10 Scientifically Backed Reasons to Meditate (Proven Results)

You have to take care of your body, right? You need to fuel it with good foods, keep it strong with training, and stay healthy with mobility and maintenance exercises. The same thing goes for your brain! You need to fuel your brain with high quality information, by filtering out the junk you’re bombarded with every day. You need to keep it strong with training, by learning new and challenging skills and concepts. These are all reasons to meditate.

Meditation is just like the maintenance exercises you can perform with your body like stretching; just a few minutes a day can make an incredible difference over time. With consistent practice, daily meditation will unlock amazing benefits to fight disease, increase intelligence, minimize stress, improve relationships, maximize emotional IQ, and spark powerful insights about yourself and the world around you.

There is nothing magical about meditation; it’s just learning to control and tame your own brain. You see, most of the time, we run on autopilot. Thousands of thoughts fly through our head every single day, with no rhyme, reason, or care. It’s absolutely exhausting, and we let it continue our entire life. Once we’ve learned to think, we can’t stop!

 

10 SCIENTIFICALLY BACKED REASONS TO MEDITATE

When you meditate, you discover something incredible: a quiet mind. And once you can calm your thoughts down, you can begin focusing them towards helpful, not harmful, thought patterns. Imagine being able to tame your thoughts, impulses, and emotions to a large extent; how helpful would that be? Many very smart and very dedicated people have traveled the world to find the “big answer” to everything. For some strange reason, it all comes back to siting down in a quiet place and just, being. Check out these amazing reasons to meditate from proven studies:

 

1. Meditation creates real, physical changes in your brain, like increasing gray matter.

Gray matter makes up a large portion of your brain and a primary component of your central nervous system. Meditators increased gray matter in the regions of the brain that control memory, emotions, decision making, self-control, and more.
(Source: Long-Term Meditation: Larger Hippocampal and Frontal Volumes of Gray Matter)

 

2. Meditation drastically improves your focus and attention.

Subjects were served quickly rotating audio and visual stimuli. It’s common to miss the second stimuli, due to lack of processing power in our minds. This is called the attention-blink deficit. Long-term meditators were able to use less attention on the first stimulus, which made them more likely to detect the second!
(Source: Mental Training Affects Distribution of Limited Brain Resources)

 

3. Meditation boosts your physical immune system.

Though testing has been limited, meditators over an 8-week period created significant increases in antibodies to influenza. This has been compared to a control group on the wait list.
(Source: Alterations in Brain and Immune Function Produced by Mindfulness Meditation)

 

4. Meditation decreases the feeling of pain.

Through a strictly monitored meditation and MRI experiment, subjects reported a 40% decrease in the reported pain they felt while administrators applied an uncomfortable amount of heat.
(Source: Brain Mechanisms Supporting Modulation of Pain by Mindfulness Meditation)

 

5. Meditation decreases medically-diagnosed depression.

A sample group with lifetime mood disorders went through an 8-week meditation program. The results indicated that meditation practice leads to decrease in ruminative thinking. This is the “disease” of constantly focusing on the negative aspects of life.
(Source: The Effects of Mindfulness Meditation in Patients with Past Depression)

 

6. Meditation decreases stress and improves self-compassion.

In a smaller study of a similar 8-week meditation program, it was suggested that mindfulness meditation is effective for reducing stress and increasing quality of life. This test was given to a group of health-care professionals, which is a notoriously a high-stress industry.
(Source: Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction for Health Care Professionals)

 

7. Meditation increases your ability to do multiple tasks well.

Multitasking is myth, but many people switch from task to task quickly. Overall task time and errors did not differ significantly among the groups of meditators and non-meditators. However, the meditation group reported lower levels of stress and showed better memory for the tasks they had performed. They also switched tasks less often and remained focused on tasks longer.
(Source: Initial Results for The Effects of Meditation on Multitasking Performance)

 

8. Meditation boosts your self-control, and how you handle your emotions.

After enrollment in a program, individuals reported increased mindfulness and happiness, as well as decreased worry and emotional suppression. This is compared to a control group, that did not report the same changes. As a bonus, those who meditated more often reported even better results.
(Source: Effects of Mindfulness on Emotional Regulation)

 

9. Meditation improves your ability to find yourself and your passions.

Your mind and your body are incredibly connected. This study took body-awareness meditators as well as dancers, which can definitely be considered a form of meditation. Those two groups experienced a linear increase in coherence, which is the ability to be aware of yourself, as opposed to a group that did not practice either exercise.
(Source: Coherence Between Emotional Experience and Physiology) 

 

10. Meditation increases your emotional IQ and sociability.

A group of working adults was assigned loving-kindness meditation exercises. The amazing results include increases over time in daily experiences of positive emotions, which, in turn, produced increases in a wide range of personal resources (e.g., increased mindfulness, purpose in life, social support, decreased illness symptoms). In turn, these increments in personal resources predicted increased life satisfaction and reduced depressive symptoms.
(Source: Positive Emotions Induced Through Loving Kindness Meditation) 

Leave a comment: Have these reasons to meditate convinced you?

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6 Comments

  1. Annekin Ove

    Awesome read.

    Reply
  2. bob jones

    Meditate!

    Reply
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    • Will Dee

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    • Jordan

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