13 Benefits of Meditation Retreats for Beginners
Meditation retreats are designed to support practitioners learn and deepen their meditation practice.
This is particularly useful for beginners as having access to this support can take the feeling of overwhelmed away.
And not just that, there are several other benefits of meditation retreats for beginners.
If you are a beginner and have been wondering whether meditation retreats can do you any good, here are its benefits in a nutshell:
- Enhances physical well-being
- Eases pain
- Improves sleep
- Detoxifies the body
- Reduces stress
- Lessens anxiety
- Helps break negative habits
- Helps process difficult emotions
- Makes us kinder
- Introduces us to our soul tribe
- Gives us access to a teacher
- Cultivates greater self-awareness
- Deepens our faith
Before we deep dive into what meditation retreats can do for beginners, we’ll take a look inside a meditation retreat to see what’s really like.
What is a meditation retreat?
Depending on the lineage, meditation retreats can vary in their style and techniques.
Retreats can be silent like Vipassana, follow a Buddhist order like Zen, or take up other forms like walking meditation, transcendental meditation, or loving-kindness meditation.
What they have in common is their intent to create a space that is conducive for meditation and to provide the tools necessary for practitioners to build and strengthen their practice.
What can beginners expect on a meditation retreat?
Lots of sitting on the meditation cushion.
Other than that, most retreats include discourses on the teachings of the particular lineage.
Because there is also a focus on teaching the technique, most meditation retreats are suitable for both beginners and advanced practitioners.
Food is almost always vegetarian or vegan.
It is often suggested that mealtimes and any other free time is spent in silence, in your own company.
Teachers and guides are available to answer questions and address any doubts.
A typical day begins fairly early. The schedule may include complementary practices like yoga, walks in nature, group activities, or healing sessions.
You could also be asked to assist with some of the chores in the retreat – like cooking and cleaning, as part of service.
Whether your retreat is for a weekend or spans a whole month, your breath becomes your best friend, but the one thing that sees you through is being kind to yourself.
13 Benefits of meditation retreats for beginners
Meditation retreats have benefits for all layers of our being – physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual.
These benefits are especially tangible for beginners because of the contrast between the before and after.
1. Enhances physical well-being
Meditation retreats are wonderful for physical health as much as mental and emotional health.
One of the most tangible effects is the opportunity to destress.
Spending time on a meditation retreat brings down stress levels. A decrease in stress hormones has associated benefits for physical health.
There is a decrease in blood pressure, lowering of the heart rate, improved blood circulation, all of which help in maintaining a healthy heart. This also helps strengthen the immune system.
2. ease pain
The perception of pain is affected by our state of mind. When the mind is in a state of stress, it can elevate the feeling of pain.
Reduction in stress has a direct relationship with easing the perception of pain. This is especially helpful for people who live with chronic pain, thereby providing them the tools to improve their quality of life.
On a meditation retreat, beginners get to learn to use their breath to ease pain. Using the breath to relax the body helps to release tension and stress that gets accumulated in the body.
3. improve sleep
A meditation retreat creates a routine around sleep.
By keeping us away from digital devices that negatively impact sleep, engaging in relaxation techniques that create physical and mental rest, and putting our overworked minds to rest, a retreat helps improve our duration and quality of sleep.
Learning the techniques of meditation has long-term benefits for insomnia.
Studies have shown that those who practice meditation enjoy longer, better sleep compared to those who don’t.
Beginners can benefit from the routine and the rituals around sleep on a meditation retreat.
Going to bed early and waking up at the designated time is something that is not always possible in the throes of daily life.
4. Detoxifies the body
This is the most certain benefit of meditation retreats for a beginner. They help to detoxify the body in many ways.
Firstly, it’s the food.
Most retreats provide food that is fresh, home-cooked, light, healthy, and vegetarian. Eating slowly and peacefully in mindfulness enhances the benefits of food.
A meditation retreat also provides an opportunity to detox from things we might not be very mindful about – caffeine, sugar, and alcohol, for instance.
Then there is the detoxification that happens from disconnecting from technology. Staying away from electromagnetic waves that we are otherwise almost always surrounded with helps to keep our energy clean.
Breathing exercises that are taught on a meditation retreat help to enhance and speed up the detoxification process.
5. reduces stress
There is a feeling of letting go when one steps into a meditation retreat. The environment of the retreat creates a safe space for the body and mind to relax.
Being away from the day to day activities that fill up our day creates lightness and ease.
Beginners especially can benefit from shutting down from the affairs of daily life and retreating to a space that is dedicated to the practice of meditation as it allows them to be present without distractions.
Results from a research conducted on beginners who were practicing meditation in a seven-day retreat in Thailand displayed a significant reduction in perceived stress in participants.
When the brain gets the signal that there are no immediate threats and it can relax, it reduces the production of stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline, which are responsible for the flight or fight responses.
As a result, the body and mind experience a deep state of relaxation.
Let’s dive right into the next benefit.
6. Reduces anxiety
A meditation retreat, by virtue of its focus on building acceptance and letting go, helps in increasing positive patterns of thinking, thereby reducing rumination and anxiety.
Anxiety is caused by excessive worrying about how events or situations would turn out to be. It persistently keeps us in the future.
Meditation retreats focus on training the mind to be in the present.
As a beginner, learning the techniques of being in the present can help immensely in dealing with anxiety.
By helping beginners get acquainted with the philosophical aspect of the teachings and helping them to practice witnessing negative thoughts without attachment, it empowers them to release their fears and worries.
7. helps you break negative habits
We inadvertently create dependencies on external factors as coping mechanisms.
Emotional eating, excessive time spent on the phone, over-consumption of coffee or alcohol, are all habits that we adopt to deal with issues we find difficult to address.
Meditation retreats break these habits by pulling us out of an environment that triggers us to find solace in the external.
Through teaching mindfulness, they help us understand the causes behind our habits and thus, empower us to break them.
The practice of meditation helps to bring back attention to the present moment and develop mindfulness of the body and mind.
As a result, the craving mind learns to rest and exercise more control over how it responds to impulses.
For beginners, a meditation retreat provides the perfect opportunity to break negative habits and form new ones.
8. helps you process difficult emotions
Meditation retreats provide the time and space to sit with one’s emotions.
Spending time with oneself with no escape but to face whatever comes up, helps to drop into the heart and see what is there.
Meditation retreats teach us how to witness our thoughts and emotions, and adopt a view of non-attachment. When we can see emotions for what they are, it helps us to see what it is in us that is creating the grief, the hurt, or the pain.
Learning to process emotions that could have been suppressed gives emotional freedom and release.
It helps to put behind us our past and steers us towards a more positive outlook on the future.
For a beginner who is new to meditation, this is one of the most transformative benefits of a meditation retreat.
9. makes us kinder
Both towards ourselves and others, but especially towards ourselves. Most meditation retreats incorporate the practice of loving-kindness.
The intent of the practice of metta, or loving-kindness meditation is to generate kind thoughts and feelings.
Metta starts with sending loving thoughts to the self, extends it to the people we love, goes further to include people we know, then includes people we don’t know, and ends with people we find difficult to love.
Some meditation retreats also include the practice of forgiveness, which is particularly helpful for those of us who have been carrying the baggage of past hurts, regrets, and resentments.
For a beginner, this means empowerment.
Gaining access to tools that help us relax emotionally and free us from the pressures and guilt we might inflict on ourselves is something that stays with us for life.
It leads to improved relationships with self as well as others.
10. you will find your soul tribe
Whether a meditation retreat is silent and allows for no communication among practitioners, or there is some time designed into the retreat where practitioners can interact with each other, there is a connection that develops by virtue of having shared a meaningful experience together.
A meditation retreat allows participants to be vulnerable without the fear of judgment.
Opening our hearts to strangers in a space that is safe is cathartic. This helps to form friendships that are founded on understanding, compassion, and acceptance.
There is great emphasis on the sangha or the spiritual community in certain philosophies.
For a beginner, it helps to practice in a larger group and feel part of a whole rather than doing it solo.
11. gives us access to a teacher
Most spiritual practices lay emphasis on a teacher or leader to show the way.
Having direct access to a teacher, especially for a beginner, helps to address any issues that come up when beginning a meditation practice.
Other than teaching the technique, a teacher removes the obstacles in our practice.
Questions like, “Am I doing it right”, “I just don’t seem to be able to sit still”, or “How to deal with negative emotions that come up when I sit down to meditate” are bound to arise.
Beginning with the right support and guidance lays the foundation for a strong practice.
By getting doubts cleared early on, a beginner starts strong and that itself is half the battle won.
A teacher can also help us in our journey on the spiritual path by guiding us to find our answers in teachings and through our own practice. They can help us have more faith in ourselves and our path.
12. helps cultivate greater self-awareness
The quest for gaining insight into our true selves is often what leads people towards meditation.
As a beginner, it can help to go into a meditation retreat with an intention, which could be anything from releasing a difficult emotion to breaking a habit or getting clarity on what you want from life.
Setting an intention brings greater focus to the practice.
Spending time alone on a meditation retreat helps keep the mind free from our responsibilities of everyday life that fill up most of our thoughts.
The mind then has more space and experiences greater clarity. It is able to keep its attention on the challenge that we give to it.
Research has shown that it is possible to cultivate more creative thinking in problem-solving by practicing meditation.
A better understanding of self develops and so does more reliance on our own ability to overcome our challenges.
13. Deepens our faith
In the eight-fold path of Ashtanga yoga, meditation is the penultimate step to achieving the final stage of Samadhi or complete spiritual absorption with the higher consciousness.
The word used for this seventh limb is dhyana, which can be understood as ‘an unbroken flow of knowledge to an object’.
For a beginner, experiencing the effects of meditation with a teacher and in a community builds faith in the merit of the path.
By seeing others in their journey and learning from their experiences helps to have faith in our own capability to advance in our practice.
When we practice meditation in a retreat, it also helps us build more faith in a purpose that is beyond our perception of the self. Depending on the lineage of the retreat, the word for this transcendence could be different. However, we realize that it exists and that it is possible for us to get there.
If you are a beginner 👉 This article explains what Iyengar yoga is and why it’s great for beginners of all ages
Conclusion
In order to receive the most out of a meditation retreat as a beginner, it helps to give up on expectations.
Each experience is unique and almost always transformative.
There may be times during the retreat that feel difficult or overwhelming. It is important to remember that meditation does not follow an outcome-based approach. There is no place that needs to be reached.
A meditation retreat will, in all likelihood, not solve all of our problems for us.
What it can do is wake us up so we can watch what is happening inside of us.
If you have an experience of a meditation retreat that you have benefited from, please do share it with us in the comments below.
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