The October 2002 Readers Di gest article
Give Peace a Chance - Meditation for Busy, Normal people
by Carol Krucoff details some of the practical benefits of meditation.
The author uses the example of Leonard Billing, a plumber for the Mount
Lebanon, Pennsylvania, school system, who meditates daily, and describes
his job as follows: Im the only one for a district with
ten buildings and I work hard, ten to sixteen hours a day. The
plumbers job is grueling, and the demands constant, yet Leonard
walks placidly through his day, solving problems with a smile.
Leonard Billing wasnt always calm, however.
Virginia, Billings wife, says, At 40, Leonard was a stroke
waiting to happen. He had a family history of heart disease (including
a cousin who died of a heart attack at age 40), high blood pressure,
and extremely high cholesterol levels. Billing was sick and miserable,
and had to do something. Then he discovered that his insurance company
would pay for his participation in an unconventional heart treatment
program - one that included meditation.
As part of his heart therapy program, he also
exercises, practices yoga and eats a mostly vegetarian diet. Of
all the changes Ive made, says Billing, now 52, meditations
whats kept me going. Its helped me become a much calmer
person, and more confident.
Americans are also embracing meditation for reasons
that go far beyond its ability to relieve stress. Like Leonard Billing,
they stumble across it when trying to manage heart disease, control
migraines, lower their blood pressure, find relief from chronic pain
or cope with cancer treatment. And like Leonard, long after they have
resolved the problems that got them started with meditation, they continue,
because the practice helps other areas of their lives as well.
How can sitting quietly, doing nothing
have this kind of power? Meditation affects brain activity, specifically
in the limbic nervous system, which controls metabolism, blood pressure,
respiration and heart rate. Harvard Medical School psychologist Alice
Domar has witnessed such changes firsthand. As part of her doctoral
dissertation research, Domar spent a year in an operating room teaching
a simple two-minute breathing meditation technique to patients who were
about to undergo surgery. The patients reported less anxiety and
coped better with the surgery, she says. Doctors liked it
because patients blood pressure was lower, they bled less and
surgery took less time.
Corporate America is also beginning to capitalize
on the benefits of meditation. Many employees are required to do complex
multitasking, which leads to anxiety and makes it difficult for them
to think clearly. Learning meditation helps them to focus their attention
and be more productive.
Meditations true power comes not just from
the time spent in formal practice, but also from taking the lessons
of meditation - learning to be relaxed and aware - out into the rest
of the day.