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Five meditation styles to try

You've got to find a style that resonates with you.
Easy ways to minimise stress
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Youโ€™ve read about the benefits of meditation and now you want to try it. But how do you know which style will be best for you?

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โ€œMeditation should be simple,โ€ says yoga teacher and energy healer Patty Kikos.

โ€œItโ€™s about finding a style thatโ€™s right for you. Each style has the same goal: to change your mindset.โ€

But not all styles will suit everyone.

โ€œItโ€™s important not to go to a class just because your friend loves it,โ€ Patty explains. โ€œYouโ€™ve got to find a style that resonates with you.โ€

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To help you get started, here are five popular styles to tryโ€ฆ

Youโ€™ve got to find a meditation style that resonates with you. (Source: Getty)

Guided Meditation

โ€œGuided meditation is the most popular and one of the best types of meditation for beginners, because it requires little preparation and thought,โ€ says Deborah Fay, holistic coach and author of 6 Keys to Happiness.

It can be done as a group or on your own, and involves being guided by a trained practitioner or teacher, or by using a recording or video.

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The guidance keeps you on track and leads you to visualisation โ€“ a process where you generate mental imagery โ€“ to recreate sensory perceptions and feelings of relaxation.

How to do it: YouTube and iTunes are great resources of free guided meditations.

Find a quiet place, put on headphones and be guided to a relaxed and peaceful state.

Find a quiet place, put on headphones and be guided to a relaxed and peaceful state. (Source: Getty)

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Breathing meditation

This is a type of Buddhist meditation that focuses on the movement of breath within you, to calm your mind and relax your body.

โ€œWhen we expel oxygen from our lungs, we make way for the new prana, or air, to come in,โ€ Patty says. โ€œItโ€™s a wonderful way for us to open ourselves up to new thought patterns, so weโ€™re not continuously repeating the same emotions, feelings or thoughts.โ€

How to do it: Find somewhere comfortable, then practise breathing through your nose while keeping your chest and belly still.

Focus for about 10 minutes. โ€œThe purpose of this is to slow down your breathing, and primarily slow down your mind,โ€ says Patty.

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READ NEXT: Radio host Ash London reveals how the practice of meditation and mindfulness helped her marriage

Find somewhere comfortable, then practise breathing through your nose while keeping your chest and belly still. (Source: Getty)

Body-scan meditation

The best part of this technique is that it can be done while youโ€™re lying down.

โ€œItโ€™s where you scan different parts of the body, usually beginning at the top of your head and finishing with your toes,โ€ Patty says.

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When practised regularly, it can help your mind focus as it shifts your attention from one place to another.

โ€œAs a beginner, you wouldnโ€™t be expected to do this on your own because youโ€™d get so distracted,โ€ she explains.

How to do it: โ€œIf youโ€™re a beginner, youโ€™ll need to be led by a practitioner, teacher, or by a recording,โ€ Patty says. Lie in a comfortable position on your back with your arms slightly away from your body. Then, while focusing on your breathing, move your attention through your body, step-by-step.

While focusing on your breathing, move your attention through your body, step-by-step. *(Source: Getty)

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Sound Meditation

Practising this method is a great way to reduce stress and promote relaxation.

Each sound creates a vibration in a different part of the body that can be used as a focal point for your meditation.

How to do it: There are several ways: focusing on sounds around you, or listening to the silence between each sound.

Another method is to use mantras โ€“ choose one and repeat for 15 minutes daily.

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Focus on the sounds around you. (Source: Getty)

Movement meditation

This is great for those who are always on the go.

โ€œIt could be focusing on a particular mantra as you walk, a conscious dance where you move to the beat of the music, or you match your movements to a mantra you repeat and move to,โ€ Patty explains.

โ€œThe repetitive movements are a nice way to reprogram your cellular memory. And when you add movement, youโ€™re also adding a bit of fluidity to your meditation,โ€ she says.

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โ€œItโ€™s also a great way to get kids into meditation.โ€

How to do it: This requires finding the right music, and a location where you can move freely without interruption or danger of hurting yourself or others.

Close your eyes and move in a freestyle fashion as the music guides you โ€“ thereโ€™s no right or wrong way to do this.

Close your eyes and move in a freestyle fashion. (Source: Getty)

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The benefits of meditating
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