Mindfulness meditation increases well-being in adolescent boys
September 1, 2010
'Mindfulness', the process of learning to become more aware of our ongoing experiences, increases well-being in adolescent boys, a new study reports.
Researchers from the University of Cambridge analyzed 155 boys from two independent UK schools, Tonbridge and Hampton, before and after a four-week crash course in mindfulness. After the trial period, the 14 and 15 year-old boys were found to have increased well-being, defined as the combination of feeling good (including positive emotions such as happiness, contentment, interest and affection) and functioning well.
Professor Felicia Huppert of the Well-being Institute at the University of Cambridge said: "More and more we are realising the importance of supporting the overall mental health of children. Our study demonstrates that this type of training improves well-being in adolescents and that the more they practice, the greater the benefits. Importantly, many of the students genuinely enjoyed the exercises and said they intended to continue them - a good sign that many children would be receptive to this type of intervention.
"Another significant aspect of this study is that adolescents who suffered from higher levels of anxiety were the ones who benefitted most from the training."
For the experiment, students in six classes were trained in mindful awareness - mindfulness. Mindfulness is a 'way of paying attention. It means consciously bringing awareness to our experience, in the present moment, without making judgements about it'*. Students in the five control classes attended their normal religious studies lessons.
The training consisted of four 40 minute classes, one per week, which presented the principles and practice of mindfulness. The classes covered the concepts of awareness and acceptance, and taught the schoolboys such things as how to practice bodily awareness by noticing where they were in contact with their chairs or the floor, paying attention to their breathing, and noticing all the sensations involved in walking.
The students were also asked to practice outside the classroom and were encouraged to listen to a CD or mp3 file for eight minutes a day. These exercises are intended to improve concentration and reduce stress.
All participants completed a short series of online questionnaires before and after the mindfulness project. The questionnaires measured the effect of the training on changes in mindful awareness, resilience (the ability to modify responses to changing situations) and psychological well-being.
The researchers found that although it was a short programme, the students who participated in the mindfulness training had increased levels of well-being which were proportional to the amount of time the students spent practicing their new skills.
Professor Huppert continued: "We believe that the effects of mindfulness training can enhance well-being in a number of ways. If you practice being in the present, you can increase positive feelings by savouring pleasurable on-going experiences. Additionally, calming the mind and observing experiences with curiosity and acceptance not only reduces stress but helps with attention control and emotion regulation - skills which are valuable both inside and outside the classroom."
The success of this initial study has recently led to the creation of an exciting 8 week mindfulness curriculum for schools in both the state and private sectors. This new curriculum, which includes games and video clips, should have even greater benefits.
More information: For further information, see http://mindfulness … nschools.org
*As described in the Mental Health Foundation Report 'Be Mindful' 2010
The paper 'A controlled trial of mindfulness training in schools; the importance of practice for an impact on well-being' is published in the latest edition of The Journal of Positive Psychology.
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Sep 01, 2010
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Sep 01, 2010
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Humans frequently fret about the future, chew over bad things in the past, or worry about things that could be happening somewhere else. But in modern Western society, most of the moments of most peoples' lives are actually quite reasonable or even pleasant - we just don't pay attention to them. So we develop a negative mindset, are stressed out, and snap at our loved ones, friends, co-workers, and so on.
Mindfulness practices help us to pay attention to the moment we're in, not some moment we're not in. It's amazing how doing this makes one cheerful and improves work and social relationships!
Incidentally, there are numerous papers in respected, peer-reviewed scientific journals attesting to the value of mindfulness practices.
Sep 01, 2010
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Sep 01, 2010
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I wonder why it is that suggesting humans develop their attention and attempt to become more conscious seems to be such a threatening idea to some? In this particular instance, I don't believe there was any alignment with any type of religious practice mentioned or implied.
Sep 02, 2010
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Sep 02, 2010
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erm also it kinda cant be taught u gota learn it dont u, mindfullness is basically seeing the moments information, but as a human ur still gona judge! but yeh it works i have adhd and anxiety and its helped me just be well being essentially "happier" all the time .. i dont need a test just need the one sentence that i mentioned, see the moment ffor the information it is, the light the love will flow from that,
remember what monks do .. sit there and go into their mind and be mindfull.. it all comes from east culture definatly not our western culture thus why it is getting to my uni lecturers after iv practiced it loool! but then u r not being mindfullness at all if u see a religion as a matter, if its truth u see it doesnt matter where it is associated with
Sep 02, 2010
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Sep 05, 2010
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that's a good point, but the question is why our minds tend to slip into all these painful and negative memories/experiences. i'm pretty sure there are reasons for that.
Sep 06, 2010
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Take too serious and you're about as socially functional as a monk. Don't practice it and you remain ignorant of you're own emotional states. Not realizing what your internal motivation is for pushing the button can be pretty serious for other people, not just the button pusher. And being a monk is just plain selfish for everyone else.
Sep 06, 2010
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Sep 06, 2010
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i'm talking about reasons behind these things. there should be some adaptive role in such mechanisms important for survival.
Sep 06, 2010
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I believe that our emotions are a tool of the survival mechanisms of our brains. Our civilization has insulated us from the natural environment for which the mechanisms evolved, but those mechanisms still exists and operate below the level of consciousness. They're always using emotions to drive our behavior towards more rewarding feelings, as those are the only "perceptions" the mechanisms have. And our civilization doesn't create a lot of rewarding feelings in most peoples' work or school environments. So the mechanisms try to increase the emotional pressure to get the "reward" feelings that tell them we're successfully surviving.
Re the article, awareness training probably counteracts that effect by calming the emotions and reassuring those mechanisms with feelings of security.
Sep 06, 2010
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well, i agree in general, though i wouldn't be so dramatic about civilization insulting our feelings. civilization is just a changing and evolving environment to which we're trying to adjust. besides, i'm not sure that our civilization is becoming less secure. i'm just saying that all these negative feelings is probably something that makes us more adaptated.