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Deleted member 20978
I'm posting this as a question or for discussion, but so need to give some info up front about my own experiences with Buddhism and meditation. I'm sorry if this is the wrong forum to post in, please mods move if it belongs somewhere else.
There's a lot of stuff on the forums and in literature related to trauma around mindfulness and meditation. I personally associate these things first with Buddhism, which has influenced a lot of people in the mental health world. There's a thread about how mindfulness may be bad or not recommended for people with PTSD.
I started doing yoga and meditating in my 20s, and then was formally introduced to Buddhism in a college class at 26. In my self-practice I had both found huge benefits but also very strange reactions, physical and emotional disturbances. Over the years I would periodically seek out new sanghas (Buddhist communities, like a meditation group) and would often have the same experience -- at first, a lot of useful stuff, and hopefulness that I had found a good community. But then too much coming up, couldn't sit still, then when I could... Well, let me leave it as saying, things would happen for me that I could only find referenced in very esoteric literature but that the local monk or teacher would shrug off or tell me I was overthinking things. I would also end up frequently annoyed at the ways the communities did not seem to get basic principles but instead got caught up in all the trappings (but okay that's a separate topic).
I would often end up wanting to ask, essentially: is there some sort of gentle intro to all this that isn't completely destabilizing? I didn't know I had PTSD, nor did I understand that maybe this mind work was somehow less safe as a result. But I also have so much belief (*bad Buddhist!!*) that all of it -- the dharma, meditation, finding good teachers -- can and does and has helped people heal from real traumas.
So I'm curious what others have experienced with Buddhism or Buddhist meditation. Anything similar? Good, bad? I gave a lot of info up front so I wouldn't be adding it to responses.
There's a lot of stuff on the forums and in literature related to trauma around mindfulness and meditation. I personally associate these things first with Buddhism, which has influenced a lot of people in the mental health world. There's a thread about how mindfulness may be bad or not recommended for people with PTSD.
I started doing yoga and meditating in my 20s, and then was formally introduced to Buddhism in a college class at 26. In my self-practice I had both found huge benefits but also very strange reactions, physical and emotional disturbances. Over the years I would periodically seek out new sanghas (Buddhist communities, like a meditation group) and would often have the same experience -- at first, a lot of useful stuff, and hopefulness that I had found a good community. But then too much coming up, couldn't sit still, then when I could... Well, let me leave it as saying, things would happen for me that I could only find referenced in very esoteric literature but that the local monk or teacher would shrug off or tell me I was overthinking things. I would also end up frequently annoyed at the ways the communities did not seem to get basic principles but instead got caught up in all the trappings (but okay that's a separate topic).
I would often end up wanting to ask, essentially: is there some sort of gentle intro to all this that isn't completely destabilizing? I didn't know I had PTSD, nor did I understand that maybe this mind work was somehow less safe as a result. But I also have so much belief (*bad Buddhist!!*) that all of it -- the dharma, meditation, finding good teachers -- can and does and has helped people heal from real traumas.
So I'm curious what others have experienced with Buddhism or Buddhist meditation. Anything similar? Good, bad? I gave a lot of info up front so I wouldn't be adding it to responses.