Meditation vs Mindfulness
Meditation and yoga have never been a part of my daily routine. Many of my family and friends, in college and in my adult life, have mentioned it would be something that I would enjoy. I have tried both for a short period and I just never got into it.
In college, our team was required to attend 6 am bikram yoga (hot yoga) sessions. While I was good at yoga, I never could get passed that smell. Meditation is the awareness of “nothing.” I typically would just fall asleep during meditation sessions.
Last week during my reading time, I was introduced to something else: Mindfulness.
Up until last week, I didn’t know mindfulness was a thing, so I went on a small research expedition to understand what the difference is between meditation and mindfulness.
Meditation
Meditation, from my understanding, is meant for calming your thoughts, mind, and anxiety. There are many ways to practice meditation. I have a listed a few below:
- Breath-awareness meditation
- Manta-based meditation
- Visualization meditation
- Guided meditation
The mental health benefits of meditation include increasing your calmness, concentration and emotional balance. This practice can also help with the practice of negative emotions and gain new perspectives around stressful situations.
These are not the only benefits to practicing meditation and the above are not the only forms of meditation. If meditation sounds like something you would enjoy, research and try various types of meditation until you find what works best for you.
Mindfulness
Mindfulness is close to meditation with some slight differences. Mindfulness is the awareness of the moment. You are intentionally becoming aware (being actively mindful) of your thoughts, feelings, behaviors and movements. You are “… developing an acute awareness of what is happening within the moment without forming judgment.” – Amy Morin. The best think about mindfulness is it can literally be practiced anywhere at any time.
Exercises that help you practice mindfulness:
- Scan your body: slowly pay attention to each part of your body, specifically looking for areas of your body that may be tense. Practice letting go of that tension
- Count to ten: close your eyes and slowly count to 10. If your mind drifts, refocus your attention back to counting.
- Consciously observe: this is NOT people watching and remember mindfulness passes no judgment. (although when I first read about this type of mindfulness that is what I instantly thought about). Find an everyday object (pen, cup, notebook, etc). Use all of your senses to observe the object. Focus on nothing except the object you selected.
- 5 Senses Practice: after completing a simple task, tune into your five senses. For each sense, name 2-3 examples of things you notice.
The mental health benefits of practicing mindfulness are around being in the moment. Too many times we have so many thoughts and things we need to do flowing through our brain at once. At the rate this happens makes us forget to be in the moment and that causes anxiety. Anxiety can lead to panic attacks and/or not sleeping and/or stress and so on and so forth.
Another mental health benefit of practicing mindfulness is recognizing in the moment how we feel, how we are acting/talking (tone), and what we are saying. This specific area has been and continues to be a major growth area for me. When we are mindful of ourselves, especially in the moment, we can instantly make adjustments that can yield appreciably better outcomes and results.
Meditation, yoga, mindfulness are all great options when it comes to quieting the mind. The goal is to find what works best for you and begin to incorporate that into your daily routine. The benefits of doing one, or any, of these will be tremendous.
- Do you practice meditation, yoga, and/or mindfulness?
- What apps/YouTube videos do you use for these?
- How have you seen the practice of these benefit you?
Share your answers/thoughts in the comments section below









