Depression
Our positive
living anti-depression program is a hands on approach through
Positive guidance, ayurveda, yoga and meditation therapy with
a goal to eliminate present or future dependency on medication.
It has been so successful that we have helped several people
from eliminating years of dependency on medication!
Each year more than 25 million Americans are treated with
antidepressants. Effective? Yes, but the added stress of side
effects, such as weight gain, lethargy, and sexual dysfunction,
have brought into question whether medication is the only
solution. It may not be. Recent studies have shown evidence
that the practice of yoga—postures, breathing techniques,
meditation—has beneficial effects on the emotional well-being
and mental acuity of depression sufferers. And, best of all,
without the side effects.
A recent, yet small, Scandinavian study conducted by Eric
Hoffman, Ph.D., that measured brain waves before and after
a two-hour Kriya Yoga class found that alpha waves (relaxation)
and theta waves (unconscious memory, dreams, emotions) increased
by 40 percent. This means the brain is more deeply relaxed
after yoga and the subjects have better contact with their
subconscious and emotions. The Scandinavian study is significant
for depression sufferers because after the yoga session, alpha
waves increased in the right temporal lobe.
Previous research has shown that depressed, introverted people
typically have more alpha activity in the left frontal-temporal
region, while optimistic, extroverted people have more alpha
activity on the right. That theta waves also increased supports
the notion that yoga works to alleviate depression not only
by increasing brain chemicals that contribute to a feel-good
response—such as endorphins, enkephalins, and serotonin—but
also by providing greater access to feelings.
Another study, conducted jointly by the Philadelphia-based
Jefferson Medical College and Yoga Research Society, found
that practitioners experienced a significant drop in cortisol
levels after a single yoga class. High cortisol levels are
characteristics of stress and serious depression. A marked
decrease in cortisol and increase in the hormone prolactin—which
is believed by many professionals to be the key in producing
the anti-depressant effect of electroshock therapy—was also
demonstrated in tests conducted by the National Institute
of Mental Health and Neurosciences in India, using the breathing
technique Sudharshan Kriya (SKY). In several major controlled
studies involving adults with major depressive disorder, SKY
produced dramatic relief from depression accompanied by beneficial
changes in brain and hormone function.
But what about long-term effects? So far, most of the longer
studies have been done in the area of mindfulness-based training;
the most recent one was published in the Journal of Consulting
and Clinical Psychology (vol. 68, 2000). Here, mindfulness-based
stress reduction was combined with group cognitive therapy
as an eight-week treatment in the prevention of recurrence
of major depression. In follow-up testing a year later, the
treatment group had a significantly lower relapse rate than
did the control group.
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