Body scan meditation
Body scan meditation is a type of mindfulness meditation
where you focus your awareness on sensations in your body. By strategically
paying attention to sensations in different areas of your body, you tune into
the places where you unconsciously hold stress. By being with the stress in the
body you expand your “window of tolerance”, or your ability to be with and
release latent physical and emotional tension. At first this may all sound a
little mysterious, but it all makes experiential sense once you give it a try.
Read on for a body scan meditation script that can help you reconnect with
yourself from the body out, right now!
Benefits of Body
Scan Meditation
How to meditate? Benefits of meditation Body scan meditation
is a type of meditation in the mindfulness tradition. The benefits of
mindfulness are numerous and supported by over 1000 clinical studies. Mindfulness activities provide numerous
positive benefits including:
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Stress reduction
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Anxiety reduction
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Reduced depression
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Increased awareness of
habits and ability to choose healthy habits
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More creativity in better
problem-solving skills
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Improved attention and
memory
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Reduces age-related memory
loss
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Enhanced attention, memory,
and mental quickness in older people
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Increased compassion for
self and others
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Improved control over
alcohol, drug, and food cravings
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Better sleep
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Reduction in physical pain
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Reduced blood pressure
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Reduced inflammation
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Reduced severity of
irritable bowel syndrome, post-traumatic stress disorder, and fibromyalgia
Body Scan Meditation Script
Start by finding a comfortable position to rest your body.
The ideal position is lying flat on your back, but you can also sit in a chair.
The key is comfort. But you can also do this practice when standing–such as
when waiting in line. Allow your eyes to close. Or if you prefer you can keep
your eyes open and resting with a soft gaze. Inhale deeply through your nose,
then exhale long and slowly. See if you can exhale for twice as long as each
inhale. Try counting if that helps. Notice
where you feel your breath in your body. This could be your nostrils, your
throat, your chest, your abdomen. Can you feel the subtle rise and fall of your
breath in your entire body?
Notice any sounds in the room. Stay with those sounds
for a bit, allowing your awareness to meet them directly. Then slowly, gently,
shift your awareness to your feet. Feel your awareness traveling inside your body.
Notice any sensations in your feet. If you’re having difficulty feeling your
feet, wiggle your toes. Feel the sensation of your feet against the texture of
your socks. Once your notice sensations
in the counterpart of your feet, shift your awareness more deeply into your
feet, all the way into the bones. If you can’t go deeper, that’s fine. This is
also a good time to notice any judgment that might come up. See if you can
notice any sensations in your body that correspond with judgment showing up.
Maybe its a heat, or a tightness. Simply notice without attempting to change
it. Can you find a little curiosity for these sensations?
When you feel like you’ve got the hang of noticing the
sensations in your feet, gently bring your awareness to your ankles. See
how deep you can bring your awareness. Then slowly allow our awareness to
travel to your calves, then your knees, and thighs. Now feel your entire left
leg, right leg, then both at once. Notice your breath. Is it tight? Is it easy?
Is it deep? Simply noticing what’s there without trying to change it. It’s
natural for your mind to wander. Notice how your thoughts endlessly arise and pass
away. Then gently shift your awareness back to the sensations in your legs.
Do you notice any pain or stiffness? Any heat,
twitches, or tension? Just noticing, not trying to change or relieve it. Just being with the sensations as they are; Notice
how the sensations arise, change, and pass away. Noticing these sensations,
you’re learning how to let your body take the lead. Your job is just to notice
the sensations as they arise. Returning to the sensations in the body whenever
you get distracted.
Meditation is the act of returning your awareness to the
sensations, not just holding it there. It’s the coming back that matters .Now
allow your awareness to travel to your bottom, and your lower back, from the
pelvic floor up to your waist. Notice any clenching in this region. Allow your
anus to relax. This might seem funny at first, but the term “tight ass” is
popular for a reason. Many of us are constantly clenched with stress and
tension. Notice any sensations in this region as they arise, change, and pass
away. Check in again with your breath. Is it tight, is it free, is it deep?
Just noticing without judgment. Allow
your awareness to travel up your mid-back and upper back. Can you allow your
awareness to drop down into your organs–your kidneys? Can you notice the
sensation of your spine, one vertebra at a time? Become curious about the
sensations here: there may be heat, tension, pressure, tingling, or even an
absence of feeling. Just be curious about whatever shows up.
Notice any opinions about these sensations, any
judgments, and even emotions. Notice them with curiosity and compassion, then
return to the sensations in the body. Now bring your awareness to the chest,
ribs, heart, and lungs. Notice the sensations of your chest rising with each
breath, notice the beating of your heart. If emotions come up, greet them with
an energy of allowance. Allow your awareness
to travel to your fingers, from your fingernails all the way up each hand, to
your wrist, forearms, elbows, biceps, triceps, all the way down into the bones
of your arms, then up to your shoulders. Simply noticing any sensations that
are there.
Spend some time noticing the sensations in our
shoulders, upper back, and neck. Noticing any tightness of breath here. These
areas can hold a lot of tension. Can you simply be with the sensations?
Noticing how they change, even if they become uncomfortable–can you tolerate
the discomfort, just observing.
Now shift your awareness to your neck, throat, jaw. Now up
to your ears, and drop down into your inner ears. Now your nose, cheekbones,
eye sockets, eyeballs. Notice any tension lingering in your eyeballs. Sometimes
when we focus inside we build tension in our eyes. Let your awareness travel up
to your forehead, up the back of your neck, all the way up to the crown of your
skull. Notice your breath, maybe you want to deepen your breath, adding an
extra-long exhale. Now let your attention expand out to include your entire
body as a whole. Just noticing the sensations arising and changing everywhere. See
if you can sweep your awareness from the top of your head down through your
entire body to the tips of your toes.
When you’re ready, gently release your focus on the interior
and let it surface back into the experience of interaction with the world. As you become fully alert and awake, you may
want to set an intention that this practice of building tolerance and focus
will benefit everyone you come in contact with today.
Body Scan Meditation Tips
Practice this body scan meditation whenever you feel
stressed. You can even do a subtle version with eyes open when sitting in
traffic as long as you don’t lose focus on the road. It is good practice to
notice what’s going on inside of you and outside of you at the same time. If
you’re short on time, you can do an abbreviated version wherever you are simply
by noticing any places in your body where you hold tension, then taking long
deep breaths with extra-long exhales. You
can make this body scan meditation part of a regimen of beneficial mindfulness
practices including loving kindness meditation, visualization practices,
meditation for stress and anxiety, gratitude practices, and movement
meditations like yoga.
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