Are you autistic and also meditate?

What Is your meditation technique?

What effect does the meditation have on you?

What effect does the meditation have on your autism?

  • greencactus@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Yes, I sometimes do. I use 7mind for it - as a student I can use it for free here in Germany.

    My experiences depend on the day. It never harms, that’s for sure. Usually it just helps me to understand how I feel. Sometimes for example I can’t get into a meditative state at all - that usually means I’m somewhat distracted today and should be careful about large decisions. Other times I just breathe and enjoy being. It isn’t particularly intense, but after opening the eyes I feel better and calmer. Only a few times could I really get into a meditative high - that was really amazing, not really comparable to anything else I’ve experienced. However, this high isn’t a goal for me at all - if it happens, it’s amazing; if not, that’s also okay.

    Tl;Dr - sometimes I meditate, when I feel like it. It usually gives good results and helps me to recognize how I feel.

    • Plesiohedron@lemmy.cafeOP
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      4 days ago

      I’m a sperg and I meditate.

      Shikantaza.

      It gets me high, expands my world, makes things smooth.

      It overcomes it the way levitation might overcome a limp.

    • Plesiohedron@lemmy.cafeOP
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      5 days ago

      … results of meditation are never immediate or even obvious, just over time, if one persists, things get a little easier.

      Speak for yourself.

      In fact, a classic warning is to beware of getting carried away by the bliss/high that commonly arrives.

      So I gotta say. If it ain’t getting you high, or producing even a little bit of noticeable effect, then you would do well to experiment with other techniques.

      • doo@sh.itjust.works
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        4 days ago

        Indeed, we must be speaking of different kinds of meditation.

        The one I was referring to is mindfulness meditation, by practicing which one gradually develops a habit of noticing thoughts as they happen in one’s mind and instead of being immediately carried away by them, have a tiny time buffer that allows to have a chance to decide whether to react or just let it dissipate as all thoughts do.

        • Plesiohedron@lemmy.cafeOP
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          4 days ago

          Yes, even with mindfulness meditation.

          If you are not guided by results then what guides you, a happy story?

  • Broadfern@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    I don’t meditate regularly but mostly it informally involves listening to music, using a sensory/fidget toy or petting an animal to ground myself. Or box breathing in a pinch.

    Basically anything that lets me hone in on being directly present in the moment with a small focus in my physical environment. *Edit: the main draw for me is something I can directly control my reactions and engage with, if that helps.

    I pretty much only use it to calm anxiety spikes or dissociative episodes from bad changes in routine, or sensory overload before hitting a meltdown if I can catch it in time.