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12 Science Based Benefits of Focused Thinking - aka Meditation

The popularity of meditation is increasing as more people discover its benefits.


Meditation is a process of training your mind to focus and redirect your thoughts.


I personally have noticed that the more I meditate, the more benefits I get from meditating.


Many people think of it as a way to reduce stress and develop concentration.


People also use the meditating to develop other beneficial habits and feelings, such as a positive mood and outlook, self-discipline, healthy sleep patterns, increased pain tolerance, and even improved relationships.


This article reviews 12 health benefits of focused thinking - aka meditation.

1. Reduces Stress

2. Controls Anxiety

3. Promotes Emotional Health

4. Enhances Self-Awareness

5. Lengthens Attention Span

6. May Reduce Age-Related Memory Loss

7. Can Generate Kindness

8. May Help Fight Addictions

9. Improves Sleep

10. Helps Control Pain

11. Can Decrease Blood Pressure

12. You Can Meditate Anywhere



(This is an example of our ocean meditation retreat)


1. Reduces Stress


Stress reduction is one of the most common reasons people try meditation.

One study including over 3,500 adults showed that it lives up to its reputation for stress reduction (Trusted Source).


Normally, mental and physical stress cause increased levels of the stress hormone cortisol. This produces many of the harmful effects of stress, such as the release of inflammation-promoting chemicals called cytokines.


These effects can disrupt sleep, promote depression and anxiety, increase blood pressure and contribute to fatigue and cloudy thinking.


In an eight-week study, a meditation style called "mindfulness meditation" reduced the inflammation response caused by stress .


Another study in nearly 1,300 adults demonstrated that meditation may decrease stress. Notably, this effect was strongest in individuals with the highest levels of stress (3Trusted Source).


Research has shown that meditation may also improve symptoms of stress-related conditions, including irritable bowel syndrome, post-traumatic stress disorder and fibromyalgia (Trusted Source, Trusted Source,Trusted Source).


2. Controls Anxiety


Less stress translates to less anxiety.


For example, an eight-week study of mindfulness meditation helped participants reduce their anxiety.


It also reduced symptoms of anxiety disorders, such as phobias, social anxiety, paranoid thoughts, obsessive-compulsive behaviors and panic attacks.


Another study followed up with 18 volunteers three years after they had completed an eight-week meditation program. Most volunteers had continued practicing regular meditation and maintained lower anxiety levels over the long term .


A larger study in 2,466 participants also showed that a variety of different meditation strategies may reduce anxiety levels .


For example, yoga has been shown to help people reduce anxiety. This is likely due to benefits from both meditative practice and physical activity (Trusted Source).


Meditation may also help control job-related anxiety in high-pressure work environments. One study found that a meditation program reduced anxiety in a group of first responders.


3. Promotes Emotional Health


Some forms of meditation can also lead to an improved self-image and more positive outlook on life.


Two studies of mindfulness meditation found decreased depression in over 4,600 adults (Trusted Source, Trusted Source).


One study followed 18 volunteers as they practiced meditation over three years. The study found that participants experienced long-term decreases in depression.


Inflammatory chemicals called cytokines, which are released in response to stress, can affect mood, leading to depression. A review of several studies suggests meditation may reduce depression by decreasing these inflammatory chemicals (Trusted Source).


Another controlled study compared electrical activity between the brains of people who practiced mindfulness meditation and the brains of others who did not.


Those who meditated showed measurable changes in activity in areas related to positive thinking and optimism.


4. Enhances Self-Awareness


Some forms of meditation may help you develop a stronger understanding of yourself, helping you grow into your best self.


For example, self-inquiry meditation explicitly aims to help you develop a greater understanding of yourself and how you relate to those around you.


Other forms teach you to recognize thoughts that may be harmful or self-defeating. The idea is that as you gain greater awareness of your thought habits, you can steer them toward more constructive patterns (Trusted Source, Trusted Source,Trusted Source).


A study of 21 women fighting breast cancer found that when they took part in a tai chi program, their self-esteem improved more than it did than in those who received social support sessions .


In another study, 40 senior men and women who took a mindfulness meditation program experienced reduced feelings of loneliness, compared to a control group that had been placed on a wait list for the program.


Also, experience in meditation may cultivate more creative problem solving (Trusted Source).


5. Lengthens Attention Span


Focused-attention meditation is like weight lifting for your attention span. It helps increase the strength and endurance of your attention.


For example, a study looked at the effects of an eight-week mindfulness meditation course and found it improved participants' ability to reorient and maintain their attention.


A similar study showed that human resource workers who regularly practiced mindfulness meditation stayed focused on a task for longer.


These workers also remembered details of their tasks better than their peers who did not practice meditation.


Moreover, one review concluded that meditation may even reverse patterns in the brain that contribute to mind-wandering, worrying and poor attention (Trusted Source).


Even meditating for a short period may benefit you. One study found that four days of practicing meditation may be enough to increase attention span.


6. May Reduce Age-Related Memory Loss


Improvements in attention and clarity of thinking may help keep your mind young.

Kirtan Kriya is a method of meditation that combines a mantra or chant with repetitive motion of the fingers to focus thoughts. It improved participants' ability to perform memory tasks in multiple studies of age-related memory loss (Trusted Source).


Furthermore, a review of 12 studies found that multiple meditation styles increased attention, memory and mental quickness in older volunteers (Trusted Source).


In addition to fighting normal age-related memory loss, meditation can at least partially improve memory in patients with dementia. It can also help control stress and improve coping in those caring for family members with dementia (Trusted Source, Trusted Source).


7. Can Generate Kindness


Some types of meditation may particularly increase positive feelings and actions toward yourself and others.


Metta, a type of meditation also known as loving-kindness meditation, begins with developing kind thoughts and feelings toward yourself.


Through practice, people learn to extend this kindness and forgiveness externally, first to friends, then acquaintances and ultimately enemies.


Twenty-two studies of this form of meditation have demonstrated its ability to increase peoples' compassion toward themselves and others (Trusted Source).


One study of 100 adults randomly assigned to a program that included loving-kindness meditation found that these benefits were dose-dependent.


In other words, the more effort people put into Metta meditation, the more positive feelings they experienced.


Another group of studies showed the positive feelings people develop through Metta meditation can improve social anxiety, reduce marriage conflict and help anger management (Trusted Source).


These benefits also appear to accumulate over time with the practice of loving-kindness meditation (Trusted Source).


8. May Help Fight Addictions


The mental discipline you can develop through meditation may help you break dependencies by increasing your self-control and awareness of triggers for addictive behaviors .


Research has shown that meditation may help people learn to redirect their attention, increase their willpower, control their emotions and impulses and increase their understanding of the causes behind their addictive behaviors (Trusted Source,