You totally get that stress is one of the biggest factors sabotaging your best efforts at living a healthier happier life right now. Not only is it leaving you overwhelmed, anxious and feeling out of control of your own life, but physically stress is creating fatigue, difficulty focusing or concentrating and even cravings for sugary food!
And of course you’d fix it if you had any time or even knew where to start, right?
But what if I told you that you could make MASSIVE change to your stress levels in just 5 minutes a day?
Could you find five minutes in your day if you knew it was going to improve your focus and productivity, increase your energy, help you make healthier choices, improve any anxiety and depression and let you start feeling in control of your life again?
The magic of today’s hack can only be appreciated through experience, so give it a go right now with the audio provided and then I HIGHLY recommend that repeat every day for as long as possible!
"But I don’t have time to sit around meditating!”
The good news is that you don’t need to be a Buddhist monk meditating on a mountain and living only on the air you breathe to enjoy the benefits of meditation.
You’ve probably heard the old adage “If you don’t have time for 20 minutes meditation each day, then you probably need 2 hours.” The bad news (in my experience) is that this is completely true.
But you don’t even have to spend 20 minutes a day meditation – you can achieve incredibly powerful results with even 5 to 10 minutes a day, so just start off bitesize, at least until you have life back under control!
"But meditation is haaaaard… and I can’t empty my crazy monkey brain, no matter HOW much I try!”
It’s very possible you’ve tried some form of meditation or mindfulness and it just caused you more stress. But the magic of meditation is not to be found in the attainment of some kind of zen-like enlightenment (although that may be cool – I really couldn’t tell you myself).
But for us ordinary souls, the magic of meditation is that for a few minutes, you can stop trying to achieve anything.
Yes, you can actually stop striving.
It’s an opportunity to sit and observe what comes up, without judgement, frustration or getting caught up with whatever unfolds – almost like a detached, but curious, third-party observer.
Let go of any expectations and gift yourself this opportunity to just sit and let whatever unfold in this moment, where all is exactly as it should be..
"Where can I get guided meditations that I like?"
This hack suggests using a guided meditation audio because this simply makes it easier for you to drop into a meditative state of Presence. We’ve given you a few short, guided meditations to get you started – try your first today.
If you love those, there are plenty more to be found in our library and other programs, but if you don’t love them, you’re bound to find something in the unlimited number of guided meditation apps to be found online.
You’ll be able to find guided meditations that suit your preferences or mood and you save your favourites, so you always have something to hand. Take a few minutes to set up a few so all you literally have to do is push a button to get started.
“I keep losing focus and missing the audio.”
Absolutely no problem!
The audio is just a tool to make meditation easier – it isn’t a lesson with information you have to remember.
It really doesn’t matter if you don’t hear a word – in fact that may even indicate you are sinking quite deeply into a meditative state.
If you catch yourself not listening because you’re getting distracted by your thoughts or emotions, that is OK, just smile and gently bring yourself back to the audio or to your breath – both great tools to bring you Present.
No quiet place?
OK, I get it, you can’t even go to the toilet in your house without a kid or a dog trailing after you? Or constant interruptions from the people and responsibilities around you?
I eventually realised if I waited for the perfect moment, it never happened. So now, I just crank up the headphones, let go of all those expectations and get on with it regardless of the noise, the interruptions and the stresses of the day.
If I am interrupted, I just smile sweetly (wallowing in my woke zenness), respond as needed and then let myself slip back to Presence instead of getting frustrated and annoyed (it wasn’t always like that).
“But I just fall asleep when I close my eyes!”
If you’re teetering on the edge of burnout (or have fallen down that chasm), you might fall asleep at the drop of a hat – and that is perfectly OK.
You'll likely wake when the audio ends, feeling far more refreshed than you would expect from a 5-minute nap. Perhaps don’t do this lying in bed if you know you’re prone to falling asleep, unless it’s bedtime, in which case meditating to sleep will likely give you one of your best sleeps in a long time!
Not sure when is the best time?
What works for you? First thing in the morning can set you up for the day, last thing at night could mean a deep and lovely sleep. Or maybe you just have to grab it where you can. But scheduling it into your calendar or attaching it to another daily habit (like just before or after brushing your teeth) might help ensure it happens.
If you wandered onto this page from somewhere other than our free Bitesize Health Hacks Kickstarter, then sign up now to get hold of all 10 of our Most Essential Bitesize Health Hacks to creating lasting Health and Happiness.
It’s well known that stress activates the sympathetic nervous system – your fight or flight stress response - but did you know that meditation, much like deep, slow belly-breathing (also a form of meditation), short circuits this stress response by engaging your parasympathetic nervous system – your ‘rest and digest’ state?
Through the parasympathetic nervous system, meditation lowers your heart rate and blood pressure and reduces the release of cortisol and other stress response hormones and inflammatory chemicals into the body.
Your body starts to digest food more effectively and tension can start to ease from your muscles as your body starts to let go of being on permanent ‘alert’.
These well-observed biological changes in the body demonstrate a real and physical reduction of stress on the body, which might explain why research has shown that meditation can improve the symptoms of stress-related disease and inflammatory conditions such as fatigue [3], heart-disease, hypertension3,4,5, diabetes5, 6, cancers5, asthma6, skin conditions1, IBS1, 3,4, chronic pain1, 3,5, headaches6 and even aging!
Meditation has also been shown to have a significant effect on the brain and overall mental health [2] and appears to have an amazing variety of neurological benefits – from:
Slowing down aging in the brain[2] and age-related memory loss [3]
Improving attention and concentration in just a few days by reducing activity in the ‘monkey-mind’ section of the brain [2,3,5]
Reducing anxiety [2,3,5] and depression [1,2,3,5] with a similar efficacy as antidepressant medications.
Helping addiction recovery [2, 3, 5], including managing eating and food cravings[5]
Easing symptoms of PTSD [1, 3, 5]
Reducing cloudy thinking or ‘brain fog’ [3] and enhancing connectivity between brain regions [2]
improving problem solving and (yay!) decision-making skills [4], which are reduced while you are in ‘fight or flight.’
Boosting self-esteem through a more positive outlook and improved self-awareness [3,4]
Functional MRI scans have shown that changes occur in the brain activity in people who meditate and that these changes hold even when they are not meditating1.
In addition, meditation practices may help reduce insomnia and improve sleep quality5,6, which in turn improves nearly all of the above and more!
Managing stress is a lot about your perception of what happens around you and making good choices in how you respond, but when you live in a chronically stressed state, your outlook and ability to respond mindfully are severely limited.
Your emotional response is constantly on high alert, which explains why you so easily react with irritation, frustration, anger and even tears at the smallest of things, creating even more stress.
Plus, your logical brain is partly shut down to allow the quicker reacting survival brain to take control, which is great for an emergency situation, but not in the long term.
It’s no surprise that your life feels out of control when your survival brain is literally running the show on autoplay!
Meditation provides you with a simple, easy and effective way to short-circuit this chronic engagement of the fight-or-flight response in your body and brain, which gives you a chance to pause in the Present moment so that you can reset, reconnect and rebalance the complex systems of your body and mind.
And this powerful healing Presence, this ability to be here in this moment, connected to your wisest self and free from the limitations of your survival brain, is what allows you to steer the path of your own life with conscious intent.
Here is where the magic happens, except that it’s also science.
And Meditation is your doorway to Presence.
Now isn’t that worth 5 minutes of your day?
Then join us in our upcoming private podcast, THE MYTH OF WILLPOWER.
In this three-part invitation-only podcast series, we take a deep dive into why it's so hard to stick to the things we say we'll do, especially when it comes to our own health and happiness.
Get on the Myth of Willpower Guestlist to make sure you get your FREE ticket when the first episode drops on 20 May 2024!
Here is a collection of articles from reputable medical or media sources that make easy reading with references to the original studies if you want to dig deeper. The fact that these are all mainstream points to how the benefits of meditation are so widely accepted by science today.
When science meets mindfulness – Harvard Gazette
Seven Ways Meditation Can Actually Change The Brain – Forbes Magazine
12 Science-Based Benefits of Meditation - Healthline
https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/12-benefits-of-meditation
16 Health Benefits of Daily Meditation According to Science – Positive Psychology
Meditation and Mindfulness: What You Need To Know –NCCIH
https://www.nccih.nih.gov/health/meditation-and-mindfulness-what-you-need-to-know
Meditation: A simple, fast way to reduce stress - MayoClinic
https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/meditation/in-depth/meditation/art-20045858#
If you follow me and my hacks, Presence is definitely something we’ll be touching on time and again. But if you can’t wait to find out more, there are countless studies on the effect of meditation and mindfulness on health and should easily be found by a google search. You can also read and research around neuroscience, embodiment and presencing.
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