BAGHDAD,
Aug. 2010 –
U.S. Division
Center
officials here
are offering
soldiers an
ancient
alternative to
traditional
methods of
coping with
deployment
stress.
“Mindfulness”
is an option
soldiers can
use to deal
with
deployment
stress.
|

Army
Maj.
Victor
Won
and
Army
Lt.
Col.
Vincent
Barnhart
meditate
during
a
15-minute
“mindfulness”
session
at
U.S.
Division
Center
headquarters
in
Baghdad,
Aug.
2,
2010.
U.S.
Army
photo
by
Spc.
Daniel
Schneider
(Click
photo
for
screen-resolution
image);high-resolution
image
available.
|
|
“Mindfulness
means paying
attention in a
particular way
or maintaining
the awareness
on purpose, in
the present
moment,”
according to
the book
“Wherever
You Go, There
You Are,” by
Jon Kabat-Zinn.
Mindfulness
is a simple
but ancient
approach to
living, which
Western
medicine has
begun to
recognize as a
powerful tool
for dealing
with stress,
illness and
other medical
or
psychological
conditions,
and it can
help soldiers
in any
circumstance,
said Army Maj.
Victor Won,
deputy
assistant
chief of staff
for
intelligence
in 1st Armored
Division’s
general staff
section.
“It
would be more
effective for
soldiers to
learn and
train
mindfulness
prior to
deployment,”
Won said,
“since the
practice will
offer soldiers
[a means] to
cope with
their mental
stress before
getting into a
high-stress
environment.
However,
practicing the
meditation on
a regular
basis will
help anyone,
no matter
where they
are.”
University
of
Pennsylvania
researchers,
with Army
support, are
working to
examine the
effects of
meditation as
a means to
deal with
post-traumatic
stress
disorder, Won
said.
“Many
psychotherapists
around the
world have
applied
mindfulness,
treating
various
psychological
diagnoses such
as PTSD,
depression and
even
personality
disorders,”
he added.
“It is
through
finding peace
within and
clarity [that
you] see that
you are not
the thoughts
or the
emotions that
bind you and
take you away
into
suffering.
“Once
practitioners
develop strong
awareness and
learn to
self-observe
their
thoughts,
feelings and
actions,” he
continued,
“the
individuals
have the power
to choose how
they want to
feel and apply
the right
attitude
toward all
aspects of
their lives.
That’s where
the healing
power comes
from –
within our own
minds.”
The
Army is moving
toward
developing
stress coping
methods, Won
noted. Mental
fitness is
similar to
physical
fitness, he
explained.
Just as
running or
lifting
weights can
improve
physical
fitness, a
daily routine
of mindfulness
will help to
strengthen
coping
mechanisms,
making it
easier to
recognize and
react to
negative
emotions so
they don’t
grow stronger,
he said.
“Rather
than dwelling
in the past or
the future,”
Won said,
“mindfulness
is learning to
work in the
present moment
in a less
reactive, less
judgmental
manner.
“In
the present,
you have the
power to make
changes to the
situations
affecting you.
During the
future or
past, nothing
can be done as
we are not
there,” he
continued.
“We know
what is
happening in
the present.
What is going
to happen in
the future
will always be
a mystery, and
our past
cannot be
changed, no
matter how
hard we wish
it to
change.”
Stress,
he added,
comes when a
discrepancy
exists between
what someone
wants and what
actually is.
“With
mindfulness,
you can choose
to see things
as they are
and accept
them as they
are,” he
said, “and
then work to
improve the
situation if
possible.”