Meditation: Why You Should Do It
Take a moment. Breathe. Focus your mind. Slow down and read each word. Become aware of yourself reading this sentence, this paragraph. You sitting there, focusing on each word, one by one. Become aware of each sound as it echoes in your mind, the one you’re hearing right now, and this one, and again and again and again. The voice in your mind reading this to you, is that you? If so, then who is doing the listening?
Ideally, the above paragraph forced you into some form of meditation. It forced you to become aware of your thoughts and mental processes, and then hopefully helped you differentiate your Self from the thoughts and sounds running through your head.
Meditation forces one to disidentify with their mind and emotions. It is perhaps the easiest to learn and most available personal developmental tool on the planet. The disabled can do it. Children can do it. Stephen Hawking can do it. Anyone with conscious awareness can practice it. You can do it on a crowded bus. You can do it in a monastery. You can do it in your bedroom. You can do it now as you read this. Experienced meditators can even do it while they sleep. It’s health benefits — mental, emotional, and physical — are innumerable and there are no side effects. You can learn to do it in as little as five minutes and once you learn you’ll never forget. Doing it as little 10 minutes a day can make you happier and healthier, and doing it as little as 30 minutes per day could change your life.
Yet almost no one does it regularly. Myself included. Why?
It’s hard to do. Really fucking hard. No seriously, take a second and close your eyes and try to think about NOTHING for 30 seconds. No seriously, try it. Just for 30 seconds. I guarantee you can’t do it.
If you try, you’ll soon notice that our minds are producing a constant stream of thought-vomit, and most of us identify so strongly with it that we don’t even notice. Our mental energy is sapped by an endless stream of useless, unhelpful thought and opinion:
“I hope the Lakers win tonight. I wonder if Shannon will ever call me back. I really enjoyed our date together, but maybe I should have picked a better restaurant? Oh, that’s silly worrying about that. I wonder if that new Sushi place near Dave’s is any good? I should call him, I haven’t talked to him in a while. He can be overly-negative though sometimes. Oh, I should buy a movie to watch this weekend, that will be cool. I wonder what though. I remember when I watched that one movie with Sara, my teenage girlfriend. God, we were young and naive. First kisses are awkward. But yeah, I should call Dave, I haven’t called him in a while. I should call Dad too, he gets testy if I don’t call him. Oh, today’s Tuesday, Breaking Bad is on.”
Chances are your mind sounds like this on a daily basis, and you’re rarely aware of it. Few of us are. Meditation trains our minds to prune and hone our thoughts, to only focus on what’s useful and important, to disregard the rest, and to separate our egos and identities from the thoughts and emotions running through our heads. This may sound like little, but it adds up and the life benefits are massive.
I got into meditation as a teenager and became serious about it in college. Since graduating, I’ve since lost touch with the practice (got distracted with girls, booze and work), but it’s a goal of mine this year to reboot my meditation habit. Its benefits on my life were wonderful and I miss the clarity and consciousness I had when I practiced regularly.
If your mind is a muscle, then meditation is a way to take it to the gym. The stronger your control of your mind becomes, the more you’re able to consciously control what your mind focuses on and how it processes new information. Strengthening your mind in this way has repercussions on every aspect of your life: your emotional health and self esteem, your work performance, your discipline, your relationships, your ability to communicate well, your overall happiness, your stress levels, and your physical health as well. I attribute a lot of the success I’ve attained in other areas of my life to all of the meditation I did when I was younger. In everything I’ve pursued since that time, I’ve noticed that my mind is more focused than most and that I’ve always been able to strip away the unnecessary distractions and get right at what’s important in any endeavor.
How to Meditate
There are dozens of styles and techniques to meditation. The beautiful thing is that none of them are right or wrong, simply different. Whatever forces you to focus your mind on your awareness and let go of any thoughts or emotions that arise is a form of meditation. Whether it involves mantras, counting breaths, yoga, chanting, rituals or whatever.
But to begin, I recommend people start with a basic sitting and counting of breaths. The process is easy.
Set aside 10 or 15 minutes. Get a clock or timer and set an alarm preferably, because you are going to be tempted to get up or stop before the time is up. Go into a quiet room where there are no distractions. Toss a pillow on the floor and sit on it cross-legged. Don’t worry if you can’t cross your legs perfectly, just do it as much as possible while remaining comfortable. Plant your ass firmly on the pillow and then make sure your back is straight. Relax your diaphragm and let your belly hang out (don’t worry, no one’s looking). Look straight ahead. You can close your eyes or leave them open, it doesn’t really matter. I prefer leaving mine open, but to start out you can close them if it makes you feel more comfortable. You can put your hands on your knees or you can rest them in your lap, one on top of the other, palms facing up, as shown in the picture.
Now comes the hard part. Clear your mind. Think about nothing. Breath through your nose into your chest until your chest is full. Your belly should expand out. Then slowly exhale. One. Do the same thing again. Each breath, count the breath. When a thought or distraction arises, start the count over again at one. Thoughts and distractions WILL come up, and if you’re just starting out, they will often come up without you even noticing them until they’ve been rattling around for a few seconds.
Don’t judge yourself. Don’t get mad. Don’t get frustrated and say, “I suck at this.” Just acknowledge the thought, let it go, and reset your counting. Chances are you won’t get past two or three the first few times you meditate. It often takes people months to even get to ten.
Do this for the full 15 minutes. It’s only 15 minutes, but I guarantee it will feel closer to three hours. By the fourth minute you’ll be dying to get up and do something. Your mind will be going crazy. Chances are you’ll start to let your mind go and just start thinking about the party last weekend, or the project that you’re working on at work. That’s fine. Don’t judge. Just let go and start the count over again.
This is the most basic form of Zen meditation, which is the practice I followed for a few years. If you get through one session, congratulations. I imagine you will get up feeling much more relaxed, clear-headed, and will feel calmer throughout your day.
These sessions are easier to do and to keep up with if done with someone else, so you can keep each other accountable. Daily practices are best. Start with 10 or 15 minutes each morning when you wake up and slowly add time from there. Once you get to the point where you can keep your mind thoughtless for a full 10 breaths or so, there are other techniques or practices you can begin to add.
Benefits of Meditation
I’ve alluded to a lot of benefits of meditation throughout the article. Of all spiritual practices, meditation probably has the largest body of scientific research backing up its utility and power. Numerous studies using MRI’s and EEG’s have shown a regular meditation practice can rewire the neural patterns in the brain and even increase grey matter. Below are some practical benefits psychologists and doctors have found to regular meditation:
- Increases Self-Awareness. Psychologists have noted that patients who practice meditation develop greater awareness of their actions and emotions. Some therapists prescribe meditation to their patients to assist them in their practice.
- Increases Focus and Discipline. Practitioners of meditation are able to retain focus on specific tasks and are less likely to deviate from those tasks. Meditation increases the one’s ability in what psychologists call “self-regulation.”
- Reduces Stress and Anxiety. Mindfulness techniques have been shown to reduce anxiety and stress and have long been prescribed to patients who suffer anxiety disorders and panic attacks as a way to calm their nerves.
- Makes you Physically Healthier. People who meditate on average sleep better, have lower heart rates, have lower blood pressure, and get sick less often.
- Increases Emotional Stability. For people who are prone to outbursts of anger or sadness, meditation helps people regulate and control their emotions.
- Increases Memory and Helps You Think More Clearly. Meditating trains you to remove all of the unnecessary garbage from your thought-patterns. This then frees up your mind to retain what is useful and important more efficiently.
- Gets You In Touch With Your Intuition. Often referred to as your “gut reaction,” your “instinct,” or your “intuition,” meditating gets you in touch with your unconscious decision-making processes. Daniel Kahneman refers to it as your “first brain.” Malcolm Gladwell refers to it as “blink.” Whatever it is, that instant, gut reaction that you have about some things, and it’s often right? Meditation will increase that.
- Increases Your Ability to Empathize with Others. Brain scans show that meditation activates the positive, happy, empathetic aspects of the brain. People who practice meditation regularly report an ability to empathize and care about the emotions of others and bond with them more easily.
- Lowers a Need for External Validation. Meditating trains yourself to become more aware of what thoughts and emotions dictate your behavior, primarily where you’re trying to receive your love and validation that may not be working. It forces you to become more aware of your needy behaviors and put an end to them.
Meditation is by no means a cure-all for your problems. But I believe that it’s a powerful first step. Meditation’s purpose is to give you perspective and clarity on your internal issues. It doesn’t fix them for you. One of the most upsetting parts of my involvement in Zen years ago was how many long-time practitioners I met who convinced themselves that meditation fixed all of their psychological and emotional problems, when it didn’t. It helped them experience and become aware of those problems, but you still have to go out into the world and commit the actions to overcome them. Sitting in a room staring at a wall all day is unlikely to do that.
Meditation and Spirituality
There is a spiritual aspect to a meditative practice, for those of you into that kind of thing. I usually avoid spirituality on this blog on purpose. I believe spirituality is something that’s experienced and lived, not discussed or taught. In my opinion, spirituality, by its definition, cannot be discussed. Just the resulting experiences of a spirituality can be described. Spirituality itself is transrational. It’s like counting to infinity. Words can capture part of it but never fill it up.
One such way to experience that spirituality is through meditation. I’m no good at describing the experience with words. But if you’ve ever had a moment in your life where your sense of self, your sense of identity completely dissolved, and there was no longer differentiation between you, the sky, the water, the people around you, everything. If you ever stared at the stars so long you started laughing at how beautiful the fact that we even exist is. If you’ve ever suddenly realized that your fears and worries were illusions created by your ego and mind, and that good and bad were simply separate expressions of the same grand unity of This, and that you never had to be afraid, ever, because you — your fears, your flaws, your failings, everything about you — was just another perfect expression of the same reality. Then yeah, meditation can help you get back that.
Feel free to share your experiences with meditation in the comments below.




“It is perhaps the easiest and most available personal developmental tool on the planet. ”
“It’s hard. Really fucking hard. ”
yeah wat
Hard to do. Easy to learn. Hard to do.
Will edit that.
Thanks for the article Mark! I will start this shit!
Perhaps by easy mark means meditation is both intellectually simple (focus on one thing) .
Perhaps by available he refers to the fact it requires no equipment.
Perhaps by hard Mark means in practice it is hard to do, in other words it takes something to do it, call it mental effort, discpline or even “psychic energy”.
*Perhaps by easy mark means meditation is intellectually simple.*
Say the Rosary. Much better idea.
Why exactly is this? Id love to see the “saying the rosary” scientific case studies.
Please keep the blog ideology-free, thanks.
Meditation doesn’t contradict any particular religious practices. It can be done for Buddhist reasons or it can be done for secular reasons.
It is also allowed in most religions, including Islam. Muslim yoga teachers teach meditation.
I figured something was up with the meditation thread on the forum
.
I’m really happy with picking up meditation myself. It has helped me enormously with self-discipline. Particurarilly with food cravings. I meditate around 15 minutes a day, and today I did three sessions.
I’m really amazed by how much easier it can be to do difficult things when you meditate regurarily. F.E. when I’m running I think about my goal and ignore the pain that I’m feeling. The same goes for situations in which you experience fear, you feel the fear but instead you think about the outcome or the action.
The reason is is simple, meditation strengthens your prefontal cortex. . This is the part of the brain that governs your willpower, making it easier to say no when it’s necessary.
There’s even more to it. The ammount of dopamine in the frontal cortex versus the ammount of dopamine in the accumbens, will determine whether or not you will make a yes-or no deciscion. If you have more dopamine in the frontal cortex, you’ll make a no deciscion. And vice versa.
sorry I just finished a book about additions, haha.
I’m 22 and meditate since I was 18 or so (with pauses in between).
I really recommend to do a meditation retreat (did two), because it really motivates to see people, who meditate it for years and how (happy) they live.
Starting the day with meditation is great. When I do not meditate I instantly feel it over the day. Well, just another attachment… So watching, always watching
Superb post like all others that focus on real self-development. I wish I see more along this line. Techniques are always useful to get one centered and reduce the constant mind chatter. Eventually one may look for something like the J.Krishnamurti-type trans-meditation, simply an awareness of what is.
I’ve tried this form of meditation several times. Each time I would get up, angry, thinking “I suck at this!”.
Oops.
I absolutely believe in the value of meditation. I see meditation as something very broad. One form of meditation is simply counting your steps as you walk. You can meditate by staying aware of what’s going on in your mind. You can meditate by being aware of the nature around you.
After reading this I want to do 15 minutes of seated meditation though.
It’s important to remember to *not* punish oneself in any way about this–whether thinking “I suck at this” or even thinking that you’re not “doing it right” when you think a thought. Our brains are wired to process information, aka think. I’d argue this is unavoidable. What meditation helps you do is slow down, muffle, quiet things down in your head. I like to phrase the thinking aspect meditation thusly: while meditating, if I have a thought I let it go in one ear and out the other, so to speak. In other words, I allow my brain to do its thinking, but I hold on to none of them–I give the thoughts no attention. (Reading that back it seems strange, but I can’t seem to phrase it better.) Interestingly, the stream of thoughts slows down, mellows out.
It may follow to ask “what should I pay attention to?” I think Mark gives a good suggestion with the breathing–it’s a slow and steady pulse we can easily keep track of (the heartbeat is a little too fast to easily pay attention to!), and it so happens that doing so is relaxing, which is an important element of meditation. Relaxation of the mental as well as physical muscles, so to speak.
Meditation is especially crazy once you start getting into the Jhanas.
It’s funny catching this article during the lunch break from the OneTaste “How to OM” seminar. Any thoughts on orgasmic meditation, anyone?
Thank you for this awesome introduction into meditation. It made me want to try this out immediately.
“Doing it as little 10 minutes a day can make you happier and healthier, and doing it as little as 30 minutes per day could change your life. ”
Wonder what would happen if I go to an Indian Ashram an do it 6 hours a day for 3 months?
love the post!
Guys, start with some easy meditation first. Sit for 5 minutes and focus on your breath. Then 10 minutes.
Nowdays I do 20 minutes. I sometimes fall of the habit but it only takes me 3 days of doing it daily to start gaining benefits such as a clearer head and more focus.
My coach encouraged me to go for a 10 day vipassana retreat. When I learned that many more of my PUA peers highly benefited from it, I went for the experience. It’s free, vegetarian food and board all included (though I suggest you donate a proper amount after you see the benefits of this, so that other people may enjoy it too).
I was a bit disappointed that it was not a huge eventful experience for me: I did not face my demons as I intended, there was no realization or anything. Others had given up drinking and smoking thanks to this. Because so many people said this was the best thing they did so far in their life, I highly recommend it to you all.
I’ve been doing this. I have started with a mere 10 minutes (and to be honest I struggle with this). But I will persevere! Onwards and upwards!
Nice, I’ve been looking forward to reading this article and I wasn’t disappointed. I especially enjoyed the way you handled the spiritual aspect of meditation. Describing glimpses of the experience, without falling into the trap of attempted conceptualization.
Glad to see people inspired to start meditating. I’m thinking of doing a 30-day challenge of meditation next month.
Don’t think. Just do.
Down for a 30 day challenge, a little effort in meditation can have a huge impact.
Just started after reading this, but wanted an excuse to do so long ago. Maybe I’m just not good enough yet, but I’ve found the counting becomes a distraction, so I just focus on my breath without counting.
I’ve found that meditating allows you to ‘store away’ all that nervous energy we sometimes feel.
[...] no other reason than to be with your friends. Learn how to dance. Take some time off work. Attend a meditation [...]
Mark, I find your site to be unique, interesting and multifaceted. Your post reminded my why meditation has played such an important role in my life experience. As a kid, before I ever heard the word existentialism, I used to ask myself the big questions. You know the ones. Who am I, where do we come from, why are we here, where do we go in the end, is there an end, who made who… You get the picture. I’m a thinker. That’s precisely why meditation is an essential bridge between the physical and metaphysical construct for me.
Thank you for your didactic reminder,
Rock
OK tried this out and there is definetley something to this.
While meditating (or trying to) I was thinking, does this turn into some sort of selfhypnosis?
I was thinking the idea is to shut out the world, so you don’t hear anything but how do you snap out of it if you don’t hear the alarm go off? No? Keep trying it? I will anyway.
Thanks for the article.
Wow you created a very interesting and inspiring article of presenting the benefits of meditation, although we live in a modern world where spiritual benefits get lost very easy. I just found an interesting video – where a French monk describes the results of studies such as brain activity, effetcs for your immunity etc.
For the study they tested experienced monks and also “normal” persons who were practicing 3 months for 30 minutes everyday. The scientifically proven part begins in minute 34.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L_30JzRGDHI&feature=g-vrec
I’ve practiced Falun Gong meditation for the last 9 years and recommend it to others. It’s simple to learn and very flexible if you only have a few minutes a day. Even 3 minutes can completely change your perspective, provide a boost to your energy, and deepen your concentration and focus.
It’s also called Falun Dafa. Here’s the link in case anyone is curious:
http://falundafa.org
Hi all,
Great article about a great subject. I learned meditation from reading Jon Kabat-Zinn’s books and I will share some differences from how you described. At heart it is essentially as Mark describes, but with a few philosophical differences.
Instead of trying to clear your mind or force yourself to think of nothing, you let your mind do its thing and simply watch. You gently maintain awareness of your original target (as Mark describes counting to ten) and gently pull your awareness back to this focal point when it wanders. As it will. About 700 times at least. If you try too hard to coerce your mind into doing what you want you are introducing stress and tension that doesn’t necessarily need to be there. Better to try to dispassionately watch your mind and see what observations come to you. Kind of ride the waves of thought like you’re surfing.
You’re not trying to figure anything out, or think consciously, but watch how your mind thinks on its own, and as Mark points out, see that you aren’t really your thoughts.
All of the benefits Mark described will come in time but shouldn’t necessarily be your goal in any particular session.
I’ll leave you with a quote from Marshall McLuhan (paraphrased): “Our mind is like a magazine, with a new edition every four seconds.”
Have you heard of Binaural Beats? Great stuff to listen to while meditating.
I laughed reading this because I recently completed a 10-day silent meditation retreat in Thailand…some of my thoughts were very similar!
http://www.getupandglobe.com/an-unenlightened-perspective-my-ten-days-at-the-suan-mokkh-silent-meditation-retreat/
Hey Mark,
I’m curious if you recommitted to a meditation practice. Did you ever try the kind with headphones and sound technology? It makes it about a thousand times easier to make the commitment. I listen while I sleep at night.
I’ll be very honest, I moved through their “levels” much faster than they advised. And for a couple years this created huge upheaval in my life (people could move more slowly if they want more gradual change and less upheaval but I wanted fast change lol). The reward is that now most of the time my life feels silky smooth peaceful, and my intuition is so powerful it sometimes scares even me (developed it through other tools as well).
For anyone who is having trouble making the commitment to this profoundly life changing practice, the headphone version might be a nice alternative.
Sage advice; don’t just do something: sit there! :-}
A very well-written article. I took a class in Japanese philosophy my senior year of college, and part of the course involved learning Zen meditation. And yes, it was frustrating at first, but it became easier to make the time to meditate as I kept at it. I continued meditating even after the semester was over, and I definitely found it helpful when I was working on my grad school applications – I found it much easier to sit down and get to work when I meditated beforehand. I fell out of the habit right before I graduated, and I’m starting to regret it after reading this article, but I’d really like to get back into it again now that I’m starting my second attempt at grad school. Thanks for writing this, Mark. It was very well-thought out and dead-on.
Oh, and one more thing I forgot: For those of y’all looking for literature to assist in your meditation, I recommend Shunryu Suzuki’s “Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind”. It’s a collection of his talks on the practice of Zen meditation. Reading one or two of them each day will help you come to a better understanding not just of meditation itself, but of your own perspectives on your practice.
[...] for those rare deeds which are unforgivable: sit with them, cease to see the separateness, and let them dissipate in the [...]
Hi there Mark!
I wonder if it helps at the beginning just to focus on one thought or one thing in my mind since it’s clearly impossible to make it empty, so… i think of this as trick to get a little bit of .. discipline? or so.
This is the 2nd article i am reading from you and i must say i am impressed by the way you think and write.
I would love to know how Mark’s “meditation re-boot” is going on. I’m doing something similar at the moment and I’m finding it harder to get into it second time around. Take away: don’t stop meditating once you’ve started!
@robcubbon I made it a few weeks and then stopped again. It’s ironic, but the times it’s hardest to maintain are always the times where one needs it the most. I became extremely busy running a number of internships and launching some business projects about a month after this post. So it all fell apart around then.
I think I’ve finally accepted that I just don’t have enough of a habit to maintain meditation without some sort of community around me. The only time I’ve ever done it consistently was when I was part of a group that did it together.
@postmasculine Thanks for letting me know, Mark. Well, it’s always there for you if you need it again, I guess.
Meditating a lot daily has probably been the biggest watershed, positive transformation of my life. I cannot recommend meditation enough, but over time I have come to realize that there are potential bad side effects of meditation, particularly if it is done foolishly, and I purposely leave out specifics because what is foolish could be many things. There is a fantastic article on toxic meditations and a bunch of other posts in the dangers if meditation over here:
http://www.lorinroche.com/dangers/dangers/medicinal.html
It’s funny, I didn’t want to read these articles at first, because meditation just has this perfect, ideal standing in so many people’s eyes, myself included, that you almost don’t want to hear about the pitfalls, even though knowing about the pitfalls of meditation could be very important in terms of not fucking yourself up.
Since no one might read the above article, I’ll follow up with an important excerpt from it about toxic meditations:
“Examples of this are meditations that are designed to weaken the connection between desire and action, perception and emotion, and create detachment. The word, “detachment” has been repeated so many times that it has come to have the sound of something good and useful. But being “quite withdrawn from sensual pleasures” is only useful as part of your overall balance in life. For most householders, detachment is simply a mild death, a devitalization and a lack of passion and enthusiasm.
Examples of life-hating, toxic and medicinal meditations are those in which you attempt to:
- make your mind blank
- slow down your thoughts
- calm down
- decrease or kill your desires and passion
- block emotions
- create devotion and subservience
- reduce your ego”
Hey Brian. I read that article and I really appreciate it you sharing it! Some essential information in there that is rarely shared.
And Mark, the last paragraph is beautiful. Captured those feelings perfectly.
[...] is why practices such as mindfulness, therapy and meditation are so crucial. They help us not only become more objective about others, but also help us unravel [...]
[...] Meditation: Why You Should Do It [...]
I meditated sometime ago for the first time and I tried combining it with stimulant music. One song was “Gayatry mantra” which can be found over the Internet easily and the other one was a recommendation of a friend who practices yoga, which has a certain frequency. Unfortunately, I don’t remember what was the name of that song, but high or low frequency meditations are easily found on YouTube.
Bottom line is that after 45 minutes of trying to meditate (concentration on the music and blackening my inner image, if it makes any sense) I took a nap. It was the nap of my life!
Good day to you all and thank you Mark for the awesome article!