Display options
Share it on

Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being. 2009 Sep 01;4:145-58. doi: 10.1080/17482620903013908.

Experiencing mindfulness meditation-a client narrative perspective.

International journal of qualitative studies on health and well-being

Reinhard Stelter

Affiliations

  1. Research Group on Body, Learning and Identity, Department of Exercise and Sport Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

PMID: 20523884 PMCID: PMC2879966 DOI: 10.1080/17482620903013908

Abstract

The study was based on the non-participant involvement of the researcher in four six-to-eight weeks' mindfulness meditation training courses led by chartered psychologists. The participants suffered from stress/sleeplessness, depression or agoraphobia in the presented cases. They were selected on the basis of recommendations by the psychologist who was the course instructor, who described them as positive and suitable. The participants wrote diaries on a weekly basis, and they were interviewed at the beginning, middle and end of the course. An in-depth analysis of three individual cases will be presented in the form of narratives constructed from their own words. The narratives demonstrate the unique and embodied changes of the individual participant's experiences during the training course. The purpose was to illustrate richly what happens and how changes happen during these weeks of learning and practicing mindfulness meditation. It is not the intention to give evidence about the effectiveness of mindfulness meditation in general, but to present the whats and hows of cases where mindfulness meditation appears to improve quality of life, health and well-being.

Keywords: Mindfulness meditation; embodiment; experience; life change; mental disorder; narrative inquiry; well-being

References

  1. Emotion. 2001 Mar;1(1):25-37 - PubMed
  2. Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2006 Apr;40(4):285-94 - PubMed

Publication Types