Importance of Meditation

 Importance of Meditation

For years, meditation research has unlocked something new every few months—and the present is no different. From genetic markers of ageing to white matter brain scans, new studies are mapping how and why mindfulness affects the mind and body. These findings confirm long-standing wisdom and surprising new angles, especially around breathwork, time-of-day habits, and brain ageing.

1. Meditation May Slow the Ageing Process

A study published compared long-term Transcendental Meditation (TM) practitioners with non-meditators and found:

  • Reduced expression of ageing-related genes, which helps regulate inflammation and energy use in the body. When it's overactive, it can accelerate ageing by disrupting cellular repair and increasing stress responses.
  • Better cognitive performance in areas that typically decline with age
  • Healthier regulation of the stress-response system.

Together, these findings suggest TM can reduce allostatic load (the cumulative stress burden on the body and brain). The study also points to a potential metabolic shift during and after meditation that may benefit long-term health.

2. Is There a Best Time to Meditate? 

A large-scale behavioural study in Behavioural Sciences analysed meditation app usage from over 4,000 people. The findings –

-People who meditated around the same time every day were more likely to stick with the habit long-term.

-But people with inconsistent timing actually meditated more often on average.

This shows habit formation isn’t one-size-fits-all. Some people benefit from routine. Others are driven by emotion-based cues, like meditating when they feel stressed. Motivation and emotional rewards may play just as important a role as timing.

3. Your Breathing Style May Influence Brain Health

Mindfulness practice with slow breathing significantly reduced plasma amyloid beta, a biomarker linked to Alzheimers risk. Surprisingly, meditation with normal breathing caused Aβ levels to increase.

This adds to the growing evidence that breathwork is a powerful lever in meditation. Slow breathing may enhance the neuroprotective effects of mindfulness, particularly for ageing brains.

4. Meditation Reshapes the Brain’s Emotional Wiring

A study found that Yoga Meditation practitioners had:

  • Stronger white matter connections between the amygdala, anterior insula, and anterior cingulate cortex
  • Enhanced interhemispheric connectivity, especially between emotional regulation centres.

These structural changes suggest that regular meditation may rewire the brain to support emotional resilience and top-down control, traits often reported by long-term meditators.

5. Does More Meditation Always Mean Less Stress? Not Exactly.

Clinical Psychological Science study found mixed results when exploring how meditation app use correlated with psychological distress:

  • The impact of meditation on stress varied depending on how researchers measured both dosage and distress
  • This suggests we need more nuanced tools to track how and why meditation works

It also reinforces that meditation isn’t a panacea. Its benefits often depend on intention, consistency, technique, and personal context.

Meditation Isn’t One-Size-Fits-All

Meditation is a powerful longevity tool. But the newest science reminds us: how, when, and why your meditation can shape your results. Whether you're looking for emotional clarity, cognitive resilience, or long-term brain health, the key is finding a style that works for you.

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