The first time Marcelle Hutchins sat down to meditate, she put on a guided session, relaxed her shoulders and tried to close her eyes. She lasted two minutes.
''I had a deadline, and I thought, 'I don't know if I can sit still this long,''' said Hutchins, who was working as a radio journalist.
At the urging of her father, a longtime practitioner, she tried again and managed to finish a 10-minute video on her third attempt. ''I remember feeling this sense of joy and relaxation,'' she said. ''I used to be that person who said, ‘I can't meditate.'''
Hutchins has since become a certified meditation teacher — and serves as an example that busy, restless people who try once should try again. Research shows a daily meditation practice can reduce anxiety, improve overall health and increase social connections, among other benefits.
The trick is to get over that initial barrier. Experts say it's more achievable when you throw common misconceptions out the window. For instance, many people try meditation only once because they feel they're doing it wrong or that they can't turn off their brain.
That's not the point, says Tara Brach, who holds a doctorate in psychology and has trained more than 7,000 people to be meditation teachers.
''It's not about stopping thoughts. The mind generates thoughts the way body creates enzymes,'' she said. ''It's about being able to get larger than the thoughts and witness them.''
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