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Metaphysics & Psychology

Can meditation actually make mental health problems worse ?

July 22, 2024 · Comment icon 98 comments
Meditating woman
Meditation can seemingly have negative side effects. Image Credit: Pixabay / dimitrisvetsikas1969
Some researchers have highlighted potentially harmful effects of meditation and mindfulness practices.
Miguel Farias: Since mindfulness it's something you can practice at home for free, it often sounds like the perfect tonic for stress and mental health issues. Mindfulness is a type of Buddhist-based meditation in which you focus on being aware of what you're sensing, thinking and feeling in the present moment.

The first recorded evidence for this, found in India, is over 1,500 years old. The Dharmatrāta Meditation Scripture, written by a community of Buddhists, describes various practices and includes reports of symptoms of depression and anxiety that can occur after meditation. It also details cognitive anomalies associated with episodes of psychosis, dissociation and depersonalisation (when people feel the world is "unreal").

In the past eight years there has been a surge of scientific research in this area. These studies show that adverse effects are not rare. A 2022 study, using a sample of 953 people in the US who meditated regularly, showed that over 10% of participants experienced adverse effects which had a significant negative impact on their everyday life and lasted for at least one month.

According to a review of over 40 years of research that was published in 2020, the most common adverse effects are anxiety and depression. These are followed by psychotic or delusional symptoms, dissociation or depersonalisation, and fear or terror.

Research also found that adverse effects can happen to people without previous mental health problems, to those who have only had a moderate exposure to meditation and they can lead to long-lasting symptoms.

The western world has also had evidence about these adverse affects for a long time. In 1976, Arnold Lazarus, a key figure in the cognitive-behavioural science movement, said that meditation, when used indiscriminately, could induce "serious psychiatric problems such as depression, agitation, and even schizophrenic decompensation".

There is evidence that mindfulness can benefit people's wellbeing. The problem is that mindfulness coaches, videos, apps and books rarely warn people about the potential adverse effects.

Professor of management and ordained Buddhist teacher Ronald Purser wrote in his 2023 book McMindfulness that mindfulness has become a kind of "capitalist spirituality". In the US alone, meditation is worth US$2.2 billion (£1.7 billion). And the senior figures in the mindfulness industry should be aware of the problems with meditation. Jon Kabat-Zinn, a key figure behind the mindfulness movement, admitted in a 2017 interview with the Guardian that "90% of the research [into the positive impacts] is subpar".

In his foreword to the 2015 UK Mindfulness All-Party Parliamentary Report, Jon Kabat-Zinn suggests that mindfulness meditation can eventually transform "who we are as human beings and individual citizens, as communities and societies, as nations, and as a species".

This religious-like enthusiasm for the power of mindfulness to change not only individual people but the course of humanity is common among advocates. Even many atheists and agnostics who practice mindfulness believe that this practice has the power to increase peace and compassion in the world.
Media discussion of mindfulness has also been somewhat imbalanced. In 2015, my book with clinical psychologist Catherine Wikholm, Buddha Pill, included a chapter summarising the research on meditation adverse effects. It was widely disseminated by the media, including a New Scientist article, and a BBC Radio 4 documentary.

But there was little media coverage in 2022 of the most expensive study in the history of meditation science (over US$8 million funded by research charity the Wellcome Trust). The study tested more than 8,000 children (aged 11-14) across 84 schools in the UK from 2016 to 2018. Its results showed that mindfulness failed to improve the mental wellbeing of children compared to a control group, and may even have had detrimental effects on those who were at risk of mental health problems.

Ethical implications

Is it ethical to sell mindfulness apps, teach people meditation classes, or even use mindfulness in clinical practice without mentioning its adverse effects? Given the evidence of how varied and common these effects are, the answer should be no.

However, many meditation and mindfulness instructors believe that these practices can only do good and don't know about the potential for adverse effects. The most common account I hear from people who have suffered adverse meditation effects is that the teachers don't believe them. They're usually told to just keep meditating and it will go away.

Research about how to safely practice meditation has only recently begun, which means there isn't yet clear advice to give people. There is a wider problem in that meditation deals with unusual states of consciousness and we don't have psychological theories of mind to help us understand these states.

But there are resources people can use to learn about these adverse effects. These include websites produced by meditators who experienced serious adverse effects and academic handbooks with dedicated sections to this topic. In the US there is a clinical service dedicated to people who have experienced acute and long term problems, led by a mindfulness researcher.

For now, if meditation is to be used as a wellbeing or therapeutic tool, the public needs to be informed about its potential for harm.

Miguel Farias, Associate Professor in Experimental Psychology, Coventry University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

Read the original article. The Conversation

Source: The Conversation | Comments (98)




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Comment icon #89 Posted by Bendy Demon 9 months ago
Woah there, partner. How about we back up that disastrously flaming garbage scow. Are you really saying that a meditation teacher has to be wealthy in order to be role models? To be trusted or respected? Seriously? Wealthy? What about experience and expertise? What about knowledge and wisdom? I would think that means FAR more than being 'wealthy'. There are plenty of people out there who are wealthy yet with many their I.Q barely rivals that of a potted plant! Money is nice but if I seek counsel with a teacher I rely on their pool of knowledge, wisdom and understanding not how 'wealthy' they a... [More]
Comment icon #90 Posted by Grim Reaper 6 9 months ago
You're very welcome my friend.
Comment icon #91 Posted by Piney 9 months ago
?
Comment icon #92 Posted by Guyver 9 months ago
Good news. I don’t have to worry about it since I have given up meditating for long time now.
Comment icon #93 Posted by lightly 9 months ago
I just close my eyes and breath  .  .  .  allowing my body to relax…and my mind to become quieter and calmer.. sometimes I picture the surface of water becoming calmer.      If that’s meditation I like it.  If that’s not meditation I like it.       
Comment icon #94 Posted by lightly 9 months ago
Yup.  . according to some info in X’s link (post#76)  certain activities increase certain brain waves?   Like when your creating music …alpha activity increases.   So, it’s sort of a mental exercise? Brain Waves and the Electroencephalogram Numerous EEG studies suggest that there are particular brain wave patterns and brain structures associated with creative problem solving, or at least specific phases within the problem-solving process (Martindale & Hasenfus 1978; Martindale & Hines 1975; Martindale et al. 1984Martindale and Hasenfus, 1978Martindale and Hines, 1975Martindal... [More]
Comment icon #95 Posted by Bed of chaos 9 months ago
I definitely believe visualization techniques are helpful. I've used this multiple times to help me sleep. I'd also apply it to billiards, something I love doing. When I watch NBA free throw players it looks like they visualize (hand movements) before shots. I still don't know what or what not meditation is. Though what Xenofish said "focused actions" sounds about right. Or idk constant focus w persistence.
Comment icon #96 Posted by joc 9 months ago
 I stare at things all the time.  One day I was staring at the patterns of grain in the stained wood of the door in my doctors office and my brain created the face of a black woman.  Not coincidentally, the woman that had just left the room after taking my vitals was a black woman.   I don't know what zone I was in.  Probably the, this is taking too long but I will just be a patient patient zone.  And as I contemplated the relationship between the black woman I had just met, and the face of the black woman on the door, the doctor walked in. Thinking, I think, is the key to all brain wa... [More]
Comment icon #97 Posted by Desertrat56 9 months ago
When you are playing your guitar and only feeling the notes, letting your fingers do the work and zoning out mentally, you are meditating.   It is that way for any artistic endeavor, the best work is in an "altered" state, meaning you are not thinking about the bills or the guy who cut you off in traffic, you are imbedded in the music or what ever artistic (or mundane) activity you are doing.   Walking a familiar path can be a meditation.
Comment icon #98 Posted by joc 9 months ago
Never really thought about it that way.  Interesting!


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