Stress is unavoidable and the point of stress reduction and stress management programs is not to eliminate stress from our lives entirely as life is always full of challenges. One of the most common reasons for people wanting to learn meditation is to reduce stress. A considerable amount of research has shown that meditation has benefits on mental health, including a reduction in proneness to depression, an increase in emotional positivity, and an increased ability to deal with life’s inevitable stresses.
Meditation, however, not only involves relaxation but also promotes mindfulness, which helps the stress-sufferer to recognize unhelpful patterns of thought that give rise to the stress response, and also involves the active cultivation of positive mental states such as loving-kindness, compassion, patience, and energy.
The most effective coping strategies are therefore cultivating loving-kindness, or being nonjudgmental, compassionate, kind to oneself and others; right understanding, or trying to see the world as it truly is; and reflecting on impermanence, or the notion that all things (including our problems) pass. When we reflect on all these and detached the things that worry us, we will understand that stress is created by us.
f there is a remedy, then what is the use of frustration?
If there is no remedy, then what benefit is frustration?