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by taeric
1494 days ago
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8% is indeed quite high. My gut would be more that this is the selection bias, though. Folks that are looking for things such as meditation to help with mental health, are more likely to have trouble with mental health. Such that I am still suspicious of this data. I should say that I'm fine with the idea of pushing for caution. I just have major suspicions when a practice is pushed with a mentality that you need expert guidance to get layman benefits. I should also state that my personal stance is that the majority of meditation, if it is working, is not working for the reasons that the practitioners think it is working. |
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I think we need to stop telling people meditation is a perfect little peaceful practice and instead treat it like ibuprofen.
If you are meditating and you start feeling anxious or in a bad way.. stop. Stop meditating and go do something else. Maybe talk with a therapist.
If you start feeling depersonalization.. stop meditating.
You should inform your medical practicioners that you meditate, the same way you tell them if you take ibuprofen on the regular. They probably don't care, but it's good to know.
You probably should ask yourself "is the benefit from meditation exceeding the side effects?" If no.. then stop doing it.
Taking more ibuprofen is not always the right course. The goal of meditating should not be to meditate more.