Meditation as Peace Training: Consolidating Attention as an Instrument for Nonviolence
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Meditation as Peace Training: Consolidating Attention as an Instrument for Nonviolence
KELASA ,DR. VIVEK KUMAR
Research Scholar, PhD, Swami Vivekanand Subharti University, Meerut, U.P., India.
kelasadbu@gmail.com
Assistant Professor, Supervisor, Swami Vivekanand Subharti University, Meerut, U.P., India.
Abstract
Meditation helps individuals deal with conflicts more peacefully by training attention more effectively. Meditative practice transforms attention into a practical tool for nonviolence by cultivating awareness, self-regulation, and compassion. When people focus their attention, they can more effectively identify emotional experiences before they lead to destructive behaviours or comments motivated by anger, fear, or defensiveness. Meditation builds a gap between stimulus and response. This enables the individual to choose a response consistent with their values rather than an impulsive one. This article draws on psychological research to describe how certain aspects of meditation improve emotional regulation, reduce rumination, and promote cognitive reappraisal, thereby reducing hostility and other negative feelings
toward others. This article also demonstrates how some of the positive attributes that meditation fosters enable individuals to practice nonviolence. Practising non-violence can be communicating and listening to others respectfully, setting and maintaining boundaries in a non-violent manner, and reducing violent or aggressive behaviours in tense situations. This article provides examples of how to incorporate meditation into daily practice, such as taking short pauses to focus on the breath, labelling emotions, and practising loving-kindness. This article also clarifies that meditation should not be confused with anger suppression or withdrawal; rather, meditation should be thought of as responding firmly without hate and acting with clarity instead of acting with reactive behaviours. The article suggests that by positing meditation as a skill that can be learned and that has ethical ramifications, the practice of sustained attention can cultivate inner equilibrium and outward behaviours that may be described as stabilizing, relationally constructive, and harmonious, contributing to a culture of peace.
Keywords – Meditation, Peace training, Attention regulation, Nonviolence, Emotional self-regulation, Compassion,Conflict de-escalation
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