Meditation Plus Running
By
Meditating before
running could change the brain in ways that are more beneficial for mental
health than practicing either of those activities alone, according to an
interesting study of a new treatment program for people with depression.
As many people know from experience,
depression is characterized in part by an inability to stop dwelling on gloomy
thoughts and unhappy memories from the past. Researchers suspect that this
thinking pattern, known as rumination, may involve two areas of the brain in
particular: the prefrontal cortex, a part of the brain that helps to control
attention and focus, and the hippocampus, which is critical for learning and
memory. In some studies, people with severe depression have been found to have
a smaller hippocampus than people who are not depressed.
Interestingly, meditation and
exercise affect those same portions of the brain, although in varying ways. In
brain-scan studies, people who are long-term meditators, for instance,
generally display different patterns of brain-cell communication in their
prefrontal cortex during cognitive tests than people who don’t meditate. Those
differences are believed to indicate that the meditators possess a more honed
ability to focus and concentrate.
Meanwhile, according to animal
studies, aerobic exercise substantially increases the production of new brain
cells in the hippocampus.
Both meditation and exercise also
have proven beneficial in the treatment of anxiety, depression and other mood
disorders.
These various findings about exercise
and meditation intrigued researchers at Rutgers University in New Brunswick,
N.J., who began to wonder whether, since meditation and exercise on their own
improve moods, combining the two might intensify the impacts of each.
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To start, the volunteers were taught
a form of meditation known as focused attention. Essentially entry-level
mindfulness meditation, it requires people to sit quietly and think about their
respiration by counting their breaths up to 10 and then backward. This practice
is not easy, especially at first.
“If people found their thoughts
wandering” during the meditation, and especially if they began to ruminate on
unpleasant memories, they were told not to worry or judge themselves, “but just
to start counting again from one,” said Brandon Alderman, a professor of
exercise science at Rutgers who led the study.
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