Thursday, July 25, 2013

More on Meditation from Harvard University

Meditation’s Effects on Emotion Shown to Persist

By  Associate News Editor
Reviewed by John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on June 23, 2013
Meditation's Effects on Emotion Shown to PersistMeditation affects a person’s brain function long after the act of meditation is over, according to new research.
“This is the first time meditation training has been shown to affect emotional processing in the brain outside of a meditative state,” said Gaelle Desbordes, Ph.D., a research fellow at the Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging at Massachusetts General Hospital and at the Boston University Center for Computational Neuroscience and Neural Technology.
“Overall, these results are consistent with the overarching hypothesis that meditation may result in enduring, beneficial changes in brain function, especially in the area of emotional processing.”
The researchers began the study with the hypothesis that meditation can help control emotional responses.
During meditation, a part of the brain called the amygdala (known for the processing of emotional stimuli) showed decreased activity. However, when the participants were shown images of other people that were either good, bad, or neutral for a practice known as “compassion meditation,” the amygdala was exceptionally responsive.
The subjects were able to focus their attention and greatly reduce their emotional reactions. And over an eight-week period, the participants retained this ability.
Even when they were not engaged in a meditative state, their emotional responses were subdued, and they experienced more compassion for others when faced with disturbing images.
Around the same time, another group at Harvard Medical School (HMS) began to study the effect of meditation on retaining information. Their hypothesis was that people who meditate have more control over alpha rhythm — a brain wave thought to screen out everyday distractions, allowing for more important information to be processed.
“Mindfulness meditation has been reported to enhance numerous mental abilities, including rapid memory recall,” said Catherine Kerr of the Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging and the Osher Research Center, both at HMS.
“Our discovery that mindfulness meditators more quickly adjusted the brain wave that screens out distraction could explain their superior ability to rapidly remember and incorporate new facts.”
Both studies used participants that had no previous experience with meditation.
Over an eight-week period and a 12-week period, both groups showed a marked change in their daily normal brain function, while they were meditating and while they were involved in medial activities.
Some researchers believe that meditation might be the key to help ease off dependency on pharmaceutical drugs.
“The implications extend far beyond meditation,” said Kerr.
“They give us clues about possible ways to help people better regulate a brain rhythm that is deregulated in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and other conditions.”
Source:  Harvard University

Antioxidants

Comment from Doc Rowe on this article from the Journal of Physiology - My conclusion, when possible get your antioxidants from natural products, tea, spices, herbs, fruits and vegetables because the "package" is important and the body knows what to take and what to leave.  If you have an inflammatory condition such as  gout, chronic  viral infection, or arthritis supplements may be a helpful way to hold low grade chronic inflammation in check and suppress flares.

 

Antioxidants counteract benefits of exercise

A compound in red grapes, including red wine, has been shown to potentially counteract exercise benefits, research shows.

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In older men, a natural antioxidant compound found in red grapes and other plants – calledresveratrol – blocks many of the cardiovascular benefits of exercise, according to research published in The Journal of Physiology.
Resveratrol has received widespread attention as a possible anti-ageing compound and is now widely available as a dietary supplement; much has been made of its role in explaining the cardiovascular health benefits of red wine, and other foods.
But now, new research at The University of Copenhagen surprisingly suggests that eating a diet rich in antioxidants may actually counteract many of the health benefits of exercise, including reduced blood pressure and cholesterol.
Opposite effect
In contrast to earlier studies in animals in which resveratrol improved the cardiovascular benefits of exercise, this study in humans has provided surprising and strong evidence that in older men, resveratrol has the opposite effect.
What is emerging is a new view that antioxidants are not a fix for everything, and that some degree of oxidant stress may be necessary for the body to work correctly. This pivotal study suggests that reactive oxygen species, generally thought of as causing ageing and disease, may be a necessary signal that causes healthy adaptations in response to stresses like exercise. So too much of a good thing (like antioxidants in the diet) may actually be detrimental to our health.
Lasse Gliemann, a PhD student who worked on the study at The University of Copenhagen, explains how they conducted the research, and the results they found: "We studied 27 healthy, physically inactive men around 65 years old for eight weeks. During the 8 weeks all of the men performed high-intensity exercise training and half of the group received 250 mg of resveratrol daily, whereas the other group received a placebo pill (a pill containing no active ingredient). The study design was double-blinded, thus neither the subjects nor the investigators knew which participant that received either resveratrol or placebo.
"We found that exercise training was highly effective in improving cardiovascular health parameters, but resveratrol supplementation attenuated the positive effects of training on several parameters including blood pressure, plasma lipid concentrations and maximal oxygen uptake."
Ylva Hellsten, the leader of the project, says:"We were surprised to find that resveratrol supplementation in aged men blunts the positive effects of exercise training on cardiovascular health parameters, in part because our results contradict findings in animal studies.
"It should be noted that the quantities of resveratrol given in our research study are much higher than what could be obtained by intake of natural foods."
This research adds to the growing body of evidence questioning the positive effects of antioxidant supplementation in humans.
Michael Joyner, from The Mayo Clinic USA, says how the study has wider implications for research: "In addition to the surprising findings on exercise and resveratrol, this study shows the continuing need for mechanistic studies in humans. Too often human studies focus on large scale outcomes and clinical trials and not on understanding the basic biology of how we adapt."

Monday, July 15, 2013

 

This was sent to me by Doc Rowe.

Susan Smalley, PHD, is  a hard nosed researcher in genetics (Professor Emeritus, Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences at UCLA). She wrote this about herself as a scientist who had something happen to her ( a melanoma) and as a result she took time to look inside herself and it changed her life.

Why Mindfulness Matters

If someone asked me 13 years ago, if 'mindfulness matters' I would have said a resounding no, and then rolled my eyes at them for their 'new age' thinking. That was a time when I felt rational thought was the only means of understanding the nature of reality and applied it through my work as a scientist in genetics. One year later I had a freckle removed from my arm that proved to be an early stage melanoma, a disruption in my extremely busy life (raising three kids and being a prof at a major university). The deadliest form of skin cancer raised my stress level to high alert and I took a short leave of absence from the university to 'get well'. During that break, my brain had a bit of a reorganization as well and suddenly I was open to exploring anything and everything alternative that might help prevent cancer. Yoga, meditation, macrobiotic diet, shamans, etc. etc., I dove headfirst into an alternative world of healing. In it I suddenly discovered something beyond the physical healing I so desperately sought. I experienced a profound sense of our deep interconnected nature - what I called a 'oneness of theuniverse' - and with that arose a giant sense of compassion, joy, and bliss. Negative emotions of greed, envy, and anger couldn't find their way into this voluminous space of love. And, I found myself in the present moment, fully aware of the beauty in moment to moment experiences.
In the aftermath of that epiphany of sorts, I returned to the university and began to study meditation and other practices that invoke a state of mind comparable to what I had experienced. I discovered it was called mindfulness and that there was a growing body of research around it - spanning neuroscience, immunology, genetics, psychiatry and other fields. (sound familiar?)
So if you had asked me 10 years ago, 'why mindfulness matters', I would have told you because it has the power to heal oneself and help find authentic happiness.
Today, if you asked me why mindfulness matters, I would add to that sentiment one more thing, perhaps the most powerful reason to venture into the world of mindfulness. It is a means of discovering our interdependent or interconnected nature, to not only 'know' it from a lens of reason (i.e. genetics, ecology, psychology) but to experience it firsthand, to feel and know intuitively that we are 'one', all part of a unity that might be called evolution, humanity, or to those spiritually minded, some version of the concept of God.
I recently discovered an object of art that reflects this value of mindfulness visually and textually. It is a fishing vessel or vat from India created by Indian artist Subodh Gupta. The vessel is 65 feet in length and crammed with objects - fishing nets, an old television, tables, chairs, a bed, pots and pans, tea kettles, etc. - everything a single fisherman might collect in a lifetime. The title of the piece is 'what does the vessel contain, that the river does not', a quote from the Muslim poet Rumi in the 13th century. The river is the metaphor for the oneness that I experienced and we all may find through an awareness of consciousness, self, and the nature of reality from an intuitive experience. The boat represents an individual life and the collection of objects - life experiences - that are unique and a reflection of our single lifetimes.
But the saying implies that we are all a microcosm of the whole, as we each evolve and unfold, so too does our shared humanity, so too does our 'whole', our 'oneness'. As we evolve, we discover our own evolution. As we discover, we begin to know the constancy of the continuum of change itself, the river.
A.A. Milne - the author of Winnie the Pooh stories - understood this well. He saw the river as the metaphor for this constancy of knowledge, of understanding. He wrote,
Sometimes, if you stand on the bottom rail of a bridge and lean over to watch the river slipping slowly away beneath you, you will suddenly know everything there is to be known.
So take time to find a river and watch it flow. It may be realized in a practice of mindfulness of whatever sort - yoga, tai chi, meditation, reflection, pondering, sitting in silence, attending to the present with your full attention.
This is perhaps the greatest reason behind 'why mindfulness matters'.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Push hands for beginners


Push Hands

The well-known martial arts author, the late Robert W. Smith, said he thought “pushing hands” should be renamed as “sensing hands”.  It makes sense but I don’t think it caught on. Pushing hands is more commonly called push hands. It’s one of the three legs of the tai chi stool, the others being the form and the sword. If you’re unfamiliar, it’s the two-person applications done in a flow. One goal is to be able to unbalance a partner with the classic four-ounces of force. The purpose of this article is not to expound on all the aspects of doing push hands. Books have been written on the subject. It’s a basic explanation of what the reason for doing it is.

It’s probably not a good idea to be exposed to push hands right of the bat. One should become very familiar with the basics before moving to this. Traditionally the Oriental arts are taught with many months or even years of basic training before instruction in form or application. The Western society we live in wants results NOW and we tend to spend less time on those basics. This contributes to the frustration many of our students have but many will stick with it and trust their instructor to give them the “good stuff” when the time is right.

Time spent of getting the postures correct will pay off well in the push hands. Get the stance and Six Harmonies (fingers/toes, elbows/knees, shoulder/hip) right and there’s less of a challenge in learning and doing the push hands.

Al this is done “in the air”, meaning there is no physical body before you, no incoming forces to measure and deal with-and no ego other than your own. The story changes when these elements are presented.

The basics you learned in the practice of the form include four components you’ll need to start the drill. They are ward-off, roll-back, press and push. And that’s the order you normally do them in the form, so it’s ingrained. A challenge in the push hands is that the sequence gets changed, along with the side on which you do them. You’re likely used to doing roll-back with the right foot and right arm forward and applying the move. In the push hands you’ll have to do it right foot/left handed. This throws most people off, so don’t be alarmed if it “feels funny” and you’re not getting it right away.

My teacher, Tom Baeli, taught me there was a push hands form in which you practiced it in the same sequence as the applications as I wrote above. It helps. Yet, for many of us, having the body there can facilitate learning the sequences.

Be advised there is etiquette to starting the exercise and that is to allow the senior to choose whether to give or receive. For example, when I approach my teacher he either holds up his ward off, meaning I give with push, or he holds up his push and I receive with ward-off. You set your feet proportionally; front foot parallel to front foot and aligned so the toes are aimed at their rear foot. It makes a kind of box that you work within.

Know also that this is the hardest version to work with because you don’t get to move your feet to escape force. It forces you to deal with what’s there with limited tools and that’s an idea used in many systems. Once you get better at dealing with the movement and the variations to come, then you get to move your feet, as in real combat, and you start the Dance of Death, which what fights were called by some.

The presence of another human being “in your space” changes the context of what you’ve been practicing just to get here. Now you’re faced with handling incoming and outgoing energy, the probability of ego getting involved since some are more aggressive than others in this practice and dealing with the mental aspects of this sensory and emotional input. You will have to work on getting your timing and position right so you can handle the physical energies. You’ll be pushed off-balance often until you get it. That can be frustrating. How others interact with you and your energy is also key. You’ll find that everyone you push with has a different feel to them and that’s a huge value. Being a bit introspective about how you react, or don’t react, to that will teach you about yourself, too. Nobody says it’s easy but the payoff in increased confidence, physical and mental discipline and even more strength and flexibility can be substantial.

What you learn as a beginner in push hands should be done gently, with that “sensing hands” idea in mind. Using strength alone just intimidates, feeds the ego and generally produces poor technique. Competition push hands is a different animal and that’s not what we’re after right now. So hang in there, kid, you’ll be ok.

Until next time,

Lee Wedlake