By (author) Anna Lutkajtis
A dive into the less-known and undesirable side-effects of meditation and mindfulness.
Researcher Anna Lutkajtis investigates why these negative ramifications of meditation and mindfulness, which are well-known in spiritual and religious traditions, have been ignored in contemporary secular contexts, such as Western psychology.
Lutkajtis' research reveals that while meditation is commonly portrayed as a practice that is overwhelmingly positive, a growing number of research studies and anecdotal reports suggest that meditation can also have negative effects.
Some meditators believe that these adverse effects are a normal part of the contemplative path and a welcome sign of progress.
For others, such effects are completely unexpected and can be psychologically harmful.In religious traditions like Buddhism, difficulties associated with meditation are acknowledged and are usually viewed as milestones on the path to enlightenment or the result of an unbalanced practice.
In such traditional contexts, meditation teachers are equipped to deal with adverse effects if and when they arise. However, in the modern West, meditation adverse effects have been overlooked, under-researched, and generally misunderstood.
Given the current popularity of meditation, Lutkajtis argues that it is important to understand why meditation adverse effects have been ignored in contemporary secular settings.
By (author) Anna Lutkajtis
Anna Lutkajtis is a postgraduate researcher from Sydney, Australia. Her research focuses on mysticism, the dark night of the soul and the healing potential of altered states of consciousness. She is particularly interested in the relationship between mental illness and spirituality, mystical experiences, and how techniques that were originally designed for contemplative purposes have been integrated into modern Western psychology. Her master's thesis, The Dark Side of Dharma, examined why meditation adverse effects, while well known in spiritual and religious traditions, have been ignored in contemporary secular contexts.
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I highly recommend this book. It is a highly relevant, well-written, enjoyable, scholarly, pithy exploration of the experiences, politics, taboos, cultural issues, traditional frameworks, science, market forces, and contemporary realities of the more challenging potential aspects of the spiritual journey.
It is a crucial counterbalance to the way meditation and spiritual practices are routinely advertised, discussed, portrayed, and taught, namely that they are all about a linear positive growth in happiness, love, and wisdom and couldn't possibly cause adverse effects and events.
Thanks, Aeon Books, for making this important book available! May it raise the level of the conversation.