“My experience of learning TM was something I will never forget. I remember when I was taught the technique, being gobsmacked at its simplicity! After my first 20 minute meditation guided by my teacher I could instantly feel the results!! I felt calmer and had a level of mental clarity that I couldn’t explain. When meditating regularly it has really helped me with my problems with anxiety!! I wish the government made TM a compulsory part of the national curriculum!! ”
Mark ~ Merseyside

“I first became aware of T.M during the 1970’s when a work colleague showed me a poster of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. At the time I was interested in the meditation but not in the “hippy” and religious lifestyle that seemed to go with it.
Last year, after a sudden and traumatic bereavement, I was at a very low point in my life, compounded by the fact that I was in real danger of literally losing the roof over my head, but that is another story. Suffice to say I was frightened, anxious and panic stricken.
A friend told me about an article she had read in a newspaper which said that doctors were recommending T.M as an aid in stress related disorders. We started searching the internet for information and came across an independent TM teacher based in Newcastle upon Tyne.
We attended a week-end course in October, 2002 and were amazed at how simple the meditation technique is. Just 20 minutes, twice a day, relaxing in a chair and repeating a mantra, has resulted in my feeling much calmer and more at peace with myself. My anxiety and panic attacks have disappeared and my normal sleep pattern has returned. I have also noticed after meditation an increase in energy and enthusiasm.
I feel that T.M has come of age after shedding its “hippy image” and is the antidote for all the stress we encounter in today’s hectic world.
I was waiting at a bus stop recently and got into a conversation with a walker. (big boots and rucksack) He had come over from Alaska to do some long distance walking in the Lake District and North Yorkshire moors. I was impressed by the distances he had covered as he wasn’t a young man, but in his late sixties at a guess. He told me he had discovered T.M when he was at college and had practised it ever since.
T.M is of benefit to people of all walks of life – it isn’t a religion or a lifestyle but a simple technique that anyone, of any age, can learn.”
~ Hilda, Whitby, North Yorks

“One of the signs of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one’s work is terribly important.”
Bertrand Russell ~ British philosopher

Just came across this & thought how very appropriate, meditation definitely gives one those regular moments of peace & clarity which help keep things in perspective.

“I was persuaded to try TM following on from my yoga practice. I felt there was something more to be had from the period of relaxation and muscular rest after a session.

Almost immediately after just the group practice that followed the initial instruction I felt a difference, that a new window of experience had been opened.

In the days and weeks that followed, I noticed that I felt calmer (particularly whilst driving) and more assured within myself (and of myself). I had more energy physically and mentally although being retired I do not face the tensions that I used to. I am convinced that if I still had those work tensions that my TM practice would help immensely.

I personally find the morning practice to be difficult to fit in but confess that this really is laziness in not getting up early enough. This leads me to ensure that I nearly always have an evening TM.

I hold dear my mantra and inwardly use this from time to time to help to relax and concentrate when for example on the golf course taking an awkward shot or put. It is my friend for life and maybe beyond!”
~ Peter, retired professional from Chorley, Lancs.

The US National Institute of Health has spent more than $25 million on TM studies, which show that it decreases anxiety, high blood pressure, rates of heart attack and stroke as well as substance abuse, addiction, and depression.

Every 65 minutes, a U.S. military veteran committed suicide in 2010. That’s according to a comprehensive study released last Friday by the Department of Veteran Affairs, which tracked veteran suicides from 1999 to 2010 (PDF). Then there are the suicides of active-duty service members: Last year they outpaced combat deaths, hitting a record high of 349.

These alarming statistics—as well as such tragedies as last week’s murder of Chris Kyle, a highly decorated Navy SEAL sniper, by an ex-Marine—may be one reason why the U.S. military is exploring alternative means of preventing and treating post-traumatic stress disorder, known as PTSD. Among the alternatives is meditation.

The military’s first foray into meditation goes back to 1985, when it found in a small pilot study that Transcendental Meditation—a trademarked technique first introduced by the Beatles’ guru, Mahareshi Mahesh Yogi—significantly decreased the stress and anxiety levels of Vietnam veterans. Within three months, 70 percent of the meditating vets no longer needed the support services of their veterans’ center.

Despite these positive results, “It hasn’t been until the last few years that there has been a more official interest,” says Bob Roth, executive director of the David Lynch Foundation, which promotes Transcendental Meditation to treat PTSD. “I think the reason why they’re really looking at Transcendental Meditation now is that the problem is so acute.”

TM is one of three major branches of meditation, all of which have different effects on the body and brain. Several U.S. vets say the technique helped them overcome severe mental distress. On Monday, Luke Jensen, a veteran of Operation Enduring Freedom, described at a fundraiser for the David Lynch Foundation at the New York Athletic Club how he became suicidal in Afghanistan and later put a gun to his head and threatened to kill himself in front of his wife and young children. He says TM brought him back from the edge. “It was the first time in so long that I felt hope,” he said. Jerry Yellin, a fighter pilot in World War II, told of how he lived with nightmares, behavioral disorders, and addiction for 30 years before trying meditation. “I got my life back 100 percent,” said Yellin, who is now co-chairman of Operation Warrior Wellness. “150 percent.”

A small pilot study at the private military college, Norwich University, also showed that first year “rooks” who practiced TM twice daily were more alert and achieved better grades than those who weren’t meditating. Without TM, “I’d definitely be falling asleep in every single class,” said one rook, interviewed for a video documenting the study.

The Department of Defense last year granted the Maharishi University of Management Research Institute and the San Diego Veterans Administration Medical Center $2.4 million to further research the effectiveness of using TM to treat PTSD. The military is also exploring other types of meditation, according to Captain John Golden of the Deployment Health Clinical Center. Among them are Integrative Restoration Meditation, which has been proven effective as an adjunct treatment for PTSD, and Mindfulness. No one, to date, has performed studies comparing the techniques, says Roth. “I think they should. It’s not about who wins, but what works,” he says.

The National Institute of Health has spent more than $25 million on TM studies, which show that it decreases anxiety, blood pressure, rates of heart attack, stroke, and death, as well as substance abuse, addiction, and depression. But TM is also pricey. For civilians, training costs $1000 a pop (although discounts are available). Training for troops costs $500 per head, and the David Lynch Foundation raises money to cover those costs.

The military isn’t paying for meditation training yet, says Robert Cancro, professor and chairman emeritus of psychiatry at NYU Longone Medical Center. He says most DOD treatment spending goes toward drugs. Other than costs and pending research, Cancro says we must still overcome a lingering distrust of meditation. “There’s a stigma associated with meditation that is not associated with taking Valium, and that’s really unfortunate.”
Winter is a reporter for Bloomberg Businessweek in New York.

By: Shazia Khan 02/06/2013 05:30 AM
First popularized in the united stated by The Beatles, transcendental mediation is now being used to combat stress in veterans. NY1’s Shazia Khan filed the following report.
Deployed to Afghanistan in 2009, 34-year-old Luke Jensen says his nearly two-month experience as a military police officer took its toll on his mental health. Once back home in Ohio, things continued to spiral down.

“I had put a gun to my head in front of my wife and children. That’s how intense it was,” Jensen says. “Everything was setting me off. Punching holes through my walls. Punching holes through doors. My children walking on eggshells around me.”

Counseling, various therapies and medications didn’t work. But in 2011, Jensen says he got his life back with transcendental meditation.

“I noticed very soon, I started sleeping better, and just that alone was huge,” Jensen says.

Jensen shared his story at a recent conference exploring meditation as a means of overcoming posttraumatic stress disorder and preventing suicides in the military.

“You have one veteran committing suicide every hour in the United States,” says Bob Roth, executive director of the David Lynch Foundation. “Thirty times more vets commit suicide then die in combat.”

The David Lynch Foundation organized the conference. The nonprofit launched Operation Warrior Wellness three years ago to provide veterans, military personnel and their families free training in transcendental meditation.

“What this meditation does is, it provides the body with a very profound state of rest and relaxation,” Roth says. “Research shows there is a 50 percent reduction in symptoms of PTSD among meditating veterans.”

In addition, a 2012 study by the American Heart Association found regular practice of this age-old, nonreligious technique may lower the risk of death, heart attack and stroke in heart patients.

Jensen strives to mediate twice a day for 20 minutes.

“Our home is a happy home again now, thankfully,” he says. “And they do remember it, but they know that there was a happy ending to it.”

Rock singer and songwriter, Paul Rodgers, famous for hits like, “All Right Now”, “Feel Like Making Love” and “Can’t Get Enough of Your Love” talks about his experience of meditation.
“I meditate daily, and started way back in ’67 when I was 17.”
Middlesbrough-born Paul, who was the lead singer of Free and, later, Bad Company, say’s that he’d discovered meditation in 1967, at the age of 17, when George Harrison – whom he was a fan of – had spoken about Transcendental Meditation.
“I delved into it, and I’ve found I always go back to it – even throughout all the crazy years and the rollercoaster life of rock ‘n’ roll. When I go back to it I find it centres me and calms me down and leaves me knowing where to go next.”
Rodgers, who has played with Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Brian May and many more, says that the youthful energy needed to perform rock comes from meditation, working out at the gym, and a healthy lifestyle.
From NME & Radio 2 interviews

“I have been practising TM for the past 18 years on and off and started on the recommendation of a friend when I’d complained about feeling stressed . My husband decided that he would be interested in doing the course so we went along together and have to say it has been invaluable. As a person who thrives on being very busy and active there are times when I either don’t get enough sleep or feel stressed and this manifests itself in migraines. Being able to draw on the positive qualities of TM over the years has been wonderful and I know that its something that I will use for the rest of my life. Apart from the feeling of complete refreshment after meditating for 20 minutes [you do feel like you’ve had a couple of hours sleep ] it helps to slow down days which are particularly hectic. It is sometimes hard to find 2 separate 20 minutes in every day, but even once a day when time is short TM has been a great tool for me.”
~ Hazel, Newcastle upon Tyne.