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The Anti Aging Effects of Meditation
By Laura
Fraser
It's
so unfair: Just at the age when
you start figuring things out --
who you are, what you want out
of life -- you begin noticing
that you're losing your mind.
Already, at 44, I not only
forget where I left my keys, I
get in the car and have no idea
where I'm going. I'm worried
that what's left of my poor
brain is starting to petrify.
Finally sure of my priorities
and values, I'm cross with
others who don't see things my
way. I'm anxious about getting
older, and impatient with my
little aches and pains. When I
look in the mirror, I see not
just superficial wrinkles, but
something deeper and more
troublesome -- the nascent
beginnings of a forgetful,
cranky, inflexible old bat.
Forget about anti-aging creams.
I need something to reset my
mental clock.
Is there anything like exercise
for the brain to keep it in
shape? Studies have shown that
doing crossword puzzles helps
keep the mind sharp, but I doubt
that struggling with 37-down,
"Palenque king," can relieve the
stress, anxieties, and mental
rigidity that can accompany
aging. Recently, alarmed at my
brain's seemingly swift
degeneration (not to mention my
impatience, distractedness, and
maddening forgetfulness), I
decided to try a different kind
of mental exercise: meditation.
It seemed unlikely that simply
sitting, closing my eyes, and
focusing on my breathing could
help. But after only a couple of
weeks -- results are quick -- I
was starting to believe that the
best thing to keep my mind calm,
cheerful, flexible, and focused
is to do nothing, for 15 minutes
a day. Meditation made me feel
both relaxed and more energetic.
I developed a bit of distance
between events and my reactions.
Someone cut me off in the car?
Maybe he's having a bad day. A
promising date didn't blossom
into a romance? Perhaps it's his
problem, not mine. Even at this
early stage, I've noticed I'm
much more able to let go of
judgments of myself and others.
I wondered: Can meditation
really keep your mind young? And
if your mind stays young, will
your body follow?
When I attended a daylong
meditation retreat to strengthen
my practice, it certainly
appeared that way. The
participants, mostly a decade
older than I, radiated the kind
of clear-eyed luminosity one
associates with the bloom of
youth. "I don't know whether
meditation actually makes you
younger," said the teacher, who,
in his 60s, had no trouble
sitting cross-legged for hours
on end. "But it sure as hell
makes you feel younger."
It turns out that how you feel
-- stressed or relaxed, anxious
or calm -- does affect the aging
process. Recent research
suggests that meditation and
other forms of mindful
relaxation may help slow down
the biological clock, so you're
better able to heal and to
withstand disease. "There's a
reason why experienced
meditators live so long and look
so young," says Eva Selhub, MD,
medical director of the
Mind/Body Medical Institute.
That reason has mainly to do
with reducing stress. Though
there is little direct research
on meditation and aging, one
1989 study of residents in
nursing homes showed that those
who practiced transcendental
meditation had better mental
flexibility and lower blood
pressure, and lived longer.
Stress = Aging
Why? Researchers suspect that
meditation slows down aging
because aging is, in many ways,
an accumulation of stress. The
new thinking is that our cells,
under stress, may stop
regenerating as quickly, and
become more prone to disease and
early cell death. Meditation and
other forms of deliberate
relaxation also change the way
you perceive stress, which
actually lightens the
physiological load. To some
extent, age really is a state of
mind: If you feel young, you're
apt to be physiologically
younger and healthier than your
cranky peers.
"If we can affect the stress
response, we can affect the
aging process," says Selhub. The
longer we live, the more stress
we're under, because stressful
events are stored in our brains,
Selhub continues, like icons on
a computer, and each new anxiety
triggers a lifetime's worth of
anxiety, like double-clicking on
that icon. The average woman
over 40, who deals with work,
kids, relationships, and her
changing life and body, has
about 50 of these stress
responses a day. Selhub adds,
"Without a lot of rest and
recovery time between stress
responses, we can age quickly."
The good news is that several
studies have shown that
deliberate relaxation, or
meditation, has exactly the
opposite effect as the stress
response, slowing and calming
all those wiggy, whacked-out
physiological changes. And while
the stress response may be
automatic and uncontrollable,
the "relaxation response" can be
called up at will, by just
sitting and literally doing
nothing. Meditation also teaches
you to separate events from your
reactions -- simply observing
situations, without judging
them, and then letting them go
-- so that a stressful event
might not automatically cause
your brain to click on that icon
of stored memories of stress.
Other studies have shown that
meditation can help strengthen
the immune system and promote
healing of illnesses that crop
up as we age. Jon Kabat-Zinn,
MD, founder of the Stress
Reduction Program at the
University of Massachusetts
Medical School, whose most
recent book on meditation is
Coming to Our Senses: Healing
Ourselves and the World Through
Mindfulness, has shown that when
patients with psoriasis listened
to meditation tapes during light
therapy, they healed four times
faster than those who didn't
relax. "The mind can affect the
healing process right down to
the level of cell division and
cell replication," he says.
Psoriasis is an uncontrolled
cell growth -- not unlike
cancer, so there is some
potential that meditation can
help control cancer, too, he
theorizes.
Rewire Your Brain
In another study, Kabat-Zinn and
his colleagues found that
meditation can change the way
the brain works. After an
eight-week program, employees at
a biotech firm showed increased
activity in the left prefrontal
cortex -- the side associated
with feelings of happiness and
well-being (Buddhist monks show
the same kind of brain
activity). The subjects who
meditated developed more
antibodies more quickly in
response to a flu vaccine,
signaling a stronger immune
system.
A calm, focused mind also
improves memory and
concentration. So much of
forgetfulness has to do with
multitasking, with your mind
scattered in a million
directions. "When you can't find
your keys or remember a name,
you have to ask yourself, how
many things are you trying to
pay attention to at once?" says
Leslee Kagan, of the Mind/Body
Medical Institute. Meditation
teaches you to be mindful in the
present moment, letting go of
all those spiraling thoughts
about the past, future, office
politics, and the grocery list,
and giving your mind and memory
an opportunity to come into
focus.
"There's nothing as effective as
some form of meditation for
cultivating concentration,"
Kabat-Zinn says. "If exercise
takes care of the body,
meditation is what takes care of
the mind."
Meditation may also help us cope
with the aging process. Studies
at the Mind/Body Medical
Institute have shown that women
who did 15-20 minutes a day of
some kind of meditative activity
that produced a relaxation
response reported a 58 percent
reduction in premenstrual
symptoms and significant
decreases in hot-flash
intensity, and 90 percent were
able to reduce or eliminate use
of sleep medications. Beyond
reducing physical symptoms, the
meditators had a more positive
attitude about their body's
changes, with fewer anxieties
and negative thoughts. "With
regular practice, relaxation
techniques can substantially
diminish one of the most
problematic aspects of menopause
-- our negative attitudes about
aging," says Kagan, director of
the Institute's menopause
program.
Over-the-Hill Illusion
Meditation, says Kabat-Zinn,
involves accepting things as
they are, without judgment.
"Acceptance doesn't mean passive
resignation, like, 'Oh, well,
I'm over the hill,'" he says.
Instead you realize that over
the hill is an illusory thought
-- one which, if you identify
with it, can affect how you feel
about yourself. "If you think
you're old, you can look in the
mirror and find 100 different
ways to confirm it," he says.
"It becomes a self-fulfilling
prophecy." Instead, meditation
can take you out of the
self-absorption with aging that
can actually age you. "What
we're talking about is
attitude," he says. "Age is not
so much chronological, but how
you inhabit your body and your
life in relationship to the
world -- and that can be worked
on. Meditation is really about
reclaiming your life as if it
were worth living now."
In a society that often tells us
otherwise, meditation can help
us realize that aging is not
such a bad thing. "There's a
certain reflectiveness, balance,
and perspective about the
sorrows and the joys of life,
which meditation can enhance,"
says my first meditation
teacher, Sharon Salzberg, author
of Lovingkindness and Faith.
Salzberg, who looks much younger
than her 52 years, says
meditation keeps your mind young
by keeping you constantly open
to the present, curious and
interested in the world around
us. "That attitude, that sense
of wonder and interest -- that
daring -- is a product of
meditation," she says. "Instead
of feeling stuck in a self-image
of being old, I feel like I'm
getting younger all the time, in
a sense of playfulness. What's
important is not aging, but
continuing to learn and grow."
I'm a beginner, but after a few
months of meditating, I feel
less impatient, more relaxed,
and able to concentrate more
easily. I can meditate about a
friend who is facing a serious
illness and not spend the rest
of the day panicked about her.
Things on my desk get cleared
away one by one, instead of
haphazardly, between cups of
coffee. I'm less likely to blurt
out something in a fit of anger,
or press "send" on a fuming
e-mail. I'm also more apt to let
go of grievances and
disappointments. My mind may
feel younger and in better shape
-- but I also feel older, wiser,
and more content. The research
on meditation and aging is still
in its infancy, but I'm
convinced that meditation will
indeed help keep my mind fit,
flexible, and acute for the
coming decades.
Now that I've found the key, I'm
in the driver's seat...
Meditation 101
There is more than one way to
quiet the mind and elicit the
relaxation response. Take your
pick from among deep breathing,
meditation, visualization, yoga,
repetitive prayer and
mindfulness (which includes
deliberately focusing on the
sensations of a small activity,
like washing your hands or
drinking a cup of tea). What's
important is to set aside at
least 15 minutes a day to engage
in one of these activities.
Even though it sounds
straightforward enough, it can
be difficult to begin meditating
without some guidance (not to
mention keeping up the
practice). There are many books,
classes, and tapes on meditation
practice available, and you need
to find one that's right for
your temperament.
Classes: The semi-annual journal
Inquiring Mind (www.inquiringmind.com)
has listings of retreats and
sitting groups (it's
meditation's equivalent of the
book club). Or just Google
"meditation sitting groups" for
local information.
Tapes and DVDs: Sharon
Salzberg's tapes can be found at
www.loving-kindness.org. Jon
Kabat-Zinn has a series of
guided meditations available at
www.mindfulness tapes.com.
Dharma Seed Tape Library (www.dharmaseed.org)
sells live recordings from top
teachers. This Web site links to
Dharmastream (www.dharmastream.org)
where you can listen to samples
of meditation talks for free, so
you can try before you buy.
Books: Jon Kabat-Zinn's Coming
to Our Senses: Healing Ourselves
and the World Through
Mindfulness explores meditation
via the five senses. Also try: 8
Minute Meditation by Victor
Davich and Mindfulness in Plain
English by Bhante Henepola
Gunaratana.
Originally published in
MOREmagazine, May 2005. |
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