Transcendental Meditation Northern Ireland

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COMING SOON PETERS HILL QUARTER, BELFAST

The creation of eco-progressive working and living spaces that transcend traditional approaches to the built environment, teaching people how to engage with their surroundings, promote the balance of body and mind, optimize human achievement and treat the planet with respect.  Learning & Visitor Centre, performing arts and screen acting school, studios, shops, offices and apartments.  Coming soon to Peters Hill Quarter, Belfast .  Rental opportunities available. contact for details

 

By Russell Simmons



I have been a meditator for about 12 years. It has given me energy, strength, health, wisdom, and access to my own inner stillness, inner silence, inner bliss. It is my connection to myself; it is my connection to the universe.

About two years ago, I visited a school in South Africa where all the students practiced one particular form of meditation—Transcendental Meditation (TM). They were bright, alert, energized with life. A short while later I returned to New York and I met a long-time TM teacher, Bob Roth, who is a national director of the David Lynch Foundation, a nonprofit organization that has provided scholarships for over 100,000 at-risk school children (and at-risk teens and adults and elderly people) to learn to meditate.

I always thought of meditation as a way to trick the mind to be still. Yogis know that when the mind is still, when the noise is gone, then the person is in total bliss, total happiness. I had heard a lot about Transcendental Meditation but had never learned it.

Bob talked about how TM worked. He described the mind as like an ocean, with waves on the surface (thoughts) and silence at its depths. He said that many meditations try to impose an artificial calm on the surface of the mind while this meditation accepted thoughts but simply allowed the thinking mind to effortlessly settle down and experience the transcendent—the field of silence within.

Decades of research conducted at medical schools like Harvard and Stanford, and funded with tens of millions of dollars by the National Institutes of Health showed TM developed the brain and increased creativity and intelligence, and reduced stress, anxiety, depression and high blood pressure. (Some insurance companies even reimburse for TM instruction if you have high blood pressure.) Research on meditating students showed rising grades and reduced suspensions and expulsions, fewer dropouts, and higher graduation rates.

 

Even though I had been meditating in different ways for over 10 years, I asked Bob to teach me. I have now been doing TM for two years. It has changed my experiences in meditation and therefore my experiences in life.

I call Bob "the monk.” He lives down the street from me and we have become good friends. We meditate together at my home whenever we are both in the city. Bob told me some time ago about the work of the David Lynch Foundation with at-risk young people fighting addiction, American Indians with high suicide rates and type-2 diabetes, veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan with PTSD, and prison inmates and guards in pressure-cookers behind thick walls. He also told me about how meditation-based executive training and wellness programs are being used in large companies and small businesses.

I support the Lynch Foundation. I am now on the Foundation board of advisors, and I am part of the process of bringing meditation to people in need.

Why am I doing this? Because it is something I believe in. Are there critics? No, not really, not any more. The science is irrefutable (more than 340 studies published in top scientific journals). And if there are critics, they are not with the National Institutes of Health or the American Medical Association or the American Heart Association, which have continued to fund and/or publish TM research for decades. If any, these people exist noisily on the fringes of the web world (you know, the “birther” types).

Several months ago, I was invited to speak on TM at the Doe Fund, probably the most successful program in the nation to help homeless men re-enter society. The Doe Fund, founded and run by George and Harriet McDonald, provides educational and vocational training for 1000 men at in-residence facilities throughout the five boroughs. I spoke to about 200 men at the facility in Harlem.

One of the most valuable benefits of the Transcendental Meditation

technique is becoming more creative—becoming more innovative and

adaptable in the midst of life’s pressures and challenges.
David Lynch

Award winning filmmaker David Lynch recently

toured U.S.college campuses with

world-renowned quantum

physicistJohn Hagelin and brain researcher

Fred Travis to presenthow the TM

technique promotes extraordinary creativity

and total brain functioning—higher states of

consciousness.
You can view their compelling presentation at:

http://www.uwtv.org/programs/displayevent.aspx?rID=4169

Better than watching

their talks, however, is

improvingyour own

brain’s orderly

functioning  by practicing

the Transcendental

Meditation technique.

 




 

 

Paul you traveled to India to study with Maharishi in 1968.

What was the single most important idea or experience or lesson

you gained while you were there?

Paul: Getting a mantra from Maharishi and then learning how to use it.

The rest is up to your self. So actually, being given a mantra and being

taughtwhat to do with it was the most important aspect of the

trip—the rest wasgreat fun.

 

What are your recollections of Maharishi?

How would you describe him?

Paul: He was a very spiritual and intelligent man, but what made him

so endearingto me was his infectious sense of humor.

 

Why do you think it is valuable for young people to meditate?

What do you think they gain from the experience?

Paul: I think meditation offers a moment in your day to be at peace with

yourself and therefore the universe, which once was thought of as a slightly

silly hippie idea, but now it’s much more accepted and even fits with some

of the most advanced scientific thinking.

 

Any particular message you would like to share with your fans?

Paul: Thanks for continuing to bother to listen to me! I wish you peace, love,

and laughter.

 

DAVID LYNCH FOUNDATION FOR STRESS FREE SCHOOLS

 

Hollywood Movie Maker

David Lynch

 

David said: "Every child should have one class

period a day to dive within himself and experience

the field of silence - bliss - the enormous

reservoir of energy and intelligence that is deep

within all of us."

 

Stress Free Schools News

Click here to watch a video of the Summit on

Childrens Health and Education which was held in

New York on the 16th October 2008

and chaired by Dr David Lynch: Film Maker.