Harvard Study: Repeating Mantras
Relieves Stress
In the early 1970s, Dr. Herbert Benson, president and
founder of the Mind/Body Medical Institute at Harvard Medical
School, documented a phenomenon he dubbed "the relaxation
response" which he says is the opposite of the body's
fight-or-flight mechanism.
Benson experimented using Sanskrit mantras. He told his
subjects to sit quietly and repeat the prayer either mentally
or verbally for ten to twenty minutes, to breathe regularly
and to push intruding thoughts aside as they entered their
minds.
Benson found that those who repeated the Sanskrit mantras,
for as little as ten minutes a day, experienced physiological
changes—reduced heart rate, lower stress levels and
slower metabolism.
Repeating the mantras also lowered the blood pressure of
those who had high blood pressure and generally decreased
the subjects' oxygen consumption (indicating that the
body was in a restful state).
Subsequent studies documented in Benson's Timeless
Healing found that repeating mantras can benefit the
immune system, relieve insomnia, reduce doctor visits and
even increase high-school sophomores' self-esteem.
Benson and his colleagues also tested other prayers, including "Lord
Jesus Christ, have mercy on me," and found that they
had the same effect. Even words like one, ocean, love and
peace produced the response.
It appears that Benson and his colleagues had uncovered
a universal principle: repetitive prayer allows human beings
to enter a relaxed state.
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