You may eat right, take your vitamins and do water aerobics to keep in shape. But one thing you probably just can’t seem to do is meditate. Despite the obvious benefits that meditation offers for health and managing stress easily, most of us have trouble settling into the serene quiet that meditation offers.
The benefits of meditation are indeed numerous, ranging from the physical to the spiritual. On the physical side, it can reduce the stimulus that overloads our bodies with stress hormones and elevated blood pressure. On the spiritual side it can provide a place of quiet exploration, said to be basic for the spiritual quest.
Though meditation has grown significantly in numbers over the last several decades, it is still successfully practiced by a very small percentage of the population. Many of us know how it can benefit us. Yet if you are like most, sitting still feels like being put in irons and told to sit in the corner. Let’s face it, there is a reason it’s so hard to take that leap to quiet contemplation.
The answer may come in the biology of the brain. An increasing amount of research says we form our brains around our experiences. In other words, whether we like it or not, we become biologically tuned, possibly even addicted, to the lives we lead. As our lives become faster and faster it becomes harder to make the jump back to something as slow or as or beneficial as sitting quietly.
For high speed westerners meditation has other challenges. First it was created in both foreign and ancient cultures. We don’t have a modern western language for meditation and have to borrow the sights, sounds and rhythms of India and the Far East where the traditions were strongest. Put simply, when we are already trying something new it’s hard to relate to exotic languages, chanting and sounds.
Second is a complete blurring of the dividing line between the world of commerce and the world of hearth and home. In his pivotal book, ‘The Pattern Language’, architect Christopher Alexander, calls for the fundamental, almost primal need for a transition from “street life," to the quiet security of a home.
Home was once a place where we could cast off the pace of the outside world and feel quite safe and secure. If you envision yourself proceeding to your front door through a small Japanese garden, or through the thick, cool walls of a Mediterranean courtyard and you may get a sense of how wonderful this can feel.
Inside the traditional home, people could act out different roles that centered on relaxation and simple pleasures like eating. Meditation doesn’t seem so far from the pace of this world. On the other hand, in the modern house, the world of commerce holds equal ground inside in the form of TV, radio, internet and cell phones. You never slow down, you never experience retreat and this gives stress no outlet.
There are a few things you can do to calm your household, even with modern and ancient technology. First, consider going on a quest for music that separates you from the day to day world. Experiment with classical music from the 16th and 17th centuries known as baroque. A lot of baroque music has a tempo close to one beat per second, the pace of the human heart. This has been shown to be beneficial to mood, focus and a sense of relaxation.
Other sounds, particularly those from nature, seem to be incredibly calming. After all, humans listened intently to the sounds of nature for signals of safety or threat.
Water fountains can provide a safe, soothing sound that bespeaks safety. Wind chimes have also been used for thousands of years enliven and change the sense of time in homes and temples.
Modern recordings of the sounds of surf, rivers and birds are also very effective calming devices. These are all accessible to anyone with a CD player or IPod. Electronics extends the range of calming sources of sound and can change our entire perception of our environment. We provide an example of how this works on our web site.
A powerful but less known sound that can change our state of mind is drumming. This is not your 15 year old on a new drum set, but the soul-satisfying, rhythmic drumming of ancient, native instruments. These sounds were refined and improved over millennia. Is it any wonder it is hard to keep still when we hear a great African beat or Tahitian drum? In fact, Ayruvedic medicine teaches that certain drum tones break up stagnate energy thereby preventing disease.
Whatever audio selections you choose, play these recordings at low volume most of the time. Music and drumming is actually very stimulating to the nervous system. The lower it is played, the more likely it will be calming, centering and not ultimately fatiguing.
However, any music that calms, relaxes and creates a positive state of mind is worth trying. Specialists in the field say that non verbal, non choral music is best. Vocal music engages the active, critical and logical part of the brain, so it should be avoided as a relaxation tool.
If any of these methods help clear your mind of the day’s events, it has brought you closer to meditative calm. In fact many spiritual practices in both the east and west claim that all of life is a meditation. The essence of meditation is being aware and clear headed.
With moments of clear headedness, if you ever choose to meditate in a more traditional and quiet form, you will find it much easier to do so. The jump from the sounds of your home to actual meditation won’t be too far to take.
His drives fly so far that they really should serve food on them or at the very least, drinks. His iron shots somehow manage to finish around the hole from even the worst of situations. From 50 yards and in, he is unbelievable. He manufactures chips and pitches from all sorts of lies and hazards that defy logic and if I had to wager my life on someone dropping a side-hill ten footer, you can bet that someone would be Tiger Woods.
So what's not to like? Why shouldn't golf instructors teach you to swing like Tiger? Why shouldn't the average player attempt to emulate the moves and mechanics of best player in the world?
Before we answer that question, I'd like to answer a different question. What is an average golfer?
The National Golf Foundation (www.NGF.org) breaks golfers into two separate categories. These categories are core golfers, defined as those who play at least 8 times per year, and occasional golfers who play 7 or less rounds yearly. In the United States, there are 15.7 million core golfers and another 14.6 occasional golfers for a total of 30.3 million golfers.
Of these players, the average score for men in the core group is 97 and 106 is the average for women in the same group. We won't even talk about the average score of the occasional group.
Percentage wise, the scoring numbers break out like this:
SCORE / PERCENTAGE OF PLAYERS WHO SHOOT IT Under 80 / 8% 80 ? 89 / 20% 90 ? 99 / 31% 100 ? 119 / 30% 120 and Up / 11%
Additionally, the average player in the core group plays 37 times per year. That's about 3 times a month or less than once per week.
To summarize, an average player is defined as a man who plays about 3 times monthly and averages a score of 97. For women the number of rounds is consistent with their male counterparts but their average score rises to 106.
Now that we've defined what an average player is, we can answer the initial question which was? ?Why shouldn't the average player attempt to emulate the best player in the world??
Tiger Woods is a world-class athlete. Most average players are not. Most people period, are not.
Tiger Woods has incredible hand-eye coordination as is referenced by his ability to square the club at impact and by his uncanny short game. If you're average score is 97 +, you're ability to square the club needs some work. Let's be realistic.
Tiger plays and practices daily. In contrast, we know the average player plays less than 1 round per week and the list of reasons why you shouldn't emulate Tiger goes on and on. Now, that's not to say that Tiger doesn't have a golf swing worth emulating, because he absolutely does. What I'm trying to convey to you is that if you fall into the average category, you are probably not physically capable of emulating Tiger and even if you are one of the very few of us who are capable physically, you don't have the time necessary to hone and repeat the motion.
Instead of trying to teach people to play like Tiger, what I think teachers should be doing is teaching Joe Average to simply play like Joe Average. Every player has his or own set of assets and also limitations and should play within those limitations.
If you want to improve your game, you should learn, within the framework of your own limitations and assets, how to square the club to the target line at impact. This is what golf is all about. You should learn how to relax so that you can maximize your own swing speed and hit the ball farther. You should absolutely develop a good grip and set-up so that when you do square the club, the ball will fly toward the target building confidence in your swing and also developing your feel for the swing.
Forget the right forearm, and the left hip. Forget pushing, pulling, and rotating. Make your game as simple and repeatable as possible. Focus solely on doing what is necessary for you to square the club to the target line at impact. After all, you only play 3 times per month. Why should you make your golf swing more complicated than it has to be?
Structure your practice programs around a solid fundamental set-up and then work steadfastly on learning the feel for squaring the face of the club to the target line. Once you've developed this feel for ?square impact,? now it's time to go to work on your short game but that's an article for another day.
If you take this information to heart, in a short period of time you will be playing more like Tiger?not necessarily in form but as a result of lower scores. You will improve your swing and the lower you score, the more you're playing like Tiger.
Both John Douglas Simpson, M.a. Simpson & Ben Throckmorton are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
John Douglas Simpson, M.a. Simpson has sinced written about articles on various topics from Yoga. John D. Simpson, M.A. is the co-creator of Ahmbi. Ahmbi designs and produces modern media products for relaxation and easy stress management.