A type of meditation that originated in Tibet may help alleviate the pain and discomfort of cancer and cancer treatment, allowing some patients to decrease their medication.
Alejandro Chaoul, Ph.D., adjunct assistant professor in the Integrative Medicine Program at M. D. Anderson, teaches Tibetan meditation at M. D. Anderson's Place ... of wellness .
"Medication and meditation aren't an odd couple," he says. "Actually, they go very well together. Often, the more you meditate, the less medication you might need."
Make a connection
The main objective of Tibetan meditation is to connect to the "heart mind," using breathing and vocalization of simple sounds, Chaoul says.
The heart mind is not the restless mind that jumps from thought to thought. It is the calm, centered mind, also called "home."
Goal is to clear the mind
"In Tibetan meditation, body, energy and mind are thought of as the three doors to the main castle that is home," Chaoul says.
As
the mind settles, obstacles are swept away, leaving the mind clear. The
goal is to bring the clarity achieved through meditation into everyday
life.
Read more Feature Stories from Cancerwise
Related articles: Tibetan Meditation Helps Patients Handle Life's Challenges
Post and Video by Deborah Thomas
Tibetan Meditation takes patients 'home'
- Global Navigation
- About Us
- Locations
- Calendar
- Careers
- How You Can Help
- Children's Art Project
- Directory
- Contact Us
- Sitemap
- Patient and Cancer Information
- myMDAnderson
- Cancer Information
- Patient Information
- Care Centers & Clinics
- Children’s Cancer Hospital
- Services & Amenities
- Clinical Trials
- News and Publications
- Newsroom
- Publications
- Education and Research
- Departments, Programs & Labs
- Research at MD Anderson
- Education & Training
- Resources for Professionals
- For Employees
- Employee Resources
- Doing Business
- Vendors & Suppliers
- Partners & Affiliates
- State of Texas
- State of Texas Home Page
- Statewide Search (TRAIL)
- State Comptroller - Where the Money Goes
- Texas Homeland Security
- The University of Texas System
- Institution Resume
- Legal and Policy
- Legal Statements & Site Policies
- Stay Connected
- Emergency Alerts
- Emergency Alert Information
© 2013 The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center



Leave a comment