Deepak Chopra Talks Meditation & The Future of Wellness

Deepak Chopra is no stranger to science. He has followed it, questioned it and even taken it on in heated debates. He also co-authored a book with prominent physicist Leonard Mlodinow titled, “War of the Worldviews: Where Science and Spiritualty Meet – And Do Not,” and he represented spirituality while Mlodinow represented science.

Science has evolved over the last 100 years, and most scientists are realists who believe the universe is all material. Albert Einstein was one of them, but there are still important questions about the universe science and the realist perspective cannot answer.

Chopra took the stage to kick off a weekend workshop at The Omega Institute in Rhineback, N.Y. this past June where he discussed “the future of wellbeing,” explaining how science views the world and what is missing from their view. He also shared new research he spearheaded, looking at how meditation effects overall wellness, including telomeres that keep the ends of our DNA chromosomes from fraying – something that is linked to aging, cancer and more.

“The two most important questions in science today – and the most open or unanswered – are ‘What is the universe made of?’ and ‘What is the biological basis of consciousness?’” Chopra told the audience. “Science has no good theory for either of those questions.”

Science can’t answer what the universe is made of because it’s invisible, says Chopra. But it generates infinite energy, galaxies, stars, planets and human life. As for the biological basis of consciousness, science refers to it as the “hard problem.” It understands that when we have an experience, something happens in the brain because it lights up on a scan, but can’t explain the cause behind it?

“Think of a beautiful sunset on the ocean,” he told the audience. “Are you having an experience? Can you see a picture? Well, where is that picture? If I go into your brain, do you think I’ll se the picture of a sunset? Where was that picture before I asked you to think of it? Did the brain activity cause the picture or was the picture causing the brain activity? Or was there something else causing the brain activity AND the picture?”

Science does not understand how we product thought, where the thought comes from before we have it, or where it disappears to after we have it. They just know what part of the brain lights up on a scan, he explains.

“When you don’t get an answer to a question that everybody is asking in the whole scientific world, then maybe it’s time to ask ourselves, are we asking the right questions?” Chopra said. “What is the universe made of? Maybe the universe is not made of anything. We are asking, what is the biological basis of consciousness, but maybe there is no biological basis of consciousness. Maybe consciousness is all there is. Maybe consciousness creates all experience, including the experience of a body and a mind.”

Chopra explained we can be sure of two things:

1. There is existence. Something does exist, and we call it the universe. What is it made up of, we don’t know, he said. But we call it the universe, and it exists, and we are all part of it.

2. There is awareness of existence. If there wasn’t awareness of existence, then we would not realize we indeed exist.

“The two go along with each other,” he explained. “Maybe they are the same thing. Maybe awareness of existence is existence.”

deepak_chopra_talk_2Meditation Improves Aging and Wellness, Study Shows
Chopra joined with 2009 Nobel Prize winner Elizabeth Blackburn, who co-discovered telomerase, the enzyme that replenishes the telomere (located at the end of the human DNA chromosome, holding it together) to study the effect meditation has on the telomeres. The results will be published soon, he said at the workshop.

“If you want to create a new way of thinking, you have to do science the way science is doing it,” he said. “This is one of the best controlled studies that has ever been done.”

Telomeres are often compared to the plastic tips on shoelaces because they keep the chromosomes from fraying and sticking to one another, which would destroy or scramble the genetic information. Each time one of our human cells divide, the telomeres get shorter, and when they become too short, the cell can no longer divide and it becomes inactive or dies. This has been associated with aging, cancer and a higher risk of death.

The new study pulled 30 women who were new to meditation and attending The Chopra Center Seduction of the Spirit meditation retreat, and 30 women who were simply vacationing at the La Costa Resort and Spa where the retreat was being held. There were also 30 who were already experienced meditators. The resort group engaged in leisure activities, typical exercise, and a daily class on healthy living (including sleep, stress management and nutrition), while the retreat group practiced a mantra meditation, body and breath awareness and self reflection. Both groups ate an ayurvedic diet for lunch and dinner.

The researchers looked at EEG’s, blood pressure, blood tests, and more, including measuring telomeres, and after four days, those in the retreat group saw a 40 percent increase in telomeres, said Chopra. The research also showed meditation changes gene expression.

“We studied effects of cellular aging, the brain and the nervous system and gene expression networks,” he noted. “We measured everything we could measure, including response to stress, defense response, and acute inflammatory response. Everything moved in the direction of increased wellness at the cellular level, including cellular biology of aging, and everything moved away from inflammation.”

Other results for the retreat group include:

— Genes that regulate heart health in a positive direction were enriched 17 times in only four days, as were the genes that regulate homeostasis (keeping things stable and constant). This includes enrichment of genes regulating neurotransmitters, levels for heart contraction, heart rate, blood pressure, hormone levels and more.

— Networks of genes involved in self-regulation were activated improving overall wellness and decreasing risks of inflammation related disease disorders, such as Alzheimer’s, Cardiovascular Disease, etc.

— A shift in a person’s identity from me to we in the direction of oneness

— Shift in emotions in the direction of love, compassion, joy and equanimity

— An immediate change in blood pressure, heart health and brain waves in the direction of wellbeing

“The question of science – ‘what is the biological basis of consciousness?’ – is the wrong question,” said Chopra. “Biology is an expression of consciousness. Consciousness doesn’t exist in space and time. It’s transcendent, and your soul is part of that. It’s aware, self-knowing, self-organizing and self-regulating. Consciousness as the ground of existence – that is the solution to the hard problem in science.”

25 Minutes of Mindfulness Meditation Alleviates Psychological Stress, Study Shows

New research from Carnegie Mellon University is the first to show that brief mindfulness meditation practice — 25 minutes for three consecutive days — alleviates psychological stress. Published in the journal “Psychoneuroendocrinology,” the study investigates how mindfulness meditation affects people’s ability to be resilient under stress.

“More and more people report using meditation practices for stress reduction, but we know very little about how much you need to do for stress reduction and health benefits,” lead author J. David Creswell, associate professor of psychology in the Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences said in a press release.

For the study, Creswell and his research team had 66 healthy individuals aged 18-30 years old participate in a three-day experiment. Some participants went through a brief mindfulness meditation training program, where for 25 minutes over three consecutive days, the individuals were given breathing exercises to help them monitor their breath and pay attention to their present moment experiences.

A second group of participants completed a matched three-day cognitive training program where they were asked to critically analyze poetry in an effort to enhance problem-solving skills.

Following the final training activity, all participants were asked to complete stressful speech and math tasks in front of stern-faced evaluators. Each individual reported stress levels in response to stressful speech and math performance stress tasks, and provided saliva samples for measurement of cortisol, or the stress hormone.

The participants who received the brief mindfulness meditation training reported reduced stress perceptions to the speech and math tasks, indicating that the mindfulness meditation fostered psychological stress resilience. Additionally, on the biological side, the mindfulness meditation participants showed greater cortisol reactivity.

“When you initially learn mindfulness mediation practices, you have to cognitively work at it — especially during a stressful task,” said Creswell. “And these active cognitive efforts may result in the task feeling less stressful, but they may also have physiological costs with higher cortisol production.”

Creswell’s group is now testing the possibility that mindfulness can become more automatic and easy to use with long-term mindfulness meditation training, which may result in reduced cortisol reactivity.

 

Deepak Chopra and The Chopra Center Release Ananda – Infinite Abundance Meditation App

Following the release of it’s first Ananda meditation app called Ananda – Living for Love, Deepak Chopra and Chopra Center Meditation released a new guided meditation app called “Ananda – Infinite Abundance.”

Just like the “Ananda – Living for Love” app, users can mix and match 22 guided meditations from Deepak Chopra with 22 musical tracks to create 484 unique meditation experiences. They can also customize the length of each meditation, and adjust the balance between the music and meditation tracks to create a personal meditation library.

The app is free to download from iTunes and Google Play and additional meditations can be purchased at $2.99 each, or they can be purchased all at once for $29.

 

Arielle Ford Honored by The Skinless Project’s as June 2014 Inspirational Woman

Arielle Ford, bestselling author of “The Soulmate Secret,” self-help and relationship experts is the featured Inspirational Woman for June 2014 for The Skinless Project, a hub for women’s self-empowerment as leaders and consumers.

A publicist who helped launch the careers of self-help gurus Deepak Chopra, Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen, Ford is the author of seven books, and is the co-producer of Chopra’s video series The Happiness Prescription, as well as a founding partner of the Spiritual Cinema Circle.

“I am glad to be The Skinless Project’s inspirational woman for June,” Ford said. “The Skinless Project is a vehicle for women the world over to share stories and build a mutually supportive community. It’s an exciting development for women.”

Maaria Mozaffar founded The Skinless Project in 2012 to propagate the truth that women are more than skin deep. The Skinless Project connects women around the world through a global community, seminars, self-empowerment resources, and connections to products and brands that advance a healthy, positive vision for women, families, and communities.

“I never thought about competition,” Ford said. “My core belief is that ‘everyone always says yes to me,’ and if they don’t say yes it’s because something bigger or better is on the way to me. In my current field of ‘love and relationships,’ my closest friends are what others might consider my ‘competition.’ I don’t see it that way. I enjoy supporting their work because we all share a common mission of having a more loving world.”

Read the Q&A with Arielle Ford here.

 

Naturopathica Herbal Therapy Pillows

New from NY-based holistic skin care line Naturopathica is two herbal therapy products – an Herbal Therapy Pillow and Herbal Therapy Eye Pillow.

The Herbal Therapy Pillow features a linen pillow case filled with flax sees, pine and peppermint. Developed to relieve fatigued muscles and calm the senses, it can be used hot or cold. For sore muscles, stiffness and tension, the company recommends microwaving the pillow for up to two minutes, and applying to the affected area on the body for up to 15 minutes. For strained muscles, joint pain and inflammation, the pillow can be placed in a plastic bag in the freezer and applied for 15 minutes as well. It sells for $44.

EyeMask_190x440The Herbal Therapy Eye Pillow is recommended for sleep, yoga or just relaxation and is filled with organic flax seeds, lavender and chamomile. The material used is 100 percent organic linen, and can also help calm puffy eyes when placed in a plastic bag in the freezer.

For more information, visit www.naturopathica.com.

 

Peace Love World Classic V-Neck Tees

With the desire to spread the message of “peace, love and happiness,” the clothing brand Peace Love World was born. Created by Alina Villasante, every garment of clothing features her daily mantra, “Love is not something you look for, Love is something you become,” imprinted on it.

The line has become a celebrity favorite, and part of it’s new spring/summer line are two classic t-shirts we love – one with the message “I am grateful,” and another with the message “I am blessed.”

Each 100 percent cotton shirt features an inspirational love quote on the back by the neck, and is priced at $78.

For more clothing from Peace Love World, visit www.peaceloveworld.com.