thank my body daily for all it has helped me through. I can choose to complain about all my aches, pains and weight gain or I can focus on my total healing...

    Linda

  • Aleeze
    Aleeze Member Posts: 1
    edited May 2009

    Hi Janet,

    I read your email with interest. We are actually conducting a NCI funded research study at Thomas Jefferson University (Philadelphia) on a mindfulness based stress reduction intervention for women with cancer. This intervention incorporates art therapy with all the mindfulness practices you mentioned (body scan, meditation, guided imagery, yoga). A previous study found that the mindfulness based art therapy significantly lowered psychological distress and improved quality of life for women who had been diagnosed with cancer. There is plenty of research that shows the benefits of mindfulness meditation for cancer patients. Wishing all of you all the best.

    Aleeze

  • mzmiller99
    mzmiller99 Member Posts: 894
    edited May 2009

    Janet - I would love to try it, but my brain is like a ferret on speed.  Definitely ADD. 

     Do classes help train the brain?  Just reading about it in articles hasn't helped me to master the technique - I either fall asleep or get side-tracked.  My cancer therapist strongly recommended it for me.  Not surprisingly.

    Let's see...where were we?

    Susan

  • London-Virginia
    London-Virginia Member Posts: 851
    edited May 2009

    I like the sound of the art therapy - could you expand a bit please?

  • cleomoon
    cleomoon Member Posts: 443
    edited May 2009

    I have tried some mindfulness and do believe both mindfulness and meditation work. I have not had success in making the commitment to doing it. Guess I have not made the commitment yet to give up my addiction to anxiety.

    Great visual "a ferret on speed."

    The suggestions of biofeedback appeal to me. I may look into this therapy. Mindful art therapy. Would that be like doing some sort of mindful meditation and then using the tool to focus on the present art project at hand? Art therapy has helped me in other healing work.

    I did finally start exploring exercise again right before the current testing. Then I dropped out so to speak. I found a new activity--swimming--could be a way for me to focus in on quieting my mind and body. I hope to return to this soon.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited May 2009

    Roseinwinter, 

    Several years ago, I purchased the Jon Kabat-Zinn book, "Full Catastrophe Living" and accompanying meditation CDs and found them beneficial.  As you know, the author is the doctor that created the Stress Reduction program at Boston to which you're referring.  I live in the Phila area, and earlier this year I took a similar 8-wk program at Univ of Penn, and a good friend of mine took the program offered by Jefferson.  Both programs were very good.  I have continued to practice almost daily, and it has made a big difference in how I feel.  My husband has noticed the change.  I also attend a weekly art therapy class that is offered by my hospital's oncology dept. for free.  It has components of mindfulness.  My hospital recently held a complementary medicine conference, and I attended a session on mindful art therapy.  The art therapist was from Jefferson Hospital, and the session was quite interesting and informative.

    Roseinwinter, how cool is that that you got to do the 8-wk program in Boston!  I do agree that consistency and commitment are necessary to reap the benefits of this type of program, but it's definitely worth the effort.  Meditating has done more for me than anything in dealing with the aftermath of BC.  I really feel that I had been traumatized by the lengthy diagnostic process and the painful expansion phase of my reconstruction.  I find that I am dealing better with anxiety, problems with sleep, and with the current pain I am experiencing with one of my implants.  I can't say enough about my art therapy classes as well.  I also attend a monthly BC support group.  For me, creating a safety net of various coping tools and skills and support system has made all the difference in the world.  

    Tina 

    P.S. -- I can relate to the "ferret on speed" comment.  Laughing  When I first started doing mindful meditation, I actually felt MORE anxious!  That was because I became more aware of how I was actually feeling.  I knew I was anxious, but wow!!  While I still have episodes of anxiety, they aren't always as intense or as long in duration as previously.  Wish I could magically make it go away, but that's not going to happen.  I'm willing to work on it and see where it takes me.

  • gabrieljosh
    gabrieljosh Member Posts: 2
    edited May 2009

    Just wanna share this...

    Yoga is an excellent exercise for Stress Relief'. Sharing your problems with your loved ones can also help you get rid of stress. Aggressiveness and headaches are some of the physical symptoms of anxiety and stress. You can join weekend seminars on stress and tension management too. Red wine, if taken in moderate amount, provides quick 'stress relief'. 

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