5 Reasons to Meditate and a Guided Meditation to Get You Started

There are many benefits to meditation. Meditation offers physical benefits by relieving pain, lowering blood pressure, and strengthening the immune system. It offers emotional benefits by improving mood and minimizing stress, and it provides spiritual benefits by helping us uncover our life purpose and realize our personal strength.

These benefits can come from many different forms of meditation, including Concentration, Mindfulness, Passage, and Transcendental meditation.

Regardless of which type you choose to explore, all of them are based on “retaining attention” and experiencing the vastness of the present moment.

Whether meditation helps us to regulate our thoughts and feelings by being mindful of our momentary experience, or helps us concentrate and build greater attention by reciting a mantra, saying, or prayer, there are some overarching benefits that come from making meditation a part of our daily life.

Sitting still helps us to be patient and rest

Living in a fast paced world with constant stimulation can be exhausting. When we can make time to be still and experience quiet solitude it is rejuvenating and relaxing.

It also builds our capacity for patience and allows us to move through life in a calm and collected manner, where we can more easily deal with problems and upsetting moments. Meditation can help us to grow and learn more about who we are, and by doing so help us to become a stronger person.

Gets us closer to a higher power

No matter what your belief or relationships with a higher power, the practice of meditation is a wonderful way to develop a sense of spirituality. As we meditate our mental chatter quiets and we begin to hear the voice of our higher power.

We can get in touch with our intuitive nature and find answers to questions concerning our purpose and meaning, or how to solve a current problem we are facing. Connecting to something greater than ourselves and pursuing a relationship with our creator can come from reciting scripture, praying, or simply being present in the moment.

It helps us stop worrying and handle stress

Most of the time we are on automatic pilot and go through life responding to fleeting thoughts that pop into our head. Meditation helps us to become mindful and manage our thinking. It slows down our thought process and lets us experience clam and quite. It helps us to be centered and present in the moment.

It not only helps us to manage negative emotions and irrational thoughts, but enhances our positive emotions as well.  Meditation has been shown to alter brain activity and enhance activity in the left frontal cortex, which is associated with positive emotional experiences. Meditation offers us a chance to cultivate more positive emotions through focusing on loving-kindness and other positive states of mind.

It helps us accept what is and say yes

Do you often find yourself saying “no” and trying to avoid your current reality? Emotionally we can get dragged down past mistakes and feelings of shame or guilt. We can become anxious about the future and live in a state of worry and fear.

Meditation can help us to overcome this perspective as we learn to let go of blame and stop holding on to what we can’t control. Mediation can help us to stay mindful and experience the present moment without brooding on the past and worry about the future.  Instead of trying to change the flowing river we can just let it flow calmly.

Guided meditation

If you’re a beginner and haven’t had much experience with meditation, here is a basic guided exercise to help you get started in your meditation practice. This audio clip will provide a breathing meditation to help you build a foundation of greater concentration and mindfulness as you develop your personal meditation practice.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

As a certified meditation instructor, I can help you develop a mediation practice that suites your personal beliefs and lifestyle. Visit my website for more information or contact info@joewilner.com and ask about meditation training.

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  • http://thehappyseeker.com Christopher Foster

    Stillness can be one of our best friends, can’t it, Joe? And the beautiful thing is, stillness will never let us down. It is always present, and it is always offering us its peace and that   connection with our timeless self that is surely the very root of happiness. Thanks for the great post Joe.

  • http://jonathanfigaro.com Jonathanfigaro

    Hey JOe…i had a question. How exactly does meditation get us closer to a higher being? Just curious? 

  • Joe @ Shakeoffthegrind

    Hi Christopher,

    Thanks so much for stopping by! If there is one thing that offers us security and safety it’s being in the present moment. Being still and meditating is a wonderful way to experience this.

  • Joe @ Shakeoffthegrind

    Hi Jonathan,

    It’s been awhile. Thanks for stopping by it’s nice to hear from you! Meditation can be used as a practice to help us quiet our minds and by doing so listen for and communicate with our creator. In other words we can connect with the spirit within us and grow as a spiritual person. Many people also utilize meditation as a way to focus on prayer or other spiritual/religious scripture.

  • http://twitter.com/psychicjazz Kenya Lynem

    Thank you for this post. I love the pic attached to this article by the way ;-)  One of the messages I actually received last night was “still the mind”. I think someone asked above how does meditation help you with communicating with higher beings. When you have accomplished a stilled mind and clearer channels, Divine communications are much clearer as well. Messages come in many forms…The audio message I received “Still the mind” actually came from the angels. Meditation is a great gateway for all around wellness (spiritually, physically and mentally)

  • http://twitter.com/arvindyogini arvind

    Thank you Joe – really a helpful audio for beginners!

  • http://thebooksthatchangedmylife.com Marc Van Der Linden

    Interesting post. I already have experiences with different kind of meditations like concentration and mindfullness. They are great! The transcendental meditation is still on my list – but now I have 5 reasons more to go for them :-)  

    However, the meditation I liked the most up until now are the Osho Dynamic meditations. They are really fantastic and completely different than all other forms of meditations!  

  • Joe @ Shakeoffthegrind

    Hi Kenya,

    Thanks for your wonderful comment and adding to the blog. Meditation is a great source of all around wellness. I personally love it for the emotional and spiritual benefits. We often have so many thoughts running through our mind, it can be tough to know what to believe. ;) When we can still this incessant chatter we can begin to hear the empowering voice of reason and experience more peace of mind.

  • Joe @ Shakeoffthegrind

    Hi Arvind,

    Pleasure to hear from you, and thanks for stopping by! Getting started with meditation can be tough if we don’t have a basic idea to work from. This simple breathing meditation is how I tend to start my sessions.

  • Joe @ Shakeoffthegrind

    Hi Marc,

    Thanks for stopping by! I have just ordered a book on TM to get a greater understanding. It’s seems to be a very commercialized form of meditation, I believe it’s even trademarked! ;) So needless to say it’s taken me awhile though I look forward to my new read. Thanks for sharing your experience with Osho Dynamic Mediation. I am not familiar with it and will be exploring that further!

  • http://mindadventure.com/blog rob white

    Great advice, Joe. Taking command of the jumping-monkey nature of our mind is essential. Our potential to create is inexhaustible but we must first learn the power of stillness. Retreating into the innermost part of our consciousness sharpens our awareness and provides clarity on creating the life we want to live into.

  • http://www.msbuddha.com/ Maya @ Ms Buddha

    To experience yourself as a witness is a powerful experience. We are not our monkey mind! That’s great news for everyone, I think.

  • Joe @ Shakeoffthegrind

    Hi Rob,

    Thanks for stopping by and commenting! We are bombarded with constant stimulation and if we’re not careful we can loose touch with who we are and what we want. One of the best ways to tame the jumping monkey of the mind is stillness and peace and quiet.

  • Joe @ Shakeoffthegrind

    Hi Maya,

    I love the idea of being an objective observing of the way we feel, act, and think. We are not our thoughts or feelings, and by being an observing we can disconnect emotionally and begin to make clearer decisions. Thanks for stopping by!

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  • kaphoor

    Hi joe, I went through your site and comments from others as
    well being frank I have no idea about Meditation but what I new is meditation
    is the best medicine for all short of problems (physically and mentally) can
    you explain me the different between Yoga and Meditation, which plays major
    role to cure problems. Hope these question will be answered with some good
    examples.

  • Joe @ Shake off the Grind

    Hi, thanks for stopping by and joining in the conversation. Yoga is a form of meditation referred to as moving meditation. In the bigger picture all styles provided health benefits, such as reducing stress and adding emotional resiliency. It helps to quiet the mind and alters brain and body functioning to improve mental and physical health.

    If you want to look into the research I would suggest going to these links and looking up the meditation articles:

    http://www.unc.edu/peplab/publications.html
    http://psyphz.psych.wisc.edu/web/pubs/pubs_articles.html