Meditation
for Coping with Depression and Stress Course
Information for people thinking about
booking on the course
Although we have used the term ‘depression’
throughout, the course has also been found to be especially helpful
with stress, anxiety and physical pain.
This course is suitable for anyone who has suffered depression or stress
and anxiety, although not for people who are currently clinically depressed.
It is a course to help people develop practical skills that can help
them stay well and be part of their strategy to prevent future relapse
into low moods.
The course is not ‘therapy’. Meditation specialists rather
than medical professionals run the course. So, it will not provide ongoing
general or professional support and should not be related to as an alternative
to seeking professional medical help or advice.
The following notes are designed to help you get a sense of the approach
that the course will take. Please read them carefully if you are intending
to book on it. Please note there is a special introduction and orientation
session before the course date at which you will be able to ask for
further information, ask questions or raise concerns.
Depression
Depression is a very common problem - 20%
of adults become severely depressed at some point in their lives. Depression
involves both biological changes in the way the brain works and psychological
changes - the way we think and feel. Because of this, it is often useful
to combine medical treatments for treating depression (which act on
the brain) with psychological approaches (which teach new ways to deal
with thoughts and feelings).
Treatment of Depression
If you have been depressed in the past your doctor may have prescribed
antidepressants. These work through their effects on the chemical messengers
in your brain. In depression these chemical messengers have often become
run down, lowering mood and energy levels, disturbing sleep and appetite.
Correcting these brain chemicals may have taken time, but most people
experience improvements in 6-8 weeks.
Although antidepressants generally work well in reducing depression,
they may not be a permanent cure - their effects continue only so long
as you keep taking the pills. Your doctor could continue to prescribe
antidepressants for months or even years. However, many people prefer
to use other or additional ways to prevent further depression. This
is the purpose of the course you are inquiring about.
Please note that it is important to consult your doctor before making
any changes to prescribed medication.
Prevention of Further Depression
Whatever caused your depression in the first place, the experience of
depression itself has a number of after-effects. One of these is the
possibility that you may become depressed again. The purpose of the
course is to improve your chance of preventing further depression. In
the 8 course sessions, you will learn skills to help you handle your
thoughts and feelings differently.
You will learn these skills in a class with others who may also have
been depressed (there will be a team of two facilitators). In eight,
2hr sessions, the classes will meet to learn new ways of dealing with
what goes on in our minds, and to share and review experiences with
other class members.
The Importance of Practice
Together we will be working to change patterns of mind that often have
been around for a long time. These patterns may have become a habit.
We can only expect to succeed in making changes if we put time and effort
into learning and practising skills.
There will therefore be a small amount of home practice for you to do
between class meetings. This practice will take up to an hour a day,
six days a week for eight weeks, and involves tasks such as listening
to CDs, performing brief exercises, and so on. We appreciate that it
is often very difficult to find that amount of time for something new
in lives that may be already very busy and crowded. However, the commitment
to spend time on home practice is an important part of the class if
you wish to gain the maximum benefits from the course.
Facing Difficulties
The classes and the home assignments can teach you how to be more fully
aware and present in each moment of life. The good news is that this
makes life more interesting, vivid and fulfilling. On the other hand,
this means facing what is present, even when it is unpleasant and difficult.
In practice you will find that turning to face and acknowledge difficulties
is the most effective way, in the long run, to reduce unhappiness. It
is also central to preventing further depression. Seeing unpleasant
feelings, thoughts, or experiences clearly, as they arise, means that
you will be in much better shape to ‘nip them in the bud’,
before they progress to more intense or persistent depressions. In the
classes you will learn gentle ways to face difficulties, and will be
supported by the facilitators and other class members.
Patience and Persistence
Because we will be working to change well established habits of mind,
you will be putting in a lot of time and effort. The effects of this
effort may only become apparent later. In many ways, it is like gardening
- we have to prepare the ground, plant the seeds, ensure that they are
adequately watered and nourished, and then wait patiently for results.
You may be familiar with this pattern from any treatment with antidepressants.
Often, there is little beneficial effect until you have been taking
medication for some time. Yet improvement in your depression depended
on your continuing to take the antidepressant even when you felt no
immediate benefit.
In the same way, we ask you to approach the classes in this course and
the home practice with a spirit of patience and persistence, committing
yourself to putting in time and effort into the course, while accepting
that the fruits of your efforts may not show straight away.
What to do next:
It is essential that you phone Evolution (204204) to let us know that
you want to attend an orientation and we will put your name on the priority
booking list. Please attend the orientation if you possibly can. However,
you also need to know that attending the orientation does not guarantee
a place on the course. Please be aware that it is possible that we will
have more applicants than we have spaces.
If you are interested in the course but are unable to come to the introductory/orientation
session please contact Taravajra on 07985 314181 or by email
for further information
(Please note the facilitators are meditation teachers and not therapists.
You may however wish to talk through the idea of doing this course with
medical or social work professionals with whom you are already in contact.
If in any doubt we recommend that you talk it through with your GP)
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