TheShield_Vol67_Issue3

Page 16

MIND OVER MATTER

Incorporating mindfulness into daily life Rachel Lechwar • Copy Editor Destiny Tran • News Editor

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o you ever find yourself going into autopilot while walking to classes? Or unable to tear yourself away from tasks you have to complete while trying to enjoy a vacation? What about constantly replaying the day’s events as you try to go to sleep? In a lifestyle that thrives on productivity and connectivity, many find it difficult to unplug from these distractions. But researchers and psychologists alike have pinpointed one solution to ease these distractions and improve the quality of life: mindfulness. Mindfulness is simply being aware of the present moment. This means consciously removing one’s thoughts from any other time and instead focusing on events as they unfold without judgment. “Mindfulness teaches you to stop, pay attention to what you’re doing, then move forward,” Professional Life Coach Dr. Asha Jaleel said. Jaleel implements mindfulness in her practice,

working with clients who have chronic pain or ADHD. Mindfulness is employed during therapy, in the workplace and at school as a means of coping with negative emotions and stress. It encourages people to accept negative emotions as a part of the human experience instead of resisting them. In the past decade, psychologists have discovered the scientific benefits of mindfulness as the practice became more widespread.

IMPROVES MENTAL HEALTH Several studies point to decreased anxiety and depression in those who practice mindfulness. In a 2018 Harvard study, MRI scans displayed less activity in the amygdala, the fear control center of the brain, after an eightweek mindfulness meditation period. Researchers scanned the brain while participants engaged in normal activities to conclude that the effects of

16 THE SHIELD | FEBRUARY 2020

mindfulness carries into daily life, according to The Harvard Gazette. The same eight-week program is designed as a form of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) intended to prevent relapses of depression, reducing the risk by 43 percent, according to the American Psychological Association (APA).

good study habit to be in the present moment, not thinking about what is going to happen two days from now or in the weekend. The more you practice mindfulness, the less automatic you’ll be as a human being.”

IMPROVES SCHOOL PERFORMANCE

Mindfulness improves working memory, correlating a higher state of mindfulness with the ability to remember old stimuli relative to new stimuli, according to The National Center for Biotechnology Information. When one can remain focused on the present moment, it increases focus and thus allows more information to be encoded. It also develops selfobservation, which allows a better understanding of self and allows more adaptive responses to stress, according to the APA.

Students may attest to the distractions that exist when faced with loads of homework. Even students who do not experience depression or anxiety may not be best utilizing their time to finish assignments. A University of British Columbia-Vancouver study of 2,000 students used a Mindfulness Attention Awareness scale to test mindfulness, and those who scored higher also had higher test scores. “It helps you get into the zone,” Jaleel said. “It is a

BENEFITS THINKING AND MEMORY

Psychology and religion and teacher Alex Maples


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