Oral Presentations and Performances: Session II
Project Type
Presentation
Faculty Mentor’s Full Name
Michael Musick
Faculty Mentor’s Department
Media Fine Arts
Abstract / Artist's Statement
Western clinical and commercial adoption of meditation and mindfulness practices has achieved remarkable reach, offering documented benefits for stress reduction, emotional regulation, and well-being. However, this rapid adoption has outpaced systematic attention to certain questions that traditional contemplative frameworks addressed through established protocols. This paper proposes a three-tier model distinguishing contemplative practice, mindfulness training, and intensive meditation, each with distinct characteristics warranting differentiated guidance. Drawing on comparative analysis of contemplative traditions, the regulatory parallel of clinical hypnosis, contemporary adverse event research, and a first-person case study, the paper identifies areas where current practice might be strengthened. Recent population-representative data indicate that approximately 60% of meditators report at least one adverse effect, with roughly 30% experiencing distressing effects and approximately 9% reporting functional impairment. The paper concludes with implications for clinical practice, research methodology, and training program development.
Category
Life Sciences
The Ethics of Meditation Instruction: Practice, Risk, and Responsibility
UC 333
Western clinical and commercial adoption of meditation and mindfulness practices has achieved remarkable reach, offering documented benefits for stress reduction, emotional regulation, and well-being. However, this rapid adoption has outpaced systematic attention to certain questions that traditional contemplative frameworks addressed through established protocols. This paper proposes a three-tier model distinguishing contemplative practice, mindfulness training, and intensive meditation, each with distinct characteristics warranting differentiated guidance. Drawing on comparative analysis of contemplative traditions, the regulatory parallel of clinical hypnosis, contemporary adverse event research, and a first-person case study, the paper identifies areas where current practice might be strengthened. Recent population-representative data indicate that approximately 60% of meditators report at least one adverse effect, with roughly 30% experiencing distressing effects and approximately 9% reporting functional impairment. The paper concludes with implications for clinical practice, research methodology, and training program development.