What mindfulness is
Mindfulness is "paying attention to the present moment, intentionally and non-judgmentally" (Jon Kabat-Zinn's definition). Derived from 2,500 years of Buddhist meditation traditions but secularized by Jon Kabat-Zinn at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center in 1979 as MBSR (Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction), standardized as an 8-week program. Now a standard tool in medicine, psychiatry, and psychotherapy.
40 years of clinical evidence
- ↓50% depression relapse: MBCT (Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy) cuts relapse in half vs. SSRI alone in 3+ recurrence patients (Teasdale 2000).
- ↓30% anxiety: MBSR 8 weeks equivalent to medication / CBT (Hofmann 2010 meta-analysis).
- ↓25% chronic pain: mindfulness + usual care beats usual care alone by 25% (Cherkin 2016 JAMA).
- ↑ attention: after 8 weeks, fMRI shows thicker prefrontal cortex and smaller amygdala (Hölzel 2011).
- ↑ immunity: stronger antibody response (Davidson 2003).
- ↓ blood pressure: systolic -5~10 mmHg (Hughes 2013).
Korean clinical psychology / psychiatry uses MBSR / MBCT as adjunctive treatment. Some university hospitals and psychiatric clinics offer 8-week group programs.
5 common misconceptions
① "You must empty your head" — no: meditation isn't emptying. Thoughts arising is normal. The core = when a thought arises, "notice it and return to the breath". 100 distractions per session is fine — 100 returns.
② "You must erase thoughts" — no: trying to block thoughts → more thoughts. Mindfulness is "distance from thoughts". Thoughts are a flowing river; you are not the river — you sit beside it.
③ "It's religious" — no: MBSR deliberately removed religious elements. Atheists, Christians, Buddhists all practice together. Some Korean churches / cathedrals also adopt it.
④ "Instant effect" — no: one session doesn't produce results. 8 weeks + 10 min daily accumulates brain change. Some "momentary calm" is possible in the first session, though.
⑤ "Only seated" — no: walking meditation, eating meditation, daily-life mindfulness are equally valid. For Korean workers, 10 min of breath mindfulness on the commute is a fine start.
10 min / day, 8-week protocol
Week 1 — breath mindfulness: 10 min daily. Sit on a chair, back upright, eyes closed or softly down. Attend to the breath. In / out, belly movement, sensation at the nose. Distracted? Notice and return to "breath". The first week, "getting distracted itself" is normal. 100 distractions = 100 noticings = 100 reps.
Week 2 — Body Scan: lying or seated, attend in sequence from toes to head, ~1 min per region. Notice pain / temperature / pressure but don't try to "change" — only observe. Recognize stress-induced body tension.
Week 3 — emotion mindfulness: when emotion arises during meditation (anxiety, sadness, anger), attend to it. Where in the body? Intensity? Change? Don't identify with the emotion — "anxiety is here; I am not anxiety". Surfacing the emotion lowers its intensity.
Week 4 — thought mindfulness: see thoughts as "leaves on a river". Thought ≠ fact — an event in the head. Label "this is just a thought". Reduces identification with thought.
Week 5 — Loving-kindness: "may I be happy / healthy / peaceful" → self → family → friends → neutral → difficult people. ↑ self-compassion / empathy.
Week 6 — daily integration: mindfulness in life. Eating (taste, texture, smell), walking (foot sensation, breath), dishes (water sensation, motion).
Week 7 — difficult emotions: don't avoid intense emotions (anger, sadness) — meet them safely with mindfulness. "Pain decreases when you don't run from it".
Week 8 — integration: integrate all 6 (breath, body, emotion, thought, compassion, daily life). Build your own meditation routine.
Korean meditation resources
- Apps:
- Kkokkiri (Korea, Korean): Korean meditation app, MBSR-based
- Mabo (Korea, Korean): short meditations
- Headspace (Eng / partial Kor): global standard, 10 min/day
- Calm (Eng / Kor): strong sleep meditation
- Insight Timer (free): 50,000+ free meditations
- MBSR 8-week program: some university hospitals (SNUH, Ewha, etc.), counseling centers, meditation centers, online (₩300K~800K)
- Korean meditation orgs: Korean Meditation Society, Korean MBSR Society
- YouTube: search "guided meditation" / "breath meditation" — many free
5 common difficulties
① No time: can't even do 10 min. Answer: start with the commute or 5 min after lunch. 1 min/day = 30 min/month.
② Distraction: 5 sec of breath, then mind wanders. Answer: normal. 100 distractions, 100 returns = the training.
③ Posture pain: legs / back hurt. Answer: chair / couch / lying is fine. Posture isn't critical.
④ Sleepiness: dozing during meditation. Answer: don't lie down — sit upright. Or do it early morning. Sleepiness also signals fatigue.
⑤ "No effect": 2 weeks in, no change. Answer: 8-week cumulative effect — not instant. After 8 weeks you'll notice "calmer than when not meditating".
Warning — possible side effects
Rare but possible:
- Trauma re-experiencing: PTSD / past abuse may resurface during meditation. → Go with a trauma-informed therapist
- Dissociation: detachment from the body. Very rare but possible.
- Worsening depression: in some depressed patients, meditation amplifies negative thoughts. → MBCT requires expert guidance
Severe mental illness (bipolar, psychosis, severe PTSD) patients shouldn't self-meditate — consult psychiatry.
Mindfulness ≠ treatment alone
Mindfulness is an adjunct, not a standalone treatment. First-line for depression, anxiety, PTSD, chronic pain = medication / psychotherapy. Mindfulness is the adjunct. "Meditation can cure everything" thinking is dangerous — a cause of treatment refusal. Suicidal thoughts / severe depression → 1577-0199 / psychiatry now.