Meditation for Anxiety - Day 6: Open Monitoring Practice

31/07/2025 7 min

Listen "Meditation for Anxiety - Day 6: Open Monitoring Practice"

Episode Synopsis

🔗 Serena AI Meditation Coach: https://www.serenaapp.com/meditation-app?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=organic&utm_term=meditation-for-anxiety&utm_content=day06Experience meditation for anxiety with today's focus on open monitoring—a practice designed to help you relate to anxious thoughts, sensations, and emotions with gentle, spacious awareness. Open monitoring meditation allows you to observe your entire field of experience without judgment, fostering a sense of calm and non-reactivity.Scientific foundation: Open monitoring meditation is supported by research showing its effectiveness in cultivating non-reactive awareness, especially beneficial for those experiencing hypervigilance related to anxiety. This technique builds on the skills of attention regulation and decentering, helping you rest in a state of effortless being. Neuroimaging studies reveal that open monitoring is associated with increased neural efficiency in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and decreased activity in the Default Mode Network (DMN), both of which are linked to reduced rumination and improved emotional regulation in anxiety. Long-term practitioners demonstrate a shift from effortful control to a more automatic, balanced state of awareness, supporting ongoing well-being and resilience.36,53,55In this session, you’ll learn how to expand your awareness beyond a single anchor, noticing sounds, sensations, thoughts, and emotions as they arise and pass. This meditation for anxiety encourages you to be present with whatever comes up, training your mind to observe without getting caught up or overwhelmed. If you feel lost, simply return to your breath, then open your awareness again when ready.Continue your 7-day meditation for anxiety journey—each session builds essential psychological skills for managing anxiety and enhancing your sense of well-being.#meditation-for-anxiety #meditation #mindfulness #breathwork #anxiety #stress #wellnessScientific References:[1] The Cognitive Neuroscience in Mindfulness Meditation - BrainFacts, accessed July 18, 2025 https://www.brainfacts.org/diseases-and-disorders/mental-health/2024/the-cognitive-neuroscience-in-mindfulness-meditation-010424[2] Focused attention meditation training modifies neural activity and attention: longitudinal EEG data in non-meditators - PubMed Central, accessed July 18, 2025 https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7304517/[3] Calm Your Mind: Choose Mindfulness by Anxiety Type ..., accessed July 18, 2025 https://neurosciencenews.com/mindfulness-anxiety-psychology-28954/