Parents Turn to Meditation to Teach Kids to De-Stress

As more adults turn to mindfulness practices like yoga and meditation to combat mounting stress in their own lives (91 percent of Americans experienced stress in the month of March, according to a Huffington Post survey), they’re also experimenting with alternative practices to teach their kids to relax.

Unfortunately, little ones aren’t immune to the damaging effects of stress — but they may benefit from stress-relieving practices meant to calm the mind and release physical tension.

Boston dad Andre Kelly told ABC News that he practices mindfulness meditation with his 10-year-old son Hayden every morning before school. Teaching kids mindfulness can go a long way in helping them boost awareness and control their moods, according to Kelly, who started a meditation program for children, Boston Buddha, to bring mindfulness programs into elementary schools.

“The magic moment where they understand mindfulness is when they can catch themselves not paying attention. That’s their chance to control their impulsivity,” Kelly said. “It helps them stop themselves from doing things like jumping on the couch or whacking their younger brother.”

Mindfulness — the focused awareness on the present moment, generally cultivated through a meditation practice — can help to curb kids’ impulsivity, and research has also shown school mindfulness programs to be effective in reducing symptoms of depression and anxiety among adolescents.

With a growing body of research supporting the health benefits of mindfulness training, for the past few years, advocates have been hoping to see these programs become more prominent in school curricula.

In a 2010 blog, Susan Kaiser Greenland, author of The Mindful Child, argued for nothing short of a “mindful revolution in education,” saying mindfulness programs can aid kids in developing good habits that will help make them happier and more compassionate.

“Mindfulness is a refined process of attention that allows children to see the world through a lens of attention, balance and compassion,” Kaiser Greenland wrote in 2011. “When children learn to look at the world with attention, balance and compassion, they soon learn to be in the world with attention, balance and compassion.”

However, some parents aren’t completely on board yet. An Ohio elementary school’s mindfulness program was recently shut down due to parent complaints about the practice’s ties to Eastern religions.

This week, a lawsuit went to trial over yoga classes at Encinitas Union School District in California. Parents who felt that the schools’ Ashtanga yoga program was inherently religious in nature, are suing the school for civil rights violations…

 Read More: huffingtonpost.com
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