Taking brain scans of voluteers who practiced meditation, researchers discovered that brain activity drops in areas devoted to the painful body part and in areas responsible for relaying sensory information, even when the person isn't meditating. In the study, volunteers reported a 40 percent reduction in their perceived pain four days after beginning a meditation program.
Meditation may also reduce pain by essentially making the physical sensations less distressing. "It's really all about the context of the situation, of the environment," said study author Fadel Zeidan in an interview with science news website LiveScience. "Meditation seems to have an overarching sense of attenuating that type of response."
Also, you don't need to have monk-like abilities to experience reduced pain, said Zeidan. New to meditation but still want to reap the benefits? Try these tips for quieting an unquiet mind: (MORE)
Source: The Independent
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