Thursday, November 5, 2015

Knitting as Mindfulness Practice

Stress affects every cell in our body and is responsible for 60% of all illnesses from colds to cancer. Our current focus in the healthcare arena on healing illness is clearly not working.  We need a seismic shift to wellness, prevention, and an overall sense of well-being.  The statistics on how stress is affecting us is staggering.  According to the American Institute of Stress, 75% of all doctor visits are related to stress; stressed people have a 25% increase risk of heart attack and 50% increase risk of stroke.  
Untreated stress can progress to mental illness like anxiety and depression.  According to the World Health Organization, mental illnesses are the largest cause of disability in any developed nation.  Stress levels are at epic proportions.  

We continue to conduct research on new medications, surgical procedures, and invasive testing to cure when we should be focusing our efforts on what is causing the problem in the first place.  STRESS!  Providing people with tools for managing their stress is paramount in a healthy society.  Learning to illicit a relaxation response such as that achieved with knitting can counteract stress, according to Dr. Herbert Benson from The Mind/Body Medicine Institute as Massachusetts General Hospital.  The rhythmic and repetitive motions of knitting are thought to be calming by increasing serotonin levels in the brain. Inducing a meditative state by using both hands, crossing the midline of the body, is consistent with mindfulness.
That's what The Happiness Knitting Project is all about.  Teaching people to use knitting as  a mindfulness practice.  There is a growing body of research that knitting can be therapeutic.  Initially, it can be frustrating like learning anything new can be.  But once you get in the rhythm of it, feel the yarn fibers flowing through your fingers, even being mindful of the animal who's fleece you are using...are all mindful activities.  Go ahead, give it a try.  You'll be infinitely glad you did.  
To read some of the latest research, go to stitchlinks.com



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