Author: Myers N1, Lewis S, Dutton MA.
Affiliation:
1Department of Anthropology, Southern Methodist University, PO BOX 750336, Dallas, TX, 75275-0336, USA, namyers@smu.edu.
Conference/Journal: Cult Med Psychiatry.
Date published: 2015 Jan 23
Other:
Word Count: 189
Abstract
Based on ethnographic fieldwork and interviews collected with meditation teachers and students in the United States, this article will argue that active training in meditation-based practices occasions the opportunity for people with traumatic stress to develop a stronger mind-body connection through heightened somatic awareness and a focus on the present moment that they find to be therapeutic. Three important themes related to healing through meditation for trauma emerged from the data and centered around the ways our interlocutors attempted to realign their sense of self, mind and body, after a traumatic experience. The themes helped explain why US women perceive meditation as therapeutic for trauma, namely that the practice of meditation enables one to focus on the lived present rather than traumatic memories, to accept pain and "open" one's heart, and to make use of silence instead of speech as a healing modality. As meditation practices increasingly enter global popular culture, promoted for postulated health benefits, the driving question of this research-how meditation may perpetuate human resilience for women who have experienced trauma based on their own perspectives of meditation practices-is a critical addition to the literature.
PMID: 25613595