Showing posts with label meditation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meditation. Show all posts

Aug 21, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 8/21/2025

Gloriavale Christian School, New Zealand, Communion of Reformed Evangelical ChurchesCommunity of Jesus, Legal, Meditation
"The Children's Commissioner is calling for the urgent closure of Gloriavale Christian School, saying she has zero confidence that students are safe. Children's Commissioner Dr Claire Achmad spoke to Corin Dann."

"If this sounds familiar to you, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is part of the same denomination."

" ... Wilson is a Christian patriarch who teaches, among other puritanical and high-control doctrines regarding family government, that women are to submit to their husbands and shouldn't be allowed to vote. My family was part of Wilson's congregation, the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches (CREC), until 2007, when I narrowly escaped what I now call church-sanctioned domestic abuse. The scene above is an excerpt from my bestselling memoir about that life and escape, "A Well-Trained Wife."

My husband believed Wilson's teaching held the key to the Christian Golden Age, a shining millennium where Christian ethics and white men rule without resistance or room for anyone else. It goes by several names. Dominion theology. Federalism. Calvinism. New Calvinism. Fundamentalism."
"A recent court case has brought serious allegations against the Community of Jesus, a religious group on Cape Cod, from a former child member who claims he was forced into unpaid labor and trafficked. The testimony describes exploitation during his time in the group, framing the Community as an abusive environment masked by religious practice. The case is drawing attention to long-standing concerns about the organization's treatment of members, with court proceedings now putting those claims under public and legal scrutiny."

"Literature evidence documenting the occurrence of relaxation-induced anxiety is reviewed, and several hypothesized mechanisms to explain the phenomenon are discussed. Possible avenues for circumventing the problem in therapy are offered. Finally, a theoretical model is presented wherein the phenomenon is viewed with a broader framework designed to explain the development and maintenance of the more generalized anxiety disorders. That framework emphasizes the emergence of fear of somatic anxiety cues and fear of loss of control from more fundamental interpersonal anxieties."

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


CultMediation.com   

Jul 16, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 7/16/2025

Meditation, Women, 3HO, MLM,  Zizians, Legal

The Guardian: When meditation turns toxic: the woman exposing spiritual sexism
Since suffering a miscarriage at a women's retreat, Tara Brach has tried to reform the world of meditation by arming its practitioners with a single weapon: self-compassion.

"Tara Brach was four months pregnant when she miscarried at a women's retreat in EspaƱola, New Mexico. She was 30, and had spent the last eight years as a devoted member of 3HO, a community promising spiritual awakening.

The loss devastated her. She believed that extensive physical activity in the desert summer heat might have contributed to her miscarriage, so she wrote a note to her spiritual leader, Yogi Bhajan, suggesting they exercise care with pregnant women in the future.

Bhajan waited until the next public gathering to respond. In front of a roomful of her peers and without previous warning, he sternly declared that no summer was hot enough to cause a woman to miscarry. He then called on Brach to stand up and "hear the truth".

She had lost the baby, he said, because she was too worried about her career – and "motherhood is not a profession". Now shouting, he accused her of being a liar; he could tell she was one from her aura. "You wanted to have a child, that is true. Everyone knows that. Otherwise you would not have spread your legs," he spat. "But you got it, and then what?"

He told her she needed to go sit and "work it out".

Brach, in shock from the public humiliation, retreated to a little one-person meditation hut called a gurdwara, where she spent most of the night.

Meditation in her ashram – which she practiced for several hours after meeting the day at 3.30am with a cold shower – focused on cultivating a "state of peacefulness, energy or rapture". This practice usually made her feel less distressed or anxious, if only temporarily, by pulling her out of her feelings.

That night, she decided to try something else and forced herself to sit with her feelings of shame, sorrow and fear, instead of trying to escape them. After several hours of doing this, she asked herself if she was feeling bad because, as Bhajan said, she was bad, or because she had lost a pregnancy and had been abused by her spiritual teacher in front of her community.

That moment changed everything. She started to listen to her body and her intuition, and came to the realization that the world of meditation had a serious problem with sexism and patriarchal practices. So she decided to do something about it – starting with self compassion."
"Sabrina wanted to make some extra cash. Chloe* followed other local mums. Ellen* was looking for love.

All three took part in multi-level marketing (MLM) businesses that they say left them in financial or emotional ruin.

And they're not alone.

There are about 300,000 MLM consultants in Australia, according to Direct Selling Australia (DSA) – about 80 per cent of them women. MLMs are legal in Australia but research shows most consultants will only lose money.

The industry has also been plagued with allegations of "toxic" culture and unethical business practices for years.

Yet more than 90,000 Aussies joined MLMs in 2023 alone, many just trying to make ends meet.

"They prey on vulnerable people, they offer hope in this financial crisis," Ellen told 9news.
"It's all a lie."

What is multi-level marketing?

MLM businesses, also known as direct selling or network marketing, work by recruiting individual salespeople or "consultants".

But they don't receive a salary or wages.
Instead, they make money by selling MLM products, which they must purchase themselves from the business then sell at a markup or through recruitment.

Consultants can make hefty bonuses by recruiting other consultants under them (known as their "downline") to earn a percentage on all those recruits' sales.

This model, popularised by brands like Avon and Tupperware, has been compared to those of illegal pyramid schemes but MLMs are legal under Australian Consumer Law because they offer tangible products.

But fewer than one per cent of MLM consultants make a profit, according to US research, and a slew of MLMs have been accused of unethical sales and recruitment tactics.

Consultants predominantly sell and recruit through their personal networks, targeting friends, family and social media connections to buy or join.

And most MLMs require consultants to make regular purchases and meet sales targets just to stay in the business."
"Three members of a violent cultlike group, including its alleged ringleader, will be tried together in Maryland on charges of trespassing, gun and drug possession after police discovered them camping in box trucks.

The group known as Zizians, which attracted a fringe contingent of computer scientists who connected online over their shared anarchist beliefs, has been linked to six killings spanning three states in recent years."

" ... Jack "Ziz" LaSota and her associates, Michelle Zajko and Daniel Blank, were arrested in February after a man told police that "suspicious" people had parked two box trucks on his property and asked to camp there for a month, according to authorities. The trucks were found in a largely remote wooded area near the Maryland-Pennsylvania line, a mountainous region dotted with small towns.

LaSota, a transgender woman who's regarded as the group leader, entered the courtroom Tuesday, hoisting a brown paper bag filled with documents. Throughout the hearing, LaSota and Zajko repeatedly interjected to address the judge directly, disregarding conventional courtroom practices and occasionally speaking over their attorneys. The regular interruptions added to the already unusual circumstances of the case, which hinged on the findings of federal investigators, despite being prosecuted in state court.

The main issue discussed on Tuesday was the timeline of the proceedings. After the trio was arrested in February on trespassing and illegal gun possession charges, prosecutors filed a superseding indictment last month with new allegations, including LSD possession."

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


Jul 2, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 7/2/2025


Religion, Meditation, Ayurveda, FLDS

"Meditation programs, often led by yoga instructors or trained facilitators. These initiatives are commonly labeled as nonreligious tools to reduce stress, improve focus, and enhance emotional regulation.

Programs like Mindful Schools, Calm Schools, and Quiet Time, the latter promoted by the New Age David Lynch Foundation, have made their way into classrooms across the United States. But what appears to be a neutral wellness intervention is often deeply rooted in Eastern religious traditions, raising concerns about religious freedom, consent, and the psychological safety of children.

One striking example occurred in Chicago, where a Christian student, Mariyah Green, won a $150,000 legal settlement after she said she was coerced into participating in the Quiet Time meditation program. The program involved chanting Sanskrit prayers during a ceremony known as a Puja, an act of worship in Hinduism that includes offerings to deities. Green alleged she wasn't informed of the religious significance and believed participation affected her academic standing and athletic eligibility. Both the Chicago Public Schools and the David Lynch Foundation settled the case, though they denied liability.

In addition to the Mariyah Green lawsuit, other legal battles have highlighted the spiritual nature of school-based mindfulness meditation programs. In Encinitas, California, a group of parents filed a lawsuit in 2013 against the school district for promoting yoga as part of the school day. The parents argued that the program, funded by a $500,000 grant from the K. P. Jois Foundation, a group that teaches Ashtanga Yoga, rooted in Hindu traditions, was inherently religious. Although the court ultimately ruled in favor of the school, the case revealed just how deeply spiritual ideologies can become embedded in the name of wellness. Children were reportedly taught poses named after Hindu deities and encouraged to chant "Om," a sacred syllable in Eastern religions. What the school called physical education, the plaintiffs recognized as indoctrination.

Such programs are spreading across the country. In addition to Mindful Schools, Calm Schools, and Quiet Time programs, many other programs are marketed as secular, science-based tools for improving focus and emotional regulation in schools. Yet a closer look reveals that many of these initiatives often include breathing rituals, body scans, and visualizations, practices directly tied to Hinduism, Buddhism, or New Age belief systems. By avoiding overt spiritual language, they slip past constitutional scrutiny while reshaping the spiritual landscape of the classroom."
"Elissa Wall hasn't seen a cent of the more than $10 million dollars she's owed from a lawsuit against self-described prophet and polygamous cult leader Warren Jeffs.

He doesn't have a bank account, she testified Wednesday afternoon.

Wall is trying to collect money from a land sale conducted, on paper, by his brother Seth Jeffs and his Montana-based Emerald Industries LLC. She's convinced that Seth Jeffs used Warren Jeffs' money to buy 40 acres here in 2018, property that he sold in 2023 for $130,000.

"I'm here to recover the money given to Seth Jeffs," she told the Cook County jury.

According to court documents, Seth Jeffs claims he used his own money to buy the land. He's expected to testify on Thursday.

Warren Jeffs is also named in the lawsuit, but he's currently in a Texas prison where he is serving a life sentence for child sexual assault. He's still in the leadership role he inherited with the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, according to Wall.

The fundamentalist sect broke away from Mormonism after the latter moved away from polygamy."


The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not imply that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly endorse the content. We provide information from multiple perspectives to foster dialogue.


Jun 11, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 6/11/2025 (Legal, Lori Daybell, Meditation, Sudarshan Kriya)



Legal, Lori Daybell, Meditation, Sudarshan Kriya 

Court TV: Jury Seated in Lori Daybell's Cult Mom Conspiracy Trial
Lori Daybell is representing herself at trial in Arizona on charges she conspired in an attempt to kill her ex-nephew-in-law.

"Prosecutors allege Lori and her brother, Alex Cox, planned to kill Brandon Boudreaux in October 2019. Court documents allege Cox drove a Jeep that belonged to Lori's deceased husband, Charles Vallow, from Rexburg, Idaho, to Gilbert, Arizona, then shot at Boudreaux outside his home on Oct. 2. Boudreaux was not injured in the incident.

At the time of the shooting, Boudreaux was recently separated from Lori's niece, Melani Pawlowski. According to police reports, Lori and her fifth husband, Chad Daybell, along with Cox, told Pawlowski that Boudreaux had a "dark" soul when they allegedly began plotting his murder. Boudreaux previously testified about the shooting during Chad's Idaho trial."
"The year was 1971. Aryeh Siegel was a graduate student at Berkeley, and he had just learned about Transcendental Meditation, known as TM. Developed by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, TM involved silently repeating a mantra in one's head as a form of meditation, and it quickly caught on amongst young people and celebrities.

After becoming a TM teacher and a senior member of the organization, Siegel found that it was corrupt and, as he put it, a cult. He also learned that the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson, a huge spiritual leader at the time, was against Jews practicing TM and other forms of meditation with Eastern religion roots, as it was not in line with Jewish law. However, the Rebbe still saw the value in meditation in general, and how it could help people; there just had to be a kosher way to do it.

This was the inspiration for Siegel to write a book. Now, he's released "Kosher Calm: Meditation & Self-Help Tools For Health & Healing Inspired by the Teachings of Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, The Lubavitcher Rebbe" to urge his fellow Jews to meditate while staying true to their values.

"Beginning in 1962, the Rebbe urged Jewish mental health professionals to create kosher meditation protocols, though those protocols never materialized," Siegel told The Journal. "My book is my attempt to finally answer that call. Drawing on my expertise in meditation, I share a simple, yet effective, technique fully aligned with Torah law, along with additional tools for stress relief and building emotional resilience."

"Kosher Calm" includes a curated selection of letters from the Lubavitcher Rebbe's extensive correspondence on the critical need for therapeutic meditation. Chapters cover topics like how to prepare to meditate, managing restlessness, mind-body techniques that help with certain health conditions, and mindfulness.

In the chapter on learning how to meditate, Siegel takes readers step by step; he also posts meditation videos on his YouTube channel for visual help. After instructing readers on how to meditate, he writes, 'During your session, you might have experienced moments of deep peace interspersed with periods of mental activity. Some people find that their awareness stays on the surface, dwelling on everyday thoughts. Others drift between states of calm and mental chatter. Whatever you experienced is exactly what needed to happen.'"
"Ajit Vadakayil, a retired Indian Merchant Navy captain and expert in maritime physiology, has raised red flags about Sudarshan Kriya — a core breathing practice taught in the Happiness Program of the Art of Living (AOL) foundation.

Citing his professional background in oxygen management and respiratory safety protocols, Vadakayil cautions that fast, forceful, or rapid breathing techniques may lead to hyperventilation and pose serious long-term health risks. He questions the widespread promotion of such practices, including Sudarshan Kriya, warning they may do more harm than good to some people in the long term."

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CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

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Jun 8, 2025

Rabbi Aryeh Siegel on His Halachic Meditation Book, ‘Kosher Calm’

Kylie Ora Lobell
Jewish Journal
June 5, 2025

The year was 1971. Aryeh Siegel was a graduate student at Berkeley, and he had just learned about Transcendental Meditation, known as TM. Developed by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, TM involved silently repeating a mantra in one’s head as a form of meditation, and it quickly caught on amongst young people and celebrities. 

After becoming a TM teacher and a senior member of the organization, Siegel found that it was corrupt and, as he put it, a cult. He also learned that the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson, a huge spiritual leader at the time, was against Jews practicing TM and other forms of meditation with Eastern religion roots, as it was not in line with Jewish law. However, the Rebbe still saw the value in meditation in general, and how it could help people; there just had to be a kosher way to do it.

This was the inspiration for Siegel to write a book. Now, he’s released “Kosher Calm: Meditation & Self-Help Tools For Health & Healing Inspired by the Teachings of Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, The Lubavitcher Rebbe” to urge his fellow Jews to meditate while staying true to their values.

“Beginning in 1962, the Rebbe urged Jewish mental health professionals to create kosher meditation protocols, though those protocols never materialized,” Siegel told The Journal. “My book is my attempt to finally answer that call. Drawing on my expertise in meditation, I share a simple, yet effective, technique fully aligned with Torah law, along with additional tools for stress relief and building emotional resilience.”

“Kosher Calm” includes a curated selection of letters from the Lubavitcher Rebbe’s extensive correspondence on the critical need for therapeutic meditation. Chapters cover topics like how to prepare to meditate, managing restlessness, mind-body techniques that help with certain health conditions, and mindfulness. 

In the chapter on learning how to meditate, Siegel takes readers step by step; he also posts meditation videos on his YouTube channel for visual help. After instructing readers on how to meditate, he writes, “During your session, you might have experienced moments of deep peace interspersed with periods of mental activity. Some people find that their awareness stays on the surface, dwelling on everyday thoughts. Others drift between states of calm and mental chatter. Whatever you experienced is exactly what needed to happen.”

According to Siegel, who lives in Los Angeles, meditation can not only help relieve stress but also help with preventing physical ailments. “When you’re stressed, your body’s ‘fight-or-flight’ system kicks in, releasing hormones like adrenaline and cortisol,” Siegel said. “While this helps in emergencies, constant modern stressors mean your body rarely gets a break. Chronic stress can cause health issues, weaken your immune system, disrupt sleep, impair memory, and cloud decision-making. It can even push people toward unhealthy habits. Since most stressors are beyond your control, meditation offers a way to break the stress cycle, calm your mind, and protect your health.”

So, what makes meditation kosher? Siegel said it must be strictly nonidolatrous, “free of Hindu mantras, foreign rituals, or religious symbols, any of which could potentially violate avodah zarah (prohibitions against idolatrous practices).” For example, to make meditation kosher, you could focus on a Hebrew word and approach meditation as a method for healing, not for worship. 

“This therapeutic approach differs from traditional Jewish spiritual practices such as hisbonenus (contemplation) or hitbodedut (secluded prayer),” said Siegel. “Rather than serving as a path to spiritual insight, the Rebbe viewed kosher meditation as designed to restore psychological balance.”

For Siegel, meditation was life-changing. He found it at a time when he was a stressed-out grad student with a new baby, sleepless nights, academic deadlines, and financial pressures. 

“That’s when meditation entered my life,” he said. “It wasn’t just a technique; it felt like a lifeline. For the first time, I experienced a sense of temporary calm that sometimes comes from fixing something, but from within.”

Siegel continued, “Meditation gave me a quiet space where I could pause, reset resulting in more clarity and resilience. It didn’t solve all my problems, but it changed how I faced them, and that, in a very real way, changed my life.”

https://koshercalm.org/

Kosher Calm” is available on Amazon.

https://jewishjournal.com/culture/arts/books/381930/rabbi-aryeh-siegel-on-his-halachic-meditation-book-kosher-calm/

Jun 5, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 6/5/2025 (Legal, Charles Manson, Meditation, Mindfulness, OneTaste)

"Patricia Krenwinkel, a former follower of cult leader Charles Manson who was convicted for her role in the murders of seven people during a two-day killing spree across Los Angeles in 1969, has been recommended for parole.

It's the 16th time Krenwinkel has appeared before the parole board panel, and the second time parole has been recommended — the first being in 2022, before the decision was overturned by California Governor Gavin Newsom.

Krenwinkel, 77, is California's longest-serving female prisoner, having originally been sentenced to death in 1971 for her role in the brutal "Helter Skelter" killings, which shocked America and shone a light on the dark side of 1960s hippie counterculture.

Her sentence was commuted to life with the possibility of parole in 1972, when the state's Supreme Court ruled the death penalty was unconstitutional."

Science Alert: Meditation And Mindfulness Have a Dark Side We Often Overlook
" ... In the past eight years there has been a surge of scientific research in this area. These studies show that adverse effects are not rare.

A 2022 study, using a sample of 953 people in the US who meditated regularly, showed that over 10 percent of participants experienced adverse effects which had a significant negative impact on their everyday life and lasted for at least one month.

According to a review of over 40 years of research that was published in 2020, the most common adverse effects are anxiety and depression. These are followed by psychotic or delusional symptoms, dissociation or depersonalisation, and fear or terror."

Courthouse News Service: Government wraps 'sex cult' case in Brooklyn
"After four weeks of testimony, federal prosecutors rested their case Monday against two former leaders of OneTaste, a Bay Area company that marketed sex acts as meditation. Jurors must now decide whether the group's tactics crossed the line into forced labor conspiracy.

The company's founder, Nicole Daedone, 57, and former head of sales, Rachel Cherwitz, 44, each face one count that carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

OneTaste's core product was "orgasmic meditation" or OM, pronounced like the sacred sound and spiritual symbol commonly invoked in yoga and meditation. Despite its branding, "OMing" is a far cry from those ancient practices; instead, it's a 15-minute partnered practice that involves stroking a woman's genitals — or in the case of "male OMing," giving a man a hand job.

Trial witnesses described an environment of high control with cruel and abusive managers who preached women's empowerment. Still, they ordered them to sexually serve men, via the "OM" practice and otherwise, particularly potential investors and high-paying clients.

Founded in San Francisco in 2004, the company established branches in New York City, London, Austin, Texas, and Boulder, Colorado, and later sold the city branches to franchisees. Daedone sold her shares in the business for $12 million in 2017. Her co-founder, Rob Kandell, an unindicted conspirator who testified under subpoena with government immunity, was bought out for $1.5 million three years earlier."



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Mar 28, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 3/28/2025 (Mindfulness, Event, Meditation, Research)


Mindfulness, Event, Meditation, Research

BDG: Metta's Gardening Leave
" ... I kept asking myself why information on the adverse effects of meditation was little known or discussed in meditation circles. With each new interview I listened to, it dawned on me that such transparency would probably be bad for the mindfulness "brand." It was oddly comforting to discover that the "fight to the death" manner in which I was interrogated and then abruptly asked to leave the center practically had a playbook. It also gave me new compassion that what had appeared as service-to-self indifference in those around me was possibly due to dissociation or even addiction to meditation.

Dr. Willoughby Britton's name came up again and again in these interviews, as well as that of Cheetah House, the non-profit organization she had founded to support people struggling with the adverse effects of meditation. Far from being anti-meditation, her work and interviews emphasize informed consent, and that the right meditation technique is a tool for the individual rather than a cure-all to be overused and even weaponized. It is a given that any medication can have side effects, yet somehow this is often ignored in the case of meditation. One person's medicine can be another's poison. These ancient practices were not designed with the modern-day aim of relaxation in mind.

These findings confirmed and challenged my thinking and understanding of my own meditation practice and experiences, and it was hardly surprising to hear Dr. Britton share some of the vicious backlash that she's endured as a consequence—to the point of building herself an off-grid cabin in the woods of Vermont to retreat to as needed.

The biggest "aha!" was hearing Dr. Britton liken choosing a meditation practice to choosing a life partner, and the importance of being aware that you both will change with time. Many people that Cheetah House supports had entered a meditation tradition for specific reasons, only to find that these traditions had slowly morphed over time to fit the agenda of a teacher, center, or sangha. Anyone who struggled with their practice or questioned this drift was either told to meditate more or flat-out dismissed."

Cheetah House: Does mindfulness suit all kinds of minds?
"An exploration of neurodiversity and the evidence on mindfulness for autistic adults.

Speaker Bio: Dr. Kelly Birtwell is a counsellor and mindfulness teacher, and currently works as a Research Fellow in the Centre for Primary Care & Health Services Research at the University of Manchester, UK. Her research focuses on two main areas: mindfulness for underserved groups, and the health and wellbeing of autistic adults.

Learning objectives:
• Participants will gain a general understanding of neurodiversity, and the evidence on mindfulness-based interventions for autistic adults.
• Participants will acquire principles and concepts that can be applied to their professional practice.
• Participants will gain critical thinking and appraisal skills by learning to assess the strengths and limitations of the research on mindfulness for autistic adults.

Abstract: Neurodiversity refers to the natural variation in the way that human minds work. However, we live in a world that is more often than not designed to suit the average or 'neurotypical' mind. Those of us who diverge from this culturally constructed norm are 'neurodivergent'. This includes people who are dyslexic, ADHD, autistic, and have synaesthesia, among many other types of neurodivergence. Mindfulness is widely used across the general population, yet does it suit those of us with different kinds of minds, and autistic individuals in particular? This talk will explore neurodiversity, the impact of language and terminology on mindfulness course participants, and what it means to be autistic, including masking and the double empathy problem. Dr. Birtwell will present a critical overview of the research on mindfulness for autistic adults, and adaptations that can be made to mindfulness-based interventions to improve their accessibility for autistic individuals."

Psyche: In therapy or meditation, is it normal to feel worse at first?
" ... In a recent analysis of nearly 900 meditators, my colleagues and I found that 58 per cent had experienced an unexpected, negative event that they attributed to the practice. Among the most common of these adverse effects were the recurrence of distressing thoughts or images, anxiety, bodily tension or pressure, exhaustion or fatigue, and feeling socially disconnected. Estimates of adverse effects in psychotherapy are similar in type and occurrence. The recurrence of unpleasant memories is the most common. Sleep problems and feeling more stressed, worried or generally unpleasant are also relatively frequent. Together, these findings underscore that many people experience at least temporary negative effects from undertakings that are fundamentally intended to provide help."

The Guardian: Dining across the divide: 'She casts meditation as a cult. I don't think retreats mean harm'
They bonded over studying languages and becoming teachers. Would they see eye to eye on meditating?

" ... Lizzie  [said] I was encouraged to get into meditation at university, which provided mindfulness programmes. Through those, I went on a retreat, which prompted some significant problems. I've had harrowing experiences, with very negative, long-lasting impacts. I'd say they were some of the worst experiences that can be had with meditation. I was involved with it for about four years; it was another two before I felt normal again. A certain percentage of people are wired in a certain way, and will not respond well – how do we safeguard young people from that possibility? Data suggests we should have increased concerns about mindfulness interventions, whether they're with adults or children. Obviously the risks are greater with intensive retreats, but courses are still a cause for concern."

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CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

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Thanks,


Ashlen Hilliard (ashlen.hilliard.wordpress@gmail.com)

Joe Kelly (joekelly411@gmail.com)

Patrick Ryan (pryan19147@gmail.com)


Feb 16, 2025

Meditation And Mindfulness Can Have a Dark Side That We Don't Talk About

Miguel Farias
The Conversation
February 16, 2025

Since mindfulness is something you can practice at home for free, it often sounds like the perfect tonic for stress and mental health issues.

Mindfulness is a type of Buddhist-based meditation in which you focus on being aware of what you're sensing, thinking, and feeling in the present moment.

The first recorded evidence for this, found in India, is over 1,500 years old. The Dharmatrāta Meditation Scripture, written by a community of Buddhists, describes various practices and includes reports of symptoms of depression and anxiety that can occur after meditation.

It also details cognitive anomalies associated with episodes of psychosis, dissociation, and depersonalisation (when people feel the world is "unreal").

In the past eight years there has been a surge of scientific research in this area. These studies show that adverse effects are not rare.

A 2022 study, using a sample of 953 people in the US who meditated regularly, showed that over 10 percent of participants experienced adverse effects which had a significant negative impact on their everyday life and lasted for at least one month.

According to a review of over 40 years of research that was published in 2020, the most common adverse effects are anxiety and depression. These are followed by psychotic or delusional symptoms, dissociation or depersonalisation, and fear or terror.

Research also found that adverse effects can happen to people without previous mental health problems, to those who have only had a moderate exposure to meditation and they can lead to long-lasting symptoms.

The western world has also had evidence about these adverse effects for a long time.

In 1976, Arnold Lazarus, a key figure in the cognitive-behavioural science movement, said that meditation, when used indiscriminately, could induce "serious psychiatric problems such as depression, agitation, and even schizophrenic decompensation".

There is evidence that mindfulness can benefit people's wellbeing. The problem is that mindfulness coaches, videos, apps and books rarely warn people about the potential adverse effects.

Professor of management and ordained Buddhist teacher Ronald Purser wrote in his 2023 book McMindfulness that mindfulness has become a kind of "capitalist spirituality".

In the US alone, meditation is worth US$2.2 billion (£1.7 billion). And the senior figures in the mindfulness industry should be aware of the problems with meditation.

Jon Kabat-Zinn, a key figure behind the mindfulness movement, admitted in a 2017 interview with the Guardian that "90 percent of the research [into the positive impacts] is subpar".

In his foreword to the 2015 UK Mindfulness All-Party Parliamentary Report, Jon Kabat-Zinn suggests that mindfulness meditation can eventually transform "who we are as human beings and individual citizens, as communities and societies, as nations, and as a species".

This religious-like enthusiasm for the power of mindfulness to change not only individual people but the course of humanity is common among advocates. Even many atheists and agnostics who practice mindfulness believe that this practice has the power to increase peace and compassion in the world.

Media discussion of mindfulness has also been somewhat imbalanced.

In 2015, my book with clinical psychologist Catherine Wikholm, Buddha Pill, included a chapter summarising the research on meditation adverse effects. It was widely disseminated by the media, including a New Scientist article, and a BBC Radio 4 documentary.

But there was little media coverage in 2022 of the most expensive study in the history of meditation science (over US$8 million funded by research charity the Wellcome Trust).

The study tested more than 8,000 children (aged 11-14) across 84 schools in the UK from 2016 to 2018. Its results showed that mindfulness failed to improve the mental wellbeing of children compared to a control group, and may even have had detrimental effects on those who were at risk of mental health problems.

Ethical implications
Is it ethical to sell mindfulness apps, teach people meditation classes, or even use mindfulness in clinical practice without mentioning its adverse effects? Given the evidence of how varied and common these effects are, the answer should be no.

However, many meditation and mindfulness instructors believe that these practices can only do good and don't know about the potential for adverse effects.

The most common account I hear from people who have suffered adverse meditation effects is that the teachers don't believe them. They're usually told to just keep meditating and it will go away.

Research about how to safely practice meditation has only recently begun, which means there isn't yet clear advice to give people. There is a wider problem in that meditation deals with unusual states of consciousness and we don't have psychological theories of mind to help us understand these states.

But there are resources people can use to learn about these adverse effects. These include websites produced by meditators who experienced serious adverse effects and academic handbooks with dedicated sections to this topic.

In the US there is a clinical service dedicated to people who have experienced acute and long term problems, led by a mindfulness researcher.

For now, if meditation is to be used as a wellbeing or therapeutic tool, the public needs to be informed about its potential for harm.The Conversation

Miguel Farias, Associate Professor in Experimental Psychology, Coventry University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

An earlier version of this article was published in July 2024.

https://www.sciencealert.com/meditation-and-mindfulness-can-have-a-dark-side-that-we-dont-talk-about

May 16, 2024

The other effects of meditation



Norma Silva Multitango
March 23, 2024

Meditation offers numerous benefits, effortlessly enhancing many lives. Yet, this isn't the whole story. Join us as we delve into ‘The other effects of meditation’.

Feb 1, 2024

CultNEWS101 Articles: 2/1/2024 (Legal, Kenya, Good News International Church, Meditation, Wellness Programs, Adnan Oktar, Turkey, Sexual Abuse, IndoctriNation Podcast, MindShift Podcast)

Legal, Kenya, Good News International Church, Meditation, Wellness Programs, Adnan Oktar, Turkey, Sexual Abuse, IndoctriNation Podcast, MindShift Podcast

The Guardian: Kenya death cult leader charged after hundreds found dead in forest
"A Kenyan court has charged a cult leader and dozens of suspected accomplices with manslaughter over the deaths of more than 200 people.

Self-proclaimed pastor Paul Nthenge Mackenzie and 94 other suspects, including his wife, pleaded not guilty to 238 counts of manslaughter, according to court documents seen by AFP.

Mackenzie, who was last week also charged with terrorism, is alleged to have incited his acolytes to starve to death in order to "meet Jesus" in a case that provoked horror across the world.

He was arrested last April after bodies were discovered in the Shakahola forest near the Indian Ocean. Autopsies revealed that the majority of the 429 victims had died of hunger. Others, including children, appeared to have been strangled, beaten or suffocated.

The 238 victims mentioned in Tuesday's hearing were killed between January 2021 and September 2023 at Shakahola, court documents said."

Financial Post: Work wellness programs have zero mental health benefits, study says
"Employers sinking money into workplace wellness programs such as mindfulness training, on-site massages and meditation apps might want to think again because new research suggests the programs do absolutely nothing to buoy mental health.

People who take part in well-being programs aimed at teaching them how to firm up their mental health get zero benefits when compared to employees who don't participate, according to an Oxford University study of more than 46,000 British employees at over 200 companies. The research, released Jan. 10, examined how workers' well-being fared after participating — or not — in programs ranging from volunteering and charity work to mindfulness classes to apps promoting well-being and healthy sleep habits.

Oxford researcher William Fleming then compiled data from employees across a wide range of industries and positions who had anonymously answered survey questions about their stress levels, job satisfaction and sense of belonging, among other indicators. "Across multiple subjective well-being indicators, participants appear no better off," Fleming said in the report. "Results show that those who participate in individual-level interventions have the same levels of mental well-being as those who do not."

The findings are the exact opposite of a narrative that has helped fuel the adoption of workplace wellness initiatives in the United Kingdom, Canada and beyond. "It's a fairly controversial finding, that these very popular programs were not effective," Fleming said in the New York Times."

Duvar English: Turkish court reveals former justice minister linked to notorious cult leader Adnan Oktar
"Turkish court documents revealed that 49 high judiciary members, including a former justice minister, were linked to Islamic televangelist cult leader Adnan Oktar, according to the reporting of KRT TV.

The judicial process initiated after the 2018 operation against the group referred to by the government as the "Adnan Oktar Armed Crime Organization" has came to an end.

The Chief Public Prosecutor's Office of the Court of Cassation has requested the approval of the sentences handed down by the local court in the case involving 215 defendants.

The court also examined the thousands of pages of documents seized during the operation in 2018. It determined that the members of the cult especially profiled members of the higher judiciary."

" ... The 66-year-old Oktar who owned a TV channel was arrested in 2018 along with 200 collaborators, following allegations of sexual abuse and kidnapping of minors.

He was also convicted of sexual abuse of minors, holding a person against their will, torture, interruption of the right to education, recording personal data, and threatening someone."

Crossover Episode Part 2: An Interview with Rachel Bernstein of the IndoctriNation PodcastMindShift Podcast
This episode marks now the second time I've done a crossover episode with Rachel Bernstein, host of the fantastic IndoctriNation podcast.

As a therapist, cult expert, and specialist in dealing with folks who suffer from religious trauma syndrome, Rachel is a wealth of knowledge when it comes to dealing with a wide variety of issues caused by cults, fundamentalist religions, and other high-control groups.

If you suffer from RTS, or have come out of a controlling religious or group background, you'll benefit from this discussion. And don't forget to head over to the IndoctriNation podcast platform to catch Part 1, Rachel's interview with [Clint].

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