Relaxation Response

"Working with yarn provides stress relief," says Herbert Benson, MD, a professor at Harvard Medical School and author of The Relaxation Response.

"Like meditation or prayer, knitting allows for the passive release of stray thoughts." But while studies have found that meditation can sometimes induce stress and depression, knitting doesn't have that effect. In fact, it tops many doctors' calming-activity lists."The rhythmic and repetitive quality of the stitching, along with the needles clicking resembles a calming mantra," Dr. Benson explains. "The mind can wander while still focusing on one task."

Relaxation Response

Dr. Herbert Benson of Mind Body Institute and Harvard Medical School has developed this therapy following his groundbreaking study of the effect of the TM on relaxation.

To elicit relaxation response, Dr. Benson recommends that you choose a technique that conforms to your own beliefs. The relaxation response can be evoked by a large number of techniques, including:

Evoking relaxation response is relatively simple. Only two basic steps need to be followed.

Step 1: You need to repeat a word, sound, prayer, phrase, or muscular activity. (You can use a religious or other word that means something to you or you can use a neutral word such as: One, Ocean, Love, Peace, Calm, Relax, etc.

Step 2: When common, everyday thoughts intrude on your focus, passively disregard them and return to your repetition.

Dr. Benson recommends the following steps to elicit relaxation response in his book, "Timeless Healing":

Step 1. Pick a focus word or short phrase that's firmly rooted in your belief system.

Step 2. Sit quietly in a comfortable position.

Step 3. Close your eyes.

Step 4. Relax your muscles.

Step 5. Breathe slowly and naturally, and as you do, repeat your focus word, phrase, or prayer silently to yourself as you exhale.

Step 6. Assume a passive attitude. Don't worry about how well you 're doing. When other thoughts come to mind, simply say to yourself, "Oh, well," and gently return to the repetition.

Step 7. Continue for ten to twenty minutes.

Step 8. Do not stand immediately. Continue sitting quietly for a minute or so, allowing other thoughts to return. Then open your eyes and sit for another minute before rising.

Step 9. Practice this technique once or twice daily.

Dr. Benson and his colleagues at the Mind Body Institute in Boston found that relaxation response is very useful in healing several stress related ailments, including anxiety. Here are some of the conditions healed or cured by elicitation of the relaxation response in combination with self-care strategies such as nutrition, exercise, and stress-management:

 

All of us have the ability to evoke the great effects of relaxation response. But we still don't precisely know which brain mechanisms make the relaxation response possible. Most people feel some effects of the lifestyle changes associated with the relaxation response and associated strategies immediately.

But the larger, more dramatic effects of the relaxation response are cumulative. So, you have to be patient and work on these techniques, sometimes it takes several months or years to accomplish complete "healing."