Today, we live in artificially controlled climates, eat at fast food restaurants, and are divorced from our natural rhythms of life.
The practice of meditation provides us with an easy method of entering into those lost natural rhythms, letting go of our bodies, and clearing the mind of all the artificial stress it unknowingly accumulates throughout lifetimes.
The human body is a complicated creation. In the brain, the body naturally makes hundreds of times more potent drugs than pharmaceutical drugs.
Numerous hormones and chemicals are in the body during meditation, which provides an incredible boost of energy and happiness. This is one of the many astonishing side effects of meditation practice.
Meditation means something different for every person. Some people use it instead of or in addition to psychotherapy. Improving sports or work performance, memory, and other mental functions is more valuable.
Some people rely on it to help them deal with grief or the aftermath of trauma or tragedy, and to regain an appreciation for the beauties of life. And some people use meditation to inspire them in the arts.
Meditation has roots in many cultures and traditions, and has a long history. Meditation has been around for a long time. Cave paintings in India show people sitting in meditative positions. Meditation is in ancient texts from China, Japan, and Tibet.
Meditation began to spread to the West in the 20th century, when Westerners began traveling to Asia to learn about Eastern philosophies and practices. When people began to explore alternative ways to achieve inner peace and relaxation, meditation became more popular in the West.