Types of Meditation
Types of Meditation January 30, 2026 Daryl Ong Learn to Meditate Introduction: Choosing the Right...
The greatest obstacle to a successful meditation practice is a semantic one. In the West, we have been conditioned to believe that meditation is a state of “peace” or “emptiness.” This creates a paradox: the moment a beginner has a thought, they believe they have failed.
In reality, meditation is a high-engagement cognitive protocol. It is the intentional training of the brain’s “executive control” systems. To meditate is to take the “Default Mode” of the human brain—which is historically evolved for anxiety and threat-scanning—and manually steer it toward a state of focused presence. This guide provides the comprehensive “how-to” for building this mental infrastructure from the ground up.
Why is it so hard to sit still? The human brain is governed by a “Bottom-Up” attentional system. This system is designed to be interrupted by sudden noises, bright lights, or internal worries, as these could historically represent survival threats. Meditation is the process of strengthening the “Top-Down” system.
Research conducted at the University of Oxford, specifically Kuyken et al. (2016) in their large-scale meta-analysis, highlights that mindfulness-based training is as effective as maintenance antidepressants in preventing the relapse of depression and managing chronic “negative loops.”
This works because meditation strengthens the Anterior Cingulate Cortex (ACC). The ACC is the brain’s “conflict monitor.” It is the part of you that notices when you are about to lose your temper or when your focus has drifted. By “meditating,” you are literally upgrading the hardware that monitors your emotional state.
We often think we need an hour of silence, but the “Minimum Effective Dose” is much smaller than the public realizes.
A study from the UCLA Mindful Awareness Research Center, published in Creswell et al. (2014), demonstrated that even three consecutive days of 25-minute mindfulness training was sufficient to alleviate self-reported psychological stress and lower cortisol levels during high-pressure tasks.
Real-Life Application: You don’t need a month-long retreat to start seeing a “return on investment.” If you are using our 5-Day Anxiety Reset, you are already exceeding the threshold required to begin chemically shifting your stress response.
To make meditation useable in a busy Australian lifestyle, we break it down into four distinct phases: The Setup, The Anchor, The Awareness, and The Return.
The Posture: You do not need a cushion. You can use a kitchen chair or even stand up. The key is “alertness.” Keep your back away from the back of the chair if possible, allowing your spine to support itself.
The Hands: Rest them on your thighs. This completes a “physical loop” that helps minimize fidgeting.
The Eyes: Closing them is easiest for beginners, but if you feel sleepy, keep them open with a “gaze toward the floor” to allow light in.
The anchor is your “Home Base.” It is the neutral object you return to when the mind wanders.
Tactile Focus: Feel the sensation of your feet on the floor.
Breath Focus: Feel the “coolness” of the air entering your nostrils and the “warmth” as it leaves.
Auditory Focus: Listen to the ambient sounds of the room without trying to label them.
As noted in research from Stanford University, specifically Gotlib & Joormann (2010), the “drift” into rumination is a key driver of anxiety. The moment you realize your mind has wandered is the most important part of the meditation. This is called Metacognition.
Once you realize you are thinking about work, your cat, or your to-do list, gently—without any self-criticism—bring the attention back to the anchor. This “return” is the equivalent of a bicep curl. Each return makes your “Focus Muscle” thicker and more resilient.
Racing thoughts are not a sign that you are “bad” at meditation; they are a sign that you are human. If your thoughts are moving too fast to observe, use “Mental Labeling.” When a thought appears, internally whisper “Thinking” or “Worrying.” This creates a small amount of distance between “You” and the “Thought.”
If you feel physical discomfort, don’t ignore it, but don’t immediately react. Observe the sensation of the “itch” or the “ache.” Often, the resistance to the pain is more stressful than the sensation itself.
The goal of meditation isn’t to be “good at meditating”—it’s to be good at life.
Based on the principles of behavioral science, the best way to make meditation stick is to “stack” it onto an existing habit.
Example: “After I put my phone on the charger at night, I will take 10 conscious breaths.”
Example: “While I wait for the kettle to boil, I will practice ‘Open Awareness’ of the sounds in the kitchen.”
When a high-stress email arrives, your Amygdala (the brain’s alarm) will fire. Before you type a response, perform One Conscious Breath.
Inhale for 4.
Exhale for 6 (The “Long Exhale”). The long exhale triggers the Vagus Nerve, which acts as a biological “brake” on your heart rate.
When you commit to this practice, the benefits move from “State” changes (feeling calm for 5 minutes) to “Trait” changes (being a calmer person overall).
As researched by Davidson et al. (2003) in their work on brain activity, consistent meditation leads to a “Left-Sided Shift” in the Prefrontal Cortex. This shift is associated with an increase in positive affect, resilience, and a decrease in “anxious temperament.”
How you meditate matters less than the fact that you do it. Whether you use our audio resets, sit in silence, or use “Mental Labeling,” you are actively participating in the evolution of your own brain. You are moving from a “Default” state of anxiety to a “Designed” state of presence.
Types of Meditation January 30, 2026 Daryl Ong Learn to Meditate Introduction: Choosing the Right...
Why Meditation Works December 30, 2025 Daryl Ong Learn to Meditate Introduction: From Mind to...