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Mantras for Self-Care: Mind Over What's The Matter

September 13, 2013 Paulissa Kipp

Using mantras as self-care can help provide calm, lower stress and improve outlooks. And science backs up the practice of mantras for mental health recovery.

Can adding mantras to your self-care routine help with your mental health recovery? For many, the answer is yes. Mantras help us change our thought processes. Changing our thoughts gives us the ability to become more resilient, to change the way our brain neurons fire and to choose to move forward. Science agrees. In a 2009 study, Italian physicians studied the effect on the cardiovascular system of reciting the Ave Maria, the rosary or a yogic mantra. The result: Prayer and mantras increased cardiovascular function when recited six times a minute.1

Quotes and mantras are self-care tools to use when overwhelm reigns, when we need a little courage and to help us be present in the moment. I began using quotes as mantras three years ago as I began down my path to recovery.

My Favorite Mantras for Self-Care

  • This too shall pass
  • This belongs to . All else in good time.
  • I embody the power of courage, endurance of strength and the beauty of survival.
  • This is only temporary.
  • One day, one moment, one step at a time.
  • You have enough, you do enough, you are enough.
  • I have survived. I will survive again.
  • Commit to love.
  • Other people have felt this way too.
  • Feel the fear and do it anyway.
  • I am okay in this moment.
  • I am right where I need to be.
  • It will be different in another moment.

Do you use mantras? How have you found mantras useful? Please share and let's learn from one another.

Namaste

Source

1 Bernardi, L., Sleight, P., Bandinelli, G., Cencetti, S., Fattorini, L., Wdowczyc-Szulc, J., & Lagi, A. (2001, December 22). Effect of rosary prayer and yoga mantras on autonomic cardiovascular rhythms: comparative study. Retrieved October 10, 2017.

2 Schuster, S., Daniels, N., & Dwyer, K. (n.d.). 32 Mantras That Help People Get Through Anxiety. Retrieved October 10, 2017.

Art by Paulissa Kipp

APA Reference
Kipp, P. (2013, September 13). Mantras for Self-Care: Mind Over What's The Matter, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, November 14 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/recoveringfrommentalillness/2013/09/mantras-recovery-mind-over-whats-the-matter



Author: Paulissa Kipp

Sister Bernadette
September, 17 2013 at 8:13 am

I have BPD and I am following a therapy based on DBT and the STEPPS as grouptherapy. I have followed Mindfulnesstraining. I am using the tingsha for mindfulness and a singing bell. I have a mala for the mantra's but am searching for it. Can anybody help me please? Which mantra's do you use? For emptiness I will say "I can accept it" or "I will accept it". Thanks for your help.

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Paulissa Kipp
September, 19 2013 at 6:02 am

I use these mantras a lot:
"This too, shall pass"
"There will a blessing, even if it is not visible right now"
For emptiness I use "I fill my heart and mind with what creates joy"

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