Every morning (almost), after my coffee and reading, I fire up the daily meditation on the Waking Up app by Sam Harris for 10 or 20 minutes. Today’s was a Loving-Kindness Meditation (LKM), a favorite of mine.

For LKM and me, it was not love at first sight. We first met several years ago at a week-long Mindful Self-Compassion retreat led by Chris Germer and Kristin Neff, the two leaders behind the development and worldwide growth of self-compassion studies and training.

I had dabbled in meditation before the retreat and tried it in secret, early in the morning, when no one would see me, trying (unsuccessfully) to stay focused on my breath, which at the time is what I thought meditation was all about.

During an afternoon session at the retreat they pulled a fast one on us. They had us close our eyes and picture someone close to us and say, in our heads, “may you be peaceful, may you be happy, may you be free from suffering.”

My first thought was, “your kidding, right?” Then it got even stranger. They told us to picture ourselves and then say the same things, i.e. “Michael, may you be peaceful, may you be happy, may you be free from suffering.”

At that moment, inside my thick skull, there was a sumo wrestling match going on as my old surgical self tried to push this loving kindness nonsense off my mental mat. He almost won, and he even almost persuaded me to ditch the retreat that afternoon.

I stuck the week out, and with more practice I started to enjoy saying may you be happy, may you be peaceful, may you be free from suffering about other people, and even myself. It just felt good. Like I was practicing being nice.

As Harris said in the morning meditation – “you feel your mind soften as you let go of self-concern.”

Soften. Imagine that if you can.

He’s right. As soon as I let go of my self-concern – what I had to do today, issues with people, the litany of crap swirling around inside my mind like a washing machine, and moved to picturing others and wishing them well, my mind softens as the normal mental tension and effort drifts away.

So what’s the deal with LKM anyway?

The word meditation is like the word sports. Just like there are different sports (football, etc), there are different meditation practices. Three meditation practices in my arsenal are those studied by Tania Singer and colleagues: Breathing and Body Scan, Observing Thoughts, and Loving-Kindness meditation.

Unlike some forms of meditation that involve moment-to-moment non-judgmental awareness of whatever is bubbling up from the cauldron of our 100 billion brain cells into consciousness, Loving-Kindness meditation is a more of a top-down influencer of the brain.

The intention of LKM is very different from other meditation practices because it actively attempts to generate positive emotions and compassion for others.

At the start of an LKM session it is easiest to get in the groove by closing your eyes and picturing someone in your life with whom you have a close and easy relationship. Then you can slowly repeat the following phrases (or others of your choosing); “may you be happy, may you be peaceful, may you be free from suffering,” over and over while continuing to picture that person.

By kickstarting the LKM engine with someone you like or love, it is easy to get the psychological ball rolling and then you can shift your attention to other people, including yourself, and ultimately even to people that irritate you or with whom you have a “challenging” relationship.

In an outstanding series of rigorously designed studies, Tania Singer and her colleagues studied the impact of the above 3 types of meditation practices in meditation naive subjects. One group was trained in LKM only and continued with guided practice for 3 months, after which they evaluated the impact of LKM in three ways.

First was the subjective impact of the practice. Just 3 months of LKM decreased their perceived levels of stress reactivity by 36%. The subjects also had an increased ability to focus, they felt more positive and warm, had higher levels of energy, and they perceived a decrease in thought distraction.

Second was the impact of a highly stressful event, the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST). The TSST reliably activates the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and cortisol release.

The TSST is a great mimic for social stress because it creates feelings of unpredictability, lack of control, and a sense of social threat similar to the everyday experiences that create chronic stress in our modern world, especially in these coronavirus soaked days.

Singer and colleagues found that just 3 months of LK meditation practice decreased the cortisol stress response by 32%!

Third, fMRI studies before and after just 3 months of LKM led to significant thickening of the surface of the brain in regions associated with positive emotions and compassion.

That’s right. Like getting your biceps bigger with curls, just 3 months of LKM thickens up your positive emotion and compassion brain circuits.

Ok, you may not be interested in bigger biceps, but who wouldn’t want more positive emotions and compassion? That’s a great return on the small investment of time in LKM.

But it gets better. LKM is like caring around an epi pen for empathic pain. In the practice of medicine or any profession where humans are exposed to a lot of suffering, one can end up emotionally exhausted and burned out.

This empathic burnout happens because the empathy areas of the brain are getting lit up again and again as we are exposed to suffering, and when these areas get lit up, we end up suffering vicariously.

LKM is the epi pen for this kind of empathic distress. By pulling out the LKM epi pen when you are feeling overwhelmed and injecting some LK into your mental milieu, you can shut down the empathic distress and deactivate the empathic regions of the brain.

Better focus, less distraction, more positive affect, more energy, less intense physiologic stress response, and relief from empathic pain. That’s a big return for just 10-20 minutes a day.