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There is a compulsion that is driving me to the neo meditation exercise and its one of the strongest that I have ever experienced. So I will follow this road right down the rabbit hole until the reason is staring me in the face. ( That seems to be a recurring theme in my life, And instead of wasting time and emotional energy trying to suss out an explanation I will just go with the program.) Other then that I will just keep working with the devices and let them take me where it is I am supposed to be.

Try it now! http://www.neologicaltech.com/product_p/idl80gk.htm

Meditation Has Positive Impact at Work

Credit: Pressmaster/Shutterstock

An ancient Buddhist practice could improve your office’s operations, new research suggests.

Creating a corporate culture grounded in mindfulness not only improves employees’ focus but also helps them better cope with stress and co-workers, according to a study published recently in the Journal of Management.

The researchers defined mindfulness as present-centered attention and awareness. They said it emerged from Buddhist philosophy and has been cultivated for generations through meditation practices.

In recent years, more and more organizations, such as Google and Aetna, have been training their employees on mindfulness.

“When you are mindful, you can have a greater consciousness in the present,” Christopher Lyddy, one of the study’s lead authors and a doctoral candidate at Case Western Reserve’s Weatherhead School of Management, said in a statement. “That’s vital for any executive or manager who, at any given moment, may be barraged with various problems that call for decisions under stress.”

For the study, the researchers analyzed 4,000 scientific papers on various aspects of mindfulness. They used the data to create a guide on mindfulness’s impact on how people think, feel, act, relate and perform at work. [See Related Story: Quiz: Are You Too Stressed Out at Work? ]

They found that mindfulness appears to have a positive impact on human functioning overall. Specifically, they said it improves attention, cognition, emotions, behavior and physiology.

In addition, the researchers discovered that mindfulness improves three qualities of attention: stability, control and efficiency. The study found that those who finished mindfulness training remained attentive longer on both visual and listening tasks.
Mindfulness can also have a positive impact on how professionals interact with each other, the researchers said. They found that mindfulness improves relationships by increasing empathy and compassion, and suggested that mindfulness training could result in better workplace processes that rely on effective leadership and teamwork.

“Historically, companies have been reticent to offer mindfulness training because it was seen as something fluffy, esoteric and spiritual,” Lyddy said. “But that’s changing.”

Darren Good, who earned his doctorate at the Weatherhead School and is now an assistant professor at Pepperdine University, was the study’s other co-lead author. The research team included experts in management and mindfulness, as well as psychologists and neuroscientists.

Chad  Brooks
Chad Brooks
Chad Brooks is a Chicago-based freelance writer who has nearly 15 years experience in the media business. A graduate of Indiana University, he spent nearly a decade as a staff reporter for the Daily Herald in suburban Chicago, covering a wide array of topics including, local and state government, crime, the legal system and education. Following his years at the newspaper Chad worked in public relations, helping promote small businesses throughout the U.S. Follow him on Twitter.

http://www.businessnewsdaily.com/8874-mindfulness-training-benefits.html

A growing number of major American corporations are offering meditation, mindfulness and yoga programs for their employees, practices that are believed to have originated in pagan Eastern religions.

Last week, the California-based software company Salesforce generated media attention for putting meditation rooms on every floor of the company’s newest corporate office building in San Francisco.

Marc Benioff, who is Salesforce’s CEO and an outspoken proponent of homosexual marriage, said the meditation rooms facilitate “mindfulness.”

“There’s a ‘mindfulness’ zone where employees can put their phones into a basket or whatever, and go into an area where there’s quietness,” he stated, according to “Business Insider.” “I think this is really important to cultivating innovation in your company.”

Fifty miles southeast of Salesforce’s San Francisco office, Google offers a meditation course called “Search Inside Yourself” to workers in its Silicon Valley headquarters. More than a thousand Google employees have been through the mindfulness training course, which promotes Eastern meditation practices.

“It’s not just Google that’s embracing Eastern traditions,” a report from “Wired.com” explained. “Across the Valley, quiet contemplation is seen as the new caffeine, the fuel that allegedly unlocks productivity and creative bursts.”

Google’s meditation routines are designed to help employees “search for meaning and emotional connection.”

“While many other Silicon Valley companies are teaching their employees to meditate, Facebook is trying to inject a Buddhist-inspired concept of compassion into the core of its business,” “Wired.com” reports.

Many other technological companies have begun promoting Buddhist-inspired meditation techniques. AOL Time Warner offers quiet rooms for employees to refresh and mentally refocus. Yahoo! encourages workers to take advantage of meditation rooms. And Apple reportedly allows employees to take 30 minutes each day to meditate at work.

Why are yoga and meditation so popular among corporate giants of the tech field? Some trace the trend back to the early pioneers of computers and the Internet.

“Many of the people who shaped the personal computer industry and the Internet were once members of the hippie counterculture,” wrote Noah Shachtman on “Wired.com.” “So an interest in Eastern faiths is all but hardwired into the modern tech world.”

This interest in Eastern faiths is not limited to California-based tech giants, however; many non-technological companies are also working meditation routines into their corporate schedules. According to recent articles from The Wall Street Journal and Harvard Business Review, General Mills, Target, Bank of America, and Goldman Sachs Groups have all started offering mindfulness programs.

“Across the country there’s a loosening up of social mores right now and things like yoga and meditation just are not as foreign or as taboo as they once were,” said David Gelles, author of the book “Mindful Work: How Meditation Is Changing Business from Inside the Out,” in an interview with The Wall Street Journal. “Yoga has become extremely popular.”

As meditation, yoga and related practices grow more popular among American workplaces, a number of respected Christian leaders have voiced concerns over the practices’ ties to unbiblical Eastern religions. Dr. Albert Mohler of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary describes yoga as “a spiritual discipline by which the adherent is trained to use the body as a vehicle for achieving consciousness of the divine.”

“There is nothing wrong with physical exercise, and yoga positions in themselves are not the main issue,” Mohler wrote in a blog post titled “The Subtle Body—Should Christians Practice Yoga?” “But these positions are teaching postures with a spiritual purpose.”

“Christians who practice yoga are embracing, or at minimum flirting with, a spiritual practice that threatens to transform their own spiritual lives into a ‘post-Christian, spiritually polyglot’ reality,” he concluded. “Should any Christian willingly risk that?”

Photo

CreditIllustration by Anna Parini

The benefits of mindfulness meditation, increasingly popular in recent years, are supposed to be many: reduced stress and risk for various diseases, improved well-being, a rewired brain. But the experimental bases to support these claims have been few. Supporters of the practice have relied on very small samples of unrepresentative subjects, like isolated Buddhist monks who spend hours meditating every day, or on studies that generally were not randomized and did not include placebo­ control groups.

The benefits of mindfulness meditation, increasingly popular in recent years, are supposed to be many: reduced stress and risk for various diseases, improved well-being, a rewired brain. But the experimental bases to support these claims have been few. Supporters of the practice have relied on very small samples of unrepresentative subjects, like isolated Buddhist monks who spend hours meditating every day, or on studies that generally were not randomized and did not include placebo­ control groups.

The benefits of mindfulness meditation, increasingly popular in recent years, are supposed to be many: reduced stress and risk for various diseases, improved well-being, a rewired brain. But the experimental bases to support these claims have been few. Supporters of the practice have relied on very small samples of unrepresentative subjects, like isolated Buddhist monks who spend hours meditating every day, or on studies that generally were not randomized and did not include placebo­ control groups.

The benefits of mindfulness meditation, increasingly popular in recent years, are supposed to be many: reduced stress and risk for various diseases, improved well-being, a rewired brain. But the experimental bases to support these claims have been few. Supporters of the practice have relied on very small samples of unrepresentative subjects, like isolated Buddhist monks who spend hours meditating every day, or on studies that generally were not randomized and did not include placebo­ control groups.

This month, however, a study published in Biological Psychiatrybrings scientific thoroughness to mindfulness meditation and for the first time shows that, unlike a placebo, it can change the brains of ordinary people and potentially improve their health.

To meditate mindfully demands ‘‘an open and receptive, nonjudgmental awareness of your present-moment experience,’’ says J. David Creswell, who led the study and is an associate professor of psychology and the director of the Health and Human Performance Laboratory at Carnegie Mellon University. One difficulty of investigating meditation has been the placebo problem. In rigorous studies, some participants receive treatment while others get a placebo: They believe they are getting the same treatment when they are not. But people can usually tell if they are meditating. Dr. Creswell, working with scientists from a number of other universities, managed to fake mindfulness.

First they recruited 35 unemployed men and women who were seeking work and experiencing considerable stress. Blood was drawn and brain scans were given. Half the subjects were then taught formal mindfulness meditation at a residential retreat center; the rest completed a kind of sham mindfulness meditation that was focused on relaxation and distracting oneself from worries and stress.

‘‘We had everyone do stretching exercises, for instance,’’ Dr. Creswell says. The mindfulness group paid close attention to bodily sensations, including unpleasant ones. The relaxation group was encouraged to chatter and ignore their bodies, while their leader cracked jokes.

At the end of three days, the participants all told the researchers that they felt refreshed and better able to withstand the stress of unemployment. Yet follow-up brain scans showed differences in only those who underwent mindfulness meditation. There was more activity, or communication, among the portions of their brains that process stress-related reactions and other areas related to focus and calm. Four months later, those who had practiced mindfulness showed much lower levels in their blood of a marker of unhealthy inflammation than the relaxation group, even though few were still meditating.

Dr. Creswell and his colleagues believe that the changes in the brain contributed to the subsequent reduction in inflammation, although precisely how remains unknown. Also unclear is whether you need to spend three uninterrupted days of contemplation to reap the benefits. When it comes to how much mindfulness is needed to improve health, Dr. Creswell says, ‘‘we still have no idea about the ideal dose.”

  • Mindfulness meditation helps people become aware of their body’s signals
  • Obesity expert Dr Ian Campbell says it may be the key to weight loss
  • Dutch study found naturally mindful people’s weight fluctuates less
  • Experts: They are better able to recognise when they are hungry or full

Scientists claim that mindfulness, a meditation-like technique that is becoming increasingly trendy, can help us tune into our body’s hunger signals.

This will mean we only eat when we need to – and so stop the pounds from piling on.

While the idea may seem wacky, mindfulness has been credited with a host of health benefits from easing depression to boosting the immune system and lowering blood pressure.

And a leading British obesity expert has said it may be the ‘missing link’ in the search for an effective weight loss technique.

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Mindfulness, a meditation-like technique which teaches people to become more aware of their body's signals, may be the‘missing link’ in the search for an effective weight loss technique, an obesity expert claims

Mindfulness, a meditation-like technique which teaches people to become more aware of their body’s signals, may be the‘missing link’ in the search for an effective weight loss technique, an obesity expert claims

Dutch researchers carried out a series of studies to see if mindfulness, which involves blocking out distractions, focusing in the present and listening to your body, stops people from eating mindlessly.

In some of these, volunteers were quizzed to find out if they were naturally high in mindfulness.

Questions included whether they were normally aware if their breathing rate changed and how good they were at finding words to describe their feelings.

The volunteers were then given milkshakes to drink and then watched as they snacked on chocolates later.

Importantly, some of the shakes contained cream and so should have made the volunteers feel much fuller and led to them eating fewer chocolates.

This was the case for the volunteers judged as being high on mindfulness.

However, those less able to listen to their body dug into the chocolates, no matter how creamy and calorific the shake.

Another experiment suggested that listening to a mindfulness tape for a few minutes made it easier for people to realise if they were hungry.

Finally, the team from Wageningen University analysed data on more than 400 people who had undergone regular weigh-ins over two and a half years.

A Dutch study found people who are 'naturally mindful' are better able to recognise when they are hungry - meaning their weight fluctuates less than people who are less aware of their body's signals

A Dutch study found people who are ‘naturally mindful’ are better able to recognise when they are hungry – meaning their weight fluctuates less than people who are less aware of their body’s signals

Like the first group of men and women, they were also asked questions to determine how naturally mindful they were.

Weight fluctuated less in the more mindful sorts, the Journal of Consumer Research reports.

The researchers believe that by listening to the body and blocking out distractions, we become more aware of whether we really are hungry or whether we simply want to eat out of habit.

Just telling people to eat less and exercise more doesn’t tend to work, we have incorporated mindfulness into our weight loss programme and the results have been fantastic
Ian Campbell, a Nottingham GP and weight loss expert

Ian Campbell, a Nottingham GP and weight loss expert, said eating mindfully makes dieters aware of what and how much they eat, while regular meditation boosts self-esteem and self-control.

This gives people more will power to limit calorie intake and change their eating habits for good.

Dr Campbell also who runs a private weight loss clinic, where he advises patients to follow he practice.

He said: ‘Just telling people to eat less and exercise more doesn’t tend to work, we have incorporated mindfulness into our weight loss programme and the results have been fantastic.

‘It addresses emotions and relationships with food and tackles the fact that so much of what we do is out of habit.’

He added that mindfulness could provide the ‘missing link’ between the biology and psychology of weight loss.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-3491943/Could-losing-weight-mind-Meditation-helps-pounds-stopping-eating-habit.html#ixzz4375X2DQt
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-3491943/Could-losing-weight-mind-Meditation-helps-pounds-stopping-eating-habit.html

Since I started using my meditation device I find that when I make a suggestion people defer to me much more readily and as a result the job flow in my area has started to improve a small bit. In a nut shell it just feels more harmonious in my work area.

Learn more about the neo meditation device. http://www.neologicaltech.com/Products_s/40.htm

Ashley Ross @ashbrookeross

March 9, 2016

Zen garden
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And why the ancient practice might still get trendier

The idea of meditation seems simple: Sit still, focus on breath, reflect. But the practice of meditating is rooted in a deep cultural history that has seen the practice grow from a religious idea to something that can now seem more stylish than spiritual.

Though plenty of people still meditate for religious reasons, these days, the practice has joined yoga as a secular and chic trend, as dedicated meditation studios open in cities like New York and Los Angeles. Even Equinox, a fitness company with gyms across North America and in London, is launching a class called HeadStrong in April, which will combine high intensity interval training with meditation. The trend has also caught up with technology, with apps like Headpsace and OMG. I Can Meditate!, both of which have partnered with airlines (Virgin Atlantic and Delta, respectively) to offer in-flight meditation options. Headspace also debuted specially designed meditation pods that co-founder Rich Pierson says hopes people will use “like Superman used phonebooths, only instead of emerging in tights intent on fighting crime, they’ll come out with a clearer, calmer outlook.”

“It used to be that if you wanted to try Tibetan Buddhism and meditation, you had to travel all the way to Tibet, and if you wanted to try Korean meditation, you had to travel all the way to Korea. But now you can go to neighborhoods in New York and do both in an hour,” says Lodro Rinzler, author and ‘Chief Spiritual Officer’ at the Manhattan studio MNDFL, which opened in late 2015. “All of a sudden people are saying this can help you, but Buddhists have been saying, yes, we’ve known this for 2,600 years.”

How that happened is a complicated story, and a surprisingly recent one considering meditation’s ancient origins.

Some archaeologists date meditation back to as early as 5,000 BCE, according to Psychology Today, and the practice itself has religious ties in ancient Egypt and China, as well as Judaism, Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism and, of course, Buddhism. Meditation’s global spread began along the Silk Road around about five or six centuries BCE, as the practice moved throughout Asia. As it arrived in a new spot, it would slowly transform to fit each new culture. But it wasn’t until the 20th century that it began to move beyond the realm of specific religions, especially in the West.

As TIME reported in a 2003 cover story, meditation began to be seriously studied for its medical benefits in the 1960s, when a researcher in India named B.K. Anand “found that yogis could meditate themselves into trances so deep that they didn’t react when hot test tubes were pressed against their arms.”

And yet meditation remained on the fringe of science, the kind of topic that was brushed off by many mainstream Western researchers. In fact, Harvard Medical School professor Dr. Herbert Benson waited until late at night to moderate a study on meditation in 1967, at which point he found that people meditating used 17% less oxygen, lowered heart rates and produced increased brain waves that could help with sleep. Benson went on to publish The Relaxation Response and founded the Mind/Body Medical Institute, continuing to pioneer for meditation’s benefits on biology. “All I’ve done,” Benson told TIME, “is put a biological explanation on techniques that people have been utilizing for thousands of years.”

Benson wasn’t the only person in the U.S. who was investigating meditation’s health benefits. Jon Kabat-Zinn, to take another example, learned about meditation while studying at MIT and turned it into a lifelong career, founding the Stress Reduction Clinic at UMass Medical Center in 1979.

It was around the same time that meditation got the boost that it needed to bring some attention to the science: celebrity status. Transcendental Meditation (TM), which a 1975 TIME story called a “drugless high,” became popular among no less than the Beatles. As one way to cope with the strangeness of their global fame, they turned to TM, eventually going to India to study. Mia Farrow also went to India to meditate with the Fab Four after her divorce with Frank Sinatra, to study with Maharishi, whom TIMEcalled “the groovy guru.” The hippie decades of the ’60s and ’70s welcomed troves of meditation and mindfulness centers as well, including the Esalen Institute, site of Don Draper’s final scene in the finale of Mad Men, set in 1970.

By the 1990s, the scientific and celebrity sides of popular meditation finally met in the middle. The product was a Hollywood-friendly, health-focused concept that had largely shed the hippie implications it had once carried.

In 1996, TIME reported on Deepak Chopra’s book Ageless Body, Timeless Mind, which had sold 137,000 copies in one day right after Chopra was featured on Oprah. Celebrities continued to spread the word, especially as Demi Moore, George Harrison, Michael Jackson and Donna Karan referred to Chopra as a guru. Athletes also began to tout the benefits of meditation and mindfulness: legendary NBA coach Phil Jackson published Sacred Hoops: Spiritual Lessons of a Hardwood Warrior, in 1995, and now Stephen Curry, the NBA’s 2015 MVP, practices different kinds of mindfulness exercises. Meanwhile, the studies continued to roll in confirming meditation’s benefits, to potentially slow or reverse neurodegeneration, reduce pain and help manage stress.

Rinzler, of MNDFL, imagines the studies will only help meditation continue its path to the mainstream. “It’s no longer just your spiritual friend saying you should try meditation,” he says. It’s your doctor.”

http://time.com/4246928/meditation-history-buddhism/

03/14/2016 11:26 am ET
  • Bruce Davis, Ph.D.Author, Teacher, Retreat Leader at SilentStay, Napa, California and Assisi, Italy

As more and more people turn to meditation to free themselves from the limiting cubicles of life, they find getting out of the box of their limitations is only the beginning. There is another reality to discover where awareness is without limits, intimately linked in a vastness beyond description, awakening in an original brightness, more brilliant then we could ever imagine. All of this is within us. Our cosmic self is not some abstract idea but the product of receiving the purification, concentration, and awakening meditation offers.

The fearful world in which we live, digs subtly and not so subtly, into our otherwise pure being. Meditation is the great restorer of expansive, trusting innocence as we bring our attention to and practice receiving the pure center of our heart. In meditation our awareness loaded down in worldly issues is washed and purified. Every time we return inside, we are developing a practice of letting go of the world weighing down our awareness while returning to the lightness of simply being. Meditation is receiving the brightness within. It is an important journey from our worldly self to the pure world of no self, the world of heart essence being the home and source of our identity.

Awareness changes through this process of purification. The fruits are quickly noticeable including new openness, trust, understanding, compassion, joy, and simplicity of life itself. Meditation practice gives our awareness an anchor inside ourselves. No longer a drift in the many physical and mental worlds around us, meditation pulls our attention back home. Life has meaning and purpose. Our own heart becomes our source, our base of support and guidance, our teacher, and mentor. Our own heart purifies our awareness until we fall into arms of love beyond anything we ever imagined in this world, no less ever expected to find inside of us.

To get to this space of purification requires concentration. This begins with finding the time and space to practice meditation. This is not so easy in a busy, non meditative world. Silence, nature, the world of the sacred are the home for meditation practice. There is so much noise, distraction, and reason to argue instead of bowing down to sacred presence. Meditation is letting go of the importance of self and everything else for the golden presence within us, nature, and one another. We live in a world concentrated on seemingly everything but our center of being, the heart of life. Yet each of us knows this is where the treasure awaits us. Meditation is the map, the calling, the balance for our worldly life. The search for all we desire is forever limited until it includes the purification that occurs in the heart inside our heart.

Concentration to have a meditation practice and focus in our practice are the keys. It is too easy to fall asleep and let our life and thought wander into endless dramatic but fruitless pursuits. Days pass and before we know years are gone, and we have little idea of who we really are. One day we wake up. Our life is over. Our bodies lay beneath us. Our awareness is surprisingly present. And we have no idea of where or how to proceed.

This is why purification and concentration are important. Meditation leads us to the altar within us where we remember, we see, we are. Every time we meditate the process repeats. We die to this world into another realm, luminous emptiness, free of all thought, unmasked realization. Awareness is the groundless ground of love pouring out of our very center in all directions forever. There are no borders, no effort, no reflection or judgment. There is only more and greater light.

This is awakening. Our meditation practice is restoring our original lightness of being. In the process we reexamine all our choices, relationships, goals, and desires. What is there to worry over, chase after, or attach ourselves to when there is so much light waiting for us within? Where do we chose to place our hearts today, to give our awareness? Each moment is precious. To have this understanding in the world is beauty and poetry and honestly at times depressing and strenuous. Awakening is not a one time, one moment shot of reality which obscures life in the world forever more. Awakening is living with an ever opening heart which includes compassion for all the pain within and around us. The purification, concentration, and awakening itself are our best friends, our tools for survival. Eternity is our inner most core which our meditation practice is absorbing in the midst of everyone and everything offering love the best they can.

Just this moment, being present, a breath into the silence of the heart, life is resonating, connected, and ecstatic in all its diversity. Purification, concentration, and awakening is happening in each of us.

03/15/2016 12:51 pm ET
  • Ornish LivingFor anyone who is interested in leading a healthful lifestyle

2016-03-14-1457996966-8607534-meditationSpiritFire.jpg

In the Ornish Reversal Program we talk about the power of the four elements: Exercise, Nutrition, Stress Management, and Social Support. Each element supports one another to create a strong foundation for health and wellness. Ouroutcome research has consistently shown that participants experience dramatic decreases in their levels of stress and depression as well as significant improvements in their vitality and quality of life. Now new research is further bolstering our recommendation that combining exercise and meditation improves depression.

We usually associate exercise with amazing benefits such as improvements in strength, aerobic capacity, and weight loss. But we often overlook that exercise can also be a treatment for anxiety, stress and depression, along with counseling and traditional medical therapy to improve symptoms. In fact, physical activity has consistently been associated with feeling more satisfaction with life, better cognitive function, and in many cases it has been shown to be as effective as antidepressants.

A 2006 meta analysis of 11 studies showed that depressed adults who took part in aerobic exercise improved as much as those treated with antidepressants. A 2011 study that looked at 127 depressed people who hadn’t experienced relief from SSRIs, a common type of antidepressant, found that exercise helped 30 percent of them to overcome the depression.

Meditation and Exercise

A 2016 study published in the journal Translational Psychiatry by researchers at Rutgers University has now found that by combining meditation and exercise, you can positively impact depression while enhancing brain activity.

Scientists studied a group of men and women who were diagnosed with non-psychotic depression. The subjects were asked to try 30 minutes of focused attention meditation and 30 minutes of moderate aerobic exercise twice a week for eight weeks. The results of this study were impressive, showing a 40 percent reduction in depressive symptoms in both clinically depressed and non-depressed students after eight weeks.

Both exercise and meditation are life long skills, which can cost very little and have few if any negative side effects. While we’ve known for some time that both exercise and meditation independently have psychosocial benefits, this new study highlights the improved outcomes when two healthy interventions are combined. This follows suit with our multi-element approach in the Ornish Reversal Program and continues to confirm the important benefits of both exercise and stress management.

Here are some basic tips to help exercise be a positive factor in treating stress and depression:

Check with Your Physician

As always first check with your physician to confirm exercise is appropriate for you at this time. Discuss your goal to include exercise as part of your healthy approach, along with any medical or therapeutic treatment they advise.

Find Activities You Enjoy!

If you’re including exercise as part of your treatment for depression or anxiety, make sure you actually enjoy what you’re doing and the environment is pleasant. Not only will this help your consistency, it will put you in a more positive mood when participating. Exercising to treat stress and depression shouldn’t be stressful. If you find it is creating stress, take a step back and discover what changes can you make to include exercise without the stress?

Exercise Three Days Per Week

Consistency is a key to receive the health benefits of exercise and meditation. Moderate intensity exercise is advised.

In our ever busier and stressed-out world, and with cases of depression on the rise, combining these two basic life skills can be a powerful gift to yourself to help keep you healthy both physically and mentally.

What enhanced benefits have you noticed in yourself from practicing this powerful combination?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ornish-living/the-powerful-benefit-of-combining-exercise-and-meditation-for-depression_b_9464176.html

There is something happening here, since I started using the Orca I am not as concerned about the future as I was even a month ago. I guess an apt way of describing my life right now would be ..more relaxed.

Get yours at: http://www.neologicaltech.com/product_p/idl8orca.htm