Meditation Classes Roanoke VA

Local resource for meditation classes in Roanoke, VA. Includes detailed information on local yoga studios and meditation centers that give access to meditation instructors who guide students in conscious breathing and other meditation techniques, such as sitting meditation, walking meditation, concentrative meditation, mindfulness meditation, and meditation.

Stone Mountain Zendo
(540) 342-8253
2702 Avenel Avenue S.W.
Roanoke, VA
Specialty
Zen - Soto

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Cloud Floating Free Sangha
(434) 825-0145
Community of Mindful Living of Charlottesville
Charlottesville, VA
Specialty
Zen

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Mindfulness Practice Center of Fairfax
(703) 938-1377
P.O. Box 130
Oakton, VA
Specialty
Zen

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Ligmincha Institute
(434) 977-6161
313 2nd St. SE #207
Charlottesville, VA
Specialty
Tibetan Bon-Buddhism

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Earth Sangha
(703) 764-4830
10123 Commonwealth Blvd.
Fairfax, VA
Specialty
Zen

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Dharmapala Buddhist Center
(540) 521-7989
1917 Franklin Road
Roanoke, VA
Specialty
Kadampa Buddhism

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Dae Do Sah Zen Group
Vienna, VA
Specialty
Zen - Kwan Um

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Dharmapala Buddhist Center
(540) 521-7989
1917 Franklin Road
Roanoke, VA
Specialty
Kadampa Buddhism

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Vietnamese Mindfulness Community of Washington, D.C.
(703) 938-9606
10413 Adel Rd.
Oakton, VA
Specialty
Zen

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Jefferson Tibetan Society
(434) 980-1752
P.O. Box 874
Charlottesville, VA
Specialty
Tibetan Gelugpa

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Lift Depression With Meditation

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By Ziba Kashef

With summer coming to a close and shorter, darker days ahead, you might be wondering how to cope with the negative thoughts that often accompany the season’s change and can lead to depression. A recent study found that age-old meditative techniques and more modern cognitive therapy can help alleviate symptoms. Anil Coumar, a psychotherapist and director of the mental health clinic at the University of Washington, Seattle, offers these do-it-yourself mood-lifting meditations:

Get moving. For many people, meditation is a remote, Eastern technique that involves sitting with your legs crossed on a cushion. But almost any activity can be mindful and healing, says Coumar. “Through a practice of mindfulness, we can see how our thoughts are not facts—they come and go.” To slow down your thinking and realize that you can release negative thoughts as quickly as they come, try this eating meditation: Hold a raisin in your hand and intentionally look at it as if you’ve never seen one before. Roll it between your fingers and notice each crease. Pay attention to your thoughts about it—maybe you’ll think, This is ugly or I’ve never noticed the true color of a raisin before. Then put it in your mouth and observe how your saliva flows as you chew.

Uncover your unconscious. Imagine you’re walking down the street and see a good friend walking in the opposite direction. You nod and smile, but your pal just looks ahead and keeps going. How do you respond? “Someone might say, ‘Oh, she probably didn’t see me.’ Another might think, ‘What did I do wrong now?’ Depending on how you interpret that event, you’re going to feel good or bad,” says Coumar. This kind of cognitive exercise can teach us how we unconsciously have these thoughts. The point? To make the normally unconscious thoughts that fuel depression conscious so you can acknowledge them—and then more easily let them go. —Ziba Kashef

Author: Ziba Kashef

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Floyd Yoga Jam
Dates: 8/30/2013 – 9/1/2013
Location:
Floyd
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