Transcendental Meditation is a secretive mantra meditation movement founded by an indian yogi/guru. Most research on meditation benefits is on TM. To learn it, one has to pay for and participate in a course led by a certified TM teacher.

Does anybody here have had experience with TM, participated in a course and received a mantra chosen by their teacher?

Do you really need a teacher to learn it? Is the course worth it or just profiteering? Anything else one should know before going to a course themselves?

  • Arxir@lemmy.worldOP
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    1 year ago

    it’s not better or worse than others

    If you want to learn meditation, there are sooo many resources online and in books. Why not use one of those?

    I was just curious, because TM is approved by artists like Scorcese, Lynch and Eastwood. There are also studies that claim its benefits are higher than those of other meditation types. I really just want to get a grasp on what this is about as I am atm greatly expanding my meditation practices and am trying out other meditation techniques.

    • weshgo@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      the scientology is approved by people like Tom Cruise. Might be better avoiding though, even if Mission Impossible is enjoyable.

      • Arxir@lemmy.worldOP
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        1 year ago

        Fair point! Didn’t notice my bias there. Guess there is a scheme to fall for for everyone.

    • redballooon@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      So, I was curious about the “studies” part of your comment, and did some randomly chosen reading.

      On the TM website they feature prominently: “Hypertension, June 2013: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association concluded that the TM technique is the only meditation practice that has been shown to lower blood pressure”

      I wanted to see how that claim holds up when looking at more details.

      In a meta analysis that includes those claims, the summary about blood pressure is:

      “Magnitude of reductions of systolic blood pressure varies widely.

      Study limitations including the methods of blood pressure measurements and bias in data ascertainment, high dropout rates, and different populations studied”

      In the detailed section about meditation practice and blood pressure, two things become apparent: first, the data quality is bad. That’s usually an indicator for suspicion. Chances are high the data was milked to support a biased claim. Second, another, earlier study than that citation by TM concluded that both Zen meditation and TM lower blood pressure.

      Now, given that zen meditation is much much closer to Vipassana than TM, and there is no suggested mechanism of how meditation is supposed to lower blood pressure and the effect is still rather small in all studies (each with their own bad data quality), that raises some eyebrows.

      Let’s remember that all of these studies were made during the time frame of the replication crisis.

      In effect, I’m still suspicious about TM as a whole. They have a product that they’re selling, and they have a marketing team. For me, that doesn’t sit right in the space of meditation, even more so because cheap and powerful alternatives are plentiful.

      But to each their own. If spiritually and money go well together for you, and you have the spare money to do it, go for it.