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WWW.DIGITALTRENDS.COM5 most anticipated comedy shows of 2025, rankedHBOTable of ContentsTable of Contents5. The Rehearsal season 2 (TBA 2025)4. Chad Powers (fall 2025)3. The Studio (March 26)2. Hacks season 4 (TBA 2025)1. The White Lotus season 3 (February 16)With a new year comes a new host of TV shows to look forward to, and 2025 stands to be a great one. With the return of several Emmy-winning comedies and a few highly anticipated new releases, there will be no shortage of laughs in 2025.With great comedies coming to Max, Hulu, Apple TV+, and more, theres bound to be a big comedy release on your preferred streaming service. These are the five most anticipated comedy shows of 2025, ranked.Recommended VideosLooking for more 2025 previews? Check out the 10 most anticipated movies of 2025.RelatedThe Rehearsal | Official Trailer | HBOIts hard to definitively describe Nathan Fielders aggressively meta semi-reality series a comedy, but its hard to categorize it as anything else. Fielder became a bit of a cult hit for his Comedy Central show Nathan For You, in which he played the worst consultant imaginable to real struggling small businesses. InThe Rehearsal, he takes the gag so much further by claiming that one can rehearse for all of lifes moments by simply rehearsing for them.Working again with real, unsuspecting people, he stages exacting, exhaustive rehearsals to prepare people for difficult conversations they want to have with people in their lives and, most jarringly, an entire child rearing trial for a curious but noncommittal potential mom. The controversial first season blew some minds and ruffled some feathers, so its somewhat surprising its coming back to HBO in 2025. We have no idea how weird Fielder is going to get this time, but we cant wait to see what he has in store.Chad Powers | Official Teaser | HuluGlen Powell is Hollywoods it man these days, but that hasnt stopped him from making Chad Powers, perhaps the goofiest TV show idea ever. But somehow, because its Powell, it might actually work. Based on Eli Mannings Chad Powers prank when he went undercover for a walk-on tryout at Penn State and played like, you know, borderline Hall of Fame quarterback Eli Manning, Chad Powers takes the bit to its logical conclusion.As the titular character, Powell dons prosthetics to start his own redemption tour on a new team under a different name after burning out in his first chance to be a star.Chad Powers will debut on Hulu, but has yet to announce a release date.The Studio Official Teaser | Apple TV+Slated for a March 26 release date on Apple TV+, The Studio is the next anticipated project from Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg. This Hollywood satire stars Rogen as newly-appointed studio head Matt Remick, a man who just wants to make good films. Unfortunately, Continental Studios makesmovies money-making blockbusters for the masses. Remicks dream job might just be his greatest nightmare.The stars are out in droves in the trailer, and The Studio looks like it wants to be a real (fictional) show about Hollywood, filled with familiar references and stars.Karen Ballard / MaxAnother HBO awards darling,Hacks recently cleaned up the comedy TV awards at the Golden Globes after also cleaning up at the Emmys. Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder are outstanding as an intergenerational odd couple navigating the changing world of comedy. Smart plays Deborah Vance, a legendary Las Vegas comic who is flirting with being officially over the hill.When she hires entitled 25-year-old outcast Ava Daniels to write some jokes for her, Deborah is her typical self: demanding, condescending, and kinda mean. But the two develop a strange chemistry, and a dark mentorship soon blossoms. The release date of season 4 of Hacks hasnt been announced, but HBO has said it will release sometime in 2025.The White Lotus Season 3 | Official Teaser | MaxOne of the best and darkest comedies on television, The White Lotusreturns for its third season on HBO with an entirely new ensemble (with the exception of Natasha Rothwell reprising her role as spa manager Belinda Lindsey). The first two seasons of Mike Whites anthology series received critical and audience acclaim for its unique conceit: following a completely new cast of characters on vacation at a different location of a White Lotus luxury hotel.First, it was Hawaii, second it was Italy, and now season 3 is set in Thailand. The cast is star-studded once again, headlined by Leslie Bibb, Carrie Coon, Walton Goggins, Jason Isaacs, Michelle Monaghan, and Parker Posey. The story is only hinted at in the trailer, but expectations are high for the February 16 debut.Editors Recommendations0 Comments 0 Shares
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WWW.DIGITALTRENDS.COMThe Schlage Sense Pro only unlocks the door when you want it tohtml PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd" When it comes to smart home technology, smart locks are some of the most convenient gadgets you can buy. Theyll automatically unlock your door as you approach, making it a lot easier to get inside when your arms are full of groceries (only one trip, right?). On the other hand, they can sometimes unlock when you dont want them to like when youre looking out the window beside the door. The Schlage Sense Pro made its debut at CES 2025, and it practically reads your mind.OK, it cant actually read your mind, but its a bit mind-blowing what it can do. The Sense Pro reads your approach and responds accordingly. If you walk up to the door with purpose, it will unlock but a slow saunter wont trigger the lock. It reads your direction, speed, and movement to know whether to activate or not. Of course, its dependent on you having your mobile device on your person.Recommended VideosFor example, if youre on your front porch watering your plants, the lock will remain locked it wont open and close each time you come within range. But if you disturb a hornets nest while gardening and run for the door, it will be unlocked and ready for you to dive for cover.SchlageThe smart lock connects straight to Wi-Fi, so you dont have to worry about a hub unit. It can store up to 250 unique access codes and works with Matter-over-Thread for wider compatibility with other smart home devices. Combine this new lock with an updated and improved Schlage Home app, and you have a powerhouse of smart tech. The app makes it easy to manage settings like the auto-lock timer, use history, and much more.Please enable Javascript to view this contentYoull be able to see all of your connected Schlage locks at a glance and lock or unlock them with just a tap. And if thats not enough, Schlage also introduced the Arrive Smart Wi-Fi Deadbolt with raised keys on the pad. The raised texture of the keypad makes it easier to use if youre wearing gloves, but its also an important step forward for those with visual impairments and other disabilities.RelatedThe updated Schlage Home app will arrive in early 2025. Both the Schlage Arrive and the Schlage Sense Pro will be available for purchase later this year, although the release window and pricing information are yet to be determined. As for installation, its designed to be an easy install that practically anyone can do.Editors Recommendations0 Comments 0 Shares
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WWW.DIGITALTRENDS.COMThe PlantaForm Indoor Smart Garden looks like it belongs aboard the Enterprisehtml PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd" Imagine having fresh vegetables and herbs all throughout the year, no matter how cold the weather is. Sounds nice, doesnt it? At CES 2025, a device that looks straight out of the space age makes that a possibility. The PlantaForm Indoor Smart Garden is a fully enclosed system that uses fogponics (rather than aeroponics or hydroponics) to grow plants, and that means it uses a lot less water than traditional gardening methods.Its both environmentally- and space-friendly. The system solves one of the biggest issues with other smart gardens: the grow lights. While almost every smart garden uses artificial lighting to accelerate growth, the lights need to remain on for anywhere from eight to 16 hours per day. If the garden is in your living room, bedroom, or another space, it becomes uncomfortably bright and sometimes too loud when the water flows but they can work as an effective wake-up alarm in a pinch. The PlantaForm is enclosed with tinted glass that greatly reduces the brightness and makes it much more compatible with a smaller home.Recommended VideosFogponics works by delivering a fine mist straight to the roots. Since the plant doesnt need to expend as much energy to obtain nutrients, you get faster growth and higher-quality vegetables as a result. Theres no soil involved; instead, the seeds are placed in a pod of rockwool. Theyll be covered by a small plastic dome. When the plant sprouts and the leaves reach the dome, just pop it off and set it aside.Plants grow from pre-made kits that are roughly $30 each. As for what you can grow, PlantaForm offers lettuce mixes, cherry tomato mixes, and even edible flowers for use in cocktails. You dont need a green thumb, either; this smart garden is able to grow no matter how bad a gardener you might be. The app walks you through the process, guiding you each step of the way. By the way, the seeds used are non-GMO and pesticide-free.Please enable Javascript to view this contentEven the packaging is designed with the environment in mind, so this is one gadget you can feel good about using. Its just large enough in diameter to fit on an end table but is somewhat tall (but not nearly as tall as the Gardyn). You wont want to put it on the coffee table itll most likely block your view. Available in both black and white, you can opt for whichever style best fits your home.Patrick Hearn | Digital TrendsYou can pick up one of these futuristic smart gardens for yourself for $500. The PlantaForm is one of the most interesting smart gardens weve ever seen and improves upon a niche field of technology in tangible, noteworthy ways and thats why we also awarded it one of our Best of CES 2025 awards.Editors Recommendations0 Comments 0 Shares
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WWW.BUSINESSINSIDER.COMMeta's moderation shake-up highlights a political divide among influencersThe reaction among creators to Meta's content-moderation changes has largely fallen along political lines.Some influencers worry the changes could cause harm to the LGBTQ+ community.Others questioned Meta's decision to feature more political content.Getting "Zucked" a term for having your account suspended or content removed due to community violations is a staple in the creator lexicon.Despite that, creators who spoke with Business Insider had mixed reactions to Meta CEOMark Zuckerberg'splans to reduce content moderation in the name of free speech.On Tuesday, Meta unveiled new policies that included winding down fact-checking, loosening content moderation, and introducing X-style "Community Notes."The creator community largely reacted along political lines, with some left-leaning influencers expressing disappointment."This is really about just pandering to the Trump administration in a way that feels extremely obvious," LGBTQ+ advocate and "Gay News" host Josh Helfgott told BI.Left-leaning filmmaker Michael McWhorter also said he felt the changes were catering to Trump and his MAGA base."You're not trying to balance things out," McWhorter said of Meta. "We are shifting to the other side of things."Elsewhere, some right-leaning creators cheered the changes.Christopher Townsend, an Air Force vet and conservative rapper with over 300,000 Instagram followers, told BI he thought the policy overhaul was "a great step toward the decentralization of information and the end to the control legacy media has had on the prevailing narrative."Instagram head Adam Mosseri posted a video on Wednesday outlining how the new policies would impact creators. He said the company would correct its "over-enforcement" of content moderation and begin recommending political content again."If you're a creator who likes to post about political content, this should mean that you feel comfortable doing so on any of our platforms," Mosseri said. "We will now show political recommendations."Meta didn't respond to a request for comment.Some are wary of Community NotesAs part of the policy overhaul, Meta is getting rid of fact-checkers in favor of Community Notes in the style of Elon Musk's X. Users will be able to volunteer to contribute to Community Notes, which will appear on content when people with a range of different perspectives agree a correction is in order."Like X, it gives the user community more authority over the platform instead of biased third-party administrators," Townsend said.McWhorter said that while Community Notes were a "great equalizer," he felt they were not an adequate replacement for fact-checking. He said he wished Meta would rely on a combination of both systems.A former Instagram staffer told BI that they felt placing the responsibility to moderate content on users and creators "on a platform with massive global reach and historical harmful content issues" was a step in the wrong direction. They asked for anonymity to protect business relationships; their identity is known to BI.Concerns about anti-LGBTQ+ discourseHelfgott expressed concern about Meta's plan to decrease moderation around certain political topics. The company's blog post specifically noted immigration and gender identity as areas of debate where it plans to decrease restrictions.Helfgott said that while Meta's plans were described in the language of "political discourse," he felt the changes could lead to bullying of the LGBTQ+ community.Alongside Tuesday's announcement, Meta updated its Hateful Conduct policy."We do allow allegations of mental illness or abnormality when based on gender or sexual orientation," the company wrote, "given political and religious discourse about transgenderism and homosexuality and common non-serious usage of words like 'weird.'""This is the most anti-LGBTQ announcement that a social-media platform has made in recent memory," Helfgott said.While McWhorter told BI he felt his content had been Zucked or unfairly suppressed in the past, he said he'd prefer a stricter moderating system even if it had "flaws.""I'd rather that I take the hit for a joke that it didn't understand than that stuff being allowed to be spread all over the platform," he said, referring to potentially harmful posts.Meta's increased political emphasis marks an about-faceSome creators were flummoxed by Meta's about-face on the amount of political content it plans to recommend. The company had previously cut back significantly on promoting political content in feeds in recent years.Malynda Hale, a creator and activist with 65,000 followers, said this change could benefit political creators but questioned the company's motives."I think the fact that Meta is going to be serving up more political content is actually positive for creators like myself, but I don't think it's with the intention to keep the community informed," she told BI.She said she felt Meta wanted to boost engagement even at the cost of division and disagreement.Despite some misgivings, the creators who spoke with BI said they weren't going anywhere."I'll work with the system as it's presented to me, and I'll find my way to work around it," McWhorter said. "I constantly have to do that on all different platforms."Helfgott said he felt "handcuffed" by Meta because if he stopped posting on Instagram, he would lose out on millions of people seeing his content each month."Meta knows this," he said. "They know that creators may not like this, but we need the reach, and we will keep posting there."0 Comments 0 Shares
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WWW.BUSINESSINSIDER.COMParts of the US should be renamed 'Amrica Mexicana,' Mexican president says in response to TrumpThe President of Mexico has suggested renaming parts of the US to "Amrica Mexicana."Claudia Sheinbaum's sarcastic remark followed Trump's idea of renaming the Gulf of Mexico as "the Gulf of America."Sheinbaum added that she believed she would have a good relationship with Trump.Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has responded to President-elect Donald Trump's proposal to rename the Gulf of Mexico as "the Gulf of America," suggesting that parts of North America should be renamed "Amrica Mexicana."During a press briefing on Wednesday, Sheinbaum pointed to a colonial-era 17th-century map showing parts of US territory that were once part of Mexico."Why don't we call it Amrica Mexicana? That sounds nice, no?" she said.Her remarks came after Trump, speaking at a press conference at his Mar-a-Lago estate on Tuesday, said he planned to rename the Gulf."We're going to be changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America," he said. "What a beautiful name and it's appropriate."Following the conference, United States Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene posted on X: "I'll be introducing legislation ASAP to officially change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to its rightful name, the Gulf of America!"Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said he was willing to work with Trump on renaming the Gulf, but only if Trump worked with Democrats on "an actual plan to lower costs for Americans.""That is what the American people want us to focus on first, not on renaming bodies of water," Schumer said.In the press briefing, Sheinbaum also hit back at Trump's claim that Mexico was "run by cartels," saying the "people are in charge" of the nation.The president added that Trump had "his own way of communicating" but that she believed she would still have a good relationship with him.0 Comments 0 Shares
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WWW.BUSINESSINSIDER.COMSome of Hollywood's biggest productions have been paused by the LA wildfires. Here are the shows affected, including 'Fallout' and 'Jimmy Kimmel Live.'Wildfires have torn through Los Angeles, destroying homes and displacing residents.Major Hollywood productions have paused shooting.They include "Fallout," one Amazon's biggest hits last year, and "Grey's Anatomy."As the Los Angeles wildfires continue to tear through swathes of the city, Hollywood has responded by pausing multiple TV and film productions.As of 8 A.M ET, at least five people had died in the wildfires, and150,000 people had been evacuated from the greater Los Angeles area, including the Pacific Palisades, Malibu, and Pasadena.The Los Angeles Times reported that around 2,000 buildings had been destroyed, citing the LA Fire Department.Numerous celebrities, including Billy Crystal and Paris Hilton have lost their homes. The Palisades fire burned over 17,000 acres of land, and a fifth fire, dubbed the Sunset Fire, started in the Hollywood Hills on Wednesday evening.Here are the projects that have paused production.'Fallout' and 'Grey's Anatomy' are among the TV shows affected Ella Purnell in "Fallout" and Ellen Pompeo in "Grey's Anatomy." Amazon Prime Video/ABC Variety reported on Wednesday that Amazon had postponed restarting filming for "Fallout" season two until Friday.The show, based on the popular "Fallout" games by Bethesda Softworks, was one of the streamer's biggest hits of 2024.The outlet also reported that the Warner Bros. studio backlot in Burbank was closed, stopping work on "Abbott Elementary," "The Pitt," "All-American," and "Georgie & Mandy's First Marriage."However, the city of Burbank said on Wednesday that there were no evacuation orders for the area.NBC Universal stopped production on "Suits: LA," the spinoff to Aaron Korsh's popular legal drama starring Stephen Amell, as well as "Ted," "Hacks," "Loot," and "Happy's Place."CBS Studios meanwhile paused work on "NCIS," "NCIS: Origins," "After Midnight," "The Neighborhood," and "Poppa's House." And Disney delayed work on "Grey's Anatomy," "Jimmy Kimmel Live," and "Doctor Odyssey."On Wednesday,FilmLA,which helps coordinate permits for movies and TV shows shooting in the city, said the LA County Fire Department told them to withdraw all permits for Altadena, La Crescenta, La Canada/Flintridge, and Unincorporated Pasadena, and others were possible.In an update on the same day, the company said that the LA Parks and Recreation Department had canceled all filming permits until January 14.The disruption from the wildfires comes as Hollywood tries to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic and actor and writer strikes last year, which both led to numerous production delays for major and smaller studios alike.Mike Miller, the vice president of the film and TV crew union IATSE, told The Hollywood Reporter on Wednesday that the organization would support those affected.He said: "We're going to be there to support them and I'm confident that we'll be able to come through this. But it is absolutely going to add additional burden to many people in our industry that are already struggling."Representatives for Amazon, NBC Universal, CBS, and Disney did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.0 Comments 0 Shares
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WWW.VOX.COMHow long should you meditate?A scientific narrative about what meditation does can offer a helpful lens on what is happening when you take your seat on the cushion. But no matter the story, theres no substitute for actually doing the practice. Which raises the question: If youre interested in exploring deeper meditation, how long will it take you to actually get somewhere? Theres no fixed relationship between how much time you put in and how much progress you get out. And even thinking about meditation in these terms time you spend meditating as an investment in particular outcomes will earn you smirks from some meditation teachers. But there are clear trends and useful benchmarks to help you think through how much daily meditation might actually deepen your practice.Meditation is more like learning physics than exercising Meditation is often compared to exercise, where the relationship between effort and outcomes is usually clear. The more time you put in, the more results you get. But its not quite as straightforward as that, whether in exercise or meditation.This was first published in More to MeditationMore to Meditation is Voxs five-day course on deepening your meditation practice. Sign up here!Take the Buddhist idea of Right Effort, which is kind of like learning proper weightlifting form. If you want to lift more weight, but your form is bad, the only thing your weightlifting actually measures is how close you are to injury, said Tucker Peck, a meditation teacher and clinical psychologist who specializes in working with advanced meditators. Given proper form, you might then expect a consistent relationship between how often you work out and the bulge of your biceps. But meditation outcomes can be jagged and unpredictable. As cognitive scientist and meditator Ruben Laukkonen explained to me last year, the amount of time you spend practicing isnt a reliable indicator of how much progress youve made.Instead, he suggested thinking of meditation like learning physics. Theres a lot to learn that does just require putting in the work memorizing all those equations and theories, mastering the math that underpins it. And you want to make sure youre learning correct ideas, rather than wasting your time on fake equations or disproved hypotheses.But theres also intuition at play, and flashes of insight can erupt at any point in the learning process. Meditation, too, can be quick and intuitive for some, or a long slog for others. Consider the Indian sage Ramana Maharshi (18791950). Among the hordes of gurus out there, hes widely considered one of the least assailable cases of being the spiritual real deal.At the age of 16 while hanging out at his uncles house, with no particular interest or commitment to meditation, Maharshi got the sudden feeling that he was going to die. So he laid down, observed the process, and a few minutes later, stood up, permanently enlightened, as the story goes. Now, Im not sure what that actually means, and Im skeptical of anyone who says they do. But the point is that some people can spend their entire lives meditating in search of some big psychological transformation, only for nothing much to happen. Others, like Maharshi, can get hit with what some traditions call sudden awakening, without any real prior meditation practice to speak of.And making progress in meditation, at least traditionally speaking, depends on more than just doing the actual meditation. Across almost every school of both Buddhism and Hinduism, getting your ethics in order sla, or moral conduct in Buddhism comes before sitting down to practice. According to Buddhist scripture, no matter how long you sit for, you wont be able to access the jhnas states of deep meditative absorption unless your mind is relatively free from the five hindrances (which are obstacles to deep concentration like ill will, sloth, or restlessness). And as the Buddhas teaching of the Eightfold Path holds, establishing moral thought, speech, action, and livelihood all come before getting to mindfulness practice.All of which is to say, theres no obvious formula here, and a lot of moving parts. Still, whether youre looking to drop every ounce of tension youve stored up in your muscles, deconstruct some harmful mental habits, or embark upon a first-person investigation into the nature of mind, we can flesh out a bit more detail on different approaches to daily meditation. How much of my day will I have to sink into advanced meditation practices?Lets assume you wont spontaneously launch into the deep end of meditation experiences with a Ramana-style sudden awakening (but you never know). Theres no blanket answer to how long you should meditate, of course. But if youre interested in deepening your meditation practice, there are at least two general principles to follow:Its more important to practice regularly than to sporadically do longer sessions. 20 minutes a day is a better bet than 60 minutes once a week.Therefore, you should do the most meditation that you will actually do every day (within reason, which well get to).As mindfulness has gone mainstream, though, much shorter sessions have become the vogue. Many of the stress-relief meditations on popular apps like Headspace or Calm cluster around 10-minute sessions.Some teachers especially those coming from non-dual traditions that believe were all already enlightened but just dont know it say that even short, 5- or 10-minute meditations can be powerful stuff. Nondual meditation teacher Loch Kelly teaches mindful glimpses that take no more than a few minutes, but, he told me, can give a real peek into deep states of meditation. Though he added that it then takes about three years of practice to stabilize those glimpses. Glimpses, stress relief, and sudden awakenings aside, most meditation teachers I spoke with agree that youll have to sit for more than 10 minutes per day to really get acquainted with meditations deeper practices. Even the formal method of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), which trojan-horsed mindfulness into Western science more than 40 years ago, is an eight-week course that recommends 45 minutes of daily meditation. Jon Kabat-Zinn meditation teacher, former biologist, and MBSRs creator settled on 45 minutes as a middle ground between longer sessions that could get you past the initial fidgety phases of meditation, while being somewhat realistic for people to actually do on their own (though a 2017 review found that people wind up doing more like 30 minutes). MBSRs timeframe is pretty close to that of Transcendental Meditation, a technique based on silently repeating a personal mantra thats been practiced by a range of celebrities, from the Beatles to David Lynch, which prescribes two 20-minute sessions per day. And meditation teacher Leigh Brasington, who well hear from later in this course, recommends a minimum of 45 minutes per day if you want to get into states of deep concentration like the jhnas.So if youre used to shorter meditations, or none at all, work upwards incrementally. Try starting with at least a 20-minute session per day. Jack Kerouac, a writer who introduced much of the 20th-century Beat Generation to Buddhism, wrote to his fellow poet Allen Ginsberg that it takes twenty minutes to quiet the machine motor of the mind. Despite his competing infatuation with benzos and wine, I think he was on to something.If you think back to yesterdays newsletter, quieting the motor of the mind is equivalent to doing enough focused attention practice to release the minds first layer of priors or habits. A quiet mind is one where attention no longer gets snagged on mental activity, clearing the path to deeper open-monitoring or nondual practices. And 20 minutes can be a helpful benchmark for getting there.But instead of using a timer, try using a stopwatch, and practicing to intuitively stop around the time youre shooting for. This might be tricky at first, but it gets easier. And that way, if you find yourself in the midst of a particularly spacious and comfortable meditation, you can stretch it a bit longer without being jolted out by a timer. Or, if your sit is getting particularly tortuous, or your back hurts, you can just stop with less grief about not lasting the whole time.As an added bonus, youll begin to develop an internal clock for meditation duration, which is actually something advanced practitioners train to do anyway.Peck, the meditation teacher and psychologist, suggests that if youre doing anything more than 45 minutes, you should be checking in with a teacher every now and then. Longer sessions are more likely to send you into deeper states, where meditation shifts from relaxing to potentially transformative. But theres no guarantee that things change for the better, which is where experienced teachers can help steer your practice. Ive seen quite a number of people become psychotic from meditating six hours a day in their room without talking to anybody, he said. A word on the under-studied risks of meditationResearch on the risks of meditation is unsurprisingly lagging behind the benefits. A 2020 systematic review of 83 meditation studies found that the prevalence of meditation adverse events, which can include anything from anxiety and depression to suicidal behaviors, hovered around 8.3 percent. But experts I spoke with are all over the map on whether that number looks too high or too low. The relative lack of knowledge about the risks has given rise to various organizations trying to fill in the gaps. Networks of scholars and practitioners are looking to educate healthcare professionals on how to support people going through challenging meditation experiences. Communities like Cheetah House offer direct support, alongside training meditation teachers to better handle difficult experiences. And resources like psychotherapist David Treleavens book, Trauma-Sensitive Mindfulness, can help guide people through a more supported approach to meditation.The goals and benefits of meditation change over timeAccording to the original framework for meditative development presented in Buddhist scripture the four-path model as your practice develops, real, durable changes to your psychology set in. Different traditions have their own maps of what making progress in your contemplative practice looks like and yes, some teachers will ridicule the idea of spiritual progress as precisely the goal-oriented approach that undermines development but most share the idea that if you keep up your practice over time, deeper stages begin to unfold. So instead of thinking about meditation as just a daily practice, then, we can also think about what it means to make progress over time. Are there benchmarks of progress in meditation? If you spent 30 minutes a day meditating over the next decade, youd rack up about 1,800 hours of practice. Would the benefits of that much effort justify the opportunity cost of other things you mightve done with about 75 days of your life?One of the few studies to explore the relationship between lifetime hours spent meditating and benefits was published in 2022 by psychologists from the University of Melbournes Contemplative Studies Centre. They surveyed 1,668 English-speaking adult meditators with an average of 1,095 lifetime meditation hours. (On the spectrum of expertise, this is still fairly low. For comparison, when Harvard neuroscientist Matthew Sacchet studied an advanced meditator in his lab earlier this year, they had roughly 23,000 hours of lifetime practice).The psychologists looked at the correlation between lifetime meditation hours and four variables: life satisfaction, positive affect, negative affect, and psychological distress. Across all four cases, two things immediately jumped out.First, steeper benefits show up in the first 500 hours of practice. In the cases of life satisfaction and positive affect (basically, pleasure), the sharpest gains registered within the first 200 hours. The authors point out a range of limitations to their study, from sampling bias to basing lifetime practice hours on an extrapolation of prior-month self-reported meditation time. But overall, they come away with two conclusions: Meditation outcomes appear non-linear with time spent practicing, and the strongest gains seem to show up in the first 500 hours of practice.I found that strange. If you look at the range of claims people make about their meditation practice, my read is that they get more intense, not less, as someones practice develops.So I reached out to Nicholas Bowles, PhD student in psychology and lead author of the study, to ask if he really thought the beginning stages of meditation are more potent than the later ones. He explained that in his more recent research, hes finding that as meditators practice more, their goals and motivations change. People who have practiced less tend to value mental health, improving relationships, etc, while people who have practiced more tend to value spiritual growth, he said via email.Peck said that he sees this pattern of changing motivations with almost every student. That peoples motivations change is universal. When you first start meditating, your mind is just wasting most of its energy on this idiotic, circular rambling. You have no sensory clarity, you dont really understand whats going on deeper in your mind. Which means that theres no single metric that can capture the thrust of meditations effects from 0 hours of practice out to 1,000, let alone 23,000. If you find major improvements to life satisfaction in the first 200 hours that level off afterward, that could be because the category of life satisfaction no longer captures the sort of benefits youre getting out of sustained practice. Overall then, Bowles added, the gains from practice for experienced practitioners probably continue to be quite impactful, but perhaps theyre impactful in different ways.Guests practice yoga at Team Milks Every Womans Marathon Wellness Fair & Expo on November 15, 2024, in Savannah, Georgia. Carol Lee Rose/Getty Images for Every Womans MarathonHow do movement and meditation fit together? Q+A with Tibetan Buddhist meditation teacher Chandra EastonIn my early 20s, I spent some time at a Zendo in southern India. During sesshins, which are like Zens form of silent meditation retreats, our daily schedule would mostly alternate between periods of sitting meditation (zazen) and walking meditation (kinhin).After sitting for something like 10 hours a day, walking was obviously crucial for my Western joints, as well as my sanity. But kinhin isnt supposed to be just a respite from the tyranny of crossed legs its meditation, too. But I struggled to really believe that.To my mind, the real meditation was sitting still, and walking was mostly a concession we make on account of having bodies that need movement. If you think back to our framework for how meditation deconstructs the predictive mind, I saw movement as just a part of the first layer of focused attention practices. The deeper stuff requires sitting still.Now, I think of sitting still in meditation as training wheels for the real practice, which is finding the same states of deeper awareness while your mind is thrashing around and navigating the stuff of daily life, whether the subway in Manhattan, the grocery store aisles the day before Thanksgiving, or while your kids are screaming. Thats when you find out if your meditation practice is actually working. Ram Dass has another good quip: If you think youre enlightened, go spend a week with your family.But moving engages the mind, so if meditative depth is about shutting down the predictive mind, and moving triggers it, arent these opposing forces? Hows it possible to progress into deeper open-monitoring and non-dual states while doing yoga poses, walking, or dancing?To explore these questions, I spoke with Chandra Easton, a meditation teacher, yoga instructor, and translator of Tibetan Buddhist texts. This excerpt of our conversation has been edited for length and clarity.Youve been teaching a class that combines meditation, mantra, and movement. How do these three fit together?In Buddhism, the body, speech, and mind are called the three doors, or gates. We can work through each of those different doorways into the same space. Theres one big room: presence.Sitting in stillness is the ultimate body door. But thats not easy for a lot of us to do. So in my class, I designed it to touch on those three doors and give people different access points into awareness or presence.Can you go as deep into meditation during movement as you can when youre sitting still?Its true that stillness allows us to access very deep states of attention. When we move, the mind moves. So we tell people dont move if you dont have to, because youre just stirring up the dust again. But ones not better than the other, it just depends where you are in the arc of your own practice.For me, Ive had some challenging chronic pain issues. So sitting still in traditional meditation posture is not always an option. Its forced me to find other ways to practice, and its been really liberating and helpful.Ive practiced through walking meditation, and supine [lying on your back] meditation. I was in such bad shape that I had to lie down while teaching meditation. And that was a really good thing for me to do in public. People would come up and say thank you for teaching us how to tend to our bodies.A lot of people deal with chronic pain, which can be a boundary for people to get into meditation. There were periods when I was in so much pain that I had to do moving meditation, like yoga, qi gong, or tai chi. For many years, I taught a style called shadow yoga, which is based on Hatha Yoga and South Indian dance and martial arts. Theres a quality of slow, mindful movement. Currently, I practice Tibetan yoga and shadow yoga adapted for my situation, and I teach elements of these in my courses to help prepare people for meditation. So for people who are facing illness or chronic pain, moving meditation options are really important. Thats also why working with a skillful teacher is very important, somebody who can help the student navigate different phases of their lives in different circumstances.I think Ive been a little biased against movement meditation because when I think of meditation, I picture the Buddha sitting quietly under the Bodhi tree. A lot of people dont know that after the Buddha sat under the Bodhi tree and got liberated from the roots of suffering, he got up and he walked. He taught for 45 years, and he spent more time walking than sitting. And that doesnt get communicated to a lot of us Westerners. So we get this perception that seated meditation is the most important thing. And there are times in our life when that should be the case so we can train the mind to go into deep concentration. But then, the advanced practice is getting up from that and blending the meditative state with the post-meditative state. The true advanced practice is to blend the awareness that we steep in and touch during [still] meditation with all our life, our movement or driving or parenting or cooking. All the mundane things.Want to dive deeper into meditation?Check out Voxs free meditation course. For five days, staff reporter Oshan Jarow breaks down what you need to know to fit meditation into your everyday life, features exclusive interviews with different meditation experts, and offers bite-size meditation practice exercises. Sign up here!Youve read 1 article in the last monthHere at Vox, we're unwavering in our commitment to covering the issues that matter most to you threats to democracy, immigration, reproductive rights, the environment, and the rising polarization across this country.Our mission is to provide clear, accessible journalism that empowers you to stay informed and engaged in shaping our world. By becoming a Vox Member, you directly strengthen our ability to deliver in-depth, independent reporting that drives meaningful change.We rely on readers like you join us.Swati SharmaVox Editor-in-ChiefSee More:0 Comments 0 Shares
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WWW.THEGUARDIAN.COMTalking about the Palestinian story was forbidden: a developers struggle to make a game about the 1948 NakbaIn the city of Nablus in the West Bank, Rasheed Abueideh owns a nut roastery, where he works to provide for his family. He is also an award-winning game developer. A decade ago, as the 2014 Gaza war raged, he created a harrowing video game called Lilya and the Shadows of War, about a man trying to find safety for his daughter and himself but as missiles fall around them, it quickly becomes clear that there is no safety. When the game was released in 2016, it was initially rejected by Apple on the grounds of inappropriate content, a decision reversed after a week of outcry.Despite the acclaim and attention that Lilya received, however, Abueideh has not been able to raise funding for his next game through conventional means. The game he envisions, Dreams on a Pillow, is about the 1948 Nakba, told through a folk tale about a mother in the Arab-Israeli war, in which more than half the Palestinian population was displaced. He tells me that his game has been rejected almost 300 times, by publishers and providers of cultural grants, for being too controversial, too much of a risk. Talking about the Palestinian story was always forbidden, he says.Historical context the games timeline switches between lead character Omms past, and her terrifying present. Photograph: Rasheed AbueidehNow, once again, war rages in Abueidehs home. The developer fears for his safety, and he is determined to tell this Palestinian story. With the help of a small team of developers and advisers from the region and beyond, he launched a crowdfunding campaign in the hopes of making Dreams on a Pillow a reality.Crowdfunding was our only option, but even that would not work for me because all the major crowdfunding platforms do not recognise Palestine, says Abueideh. The team turned to LaunchGood, a Muslim-focused platform, where it met its funding goal on 7 January. Its enough to cover at least half the games development costs, and he hopes that once the game starts to take shape, it will be easier to find the rest. I am overjoyed, he says. The support on social media and on the campaign page has been overwhelming, demonstrating how much people care about the Palestinian story I didnt expect this level of success.I want to deliver a message Rasheed Abueideh in his nut roastery in Nablus. Photograph: Rasheed AbueidehThe folk tale that inspired Dreams on a Pillow tells of a mother who rushes into her home to retrieve her baby before fleeing, only to realise that she has escaped with a pillow instead. In the game, she spends her days trying to make her way to Lebanon after the massacre at Tantura, and the nights dreaming of the Palestine she knew as a child. Putting the pillow down lets her move through the games scenarios more freely, but invites nightmares and hallucinations. Abueideh estimates that it will take two years to complete; heartbreakingly, the crowdfunding page contains an assurance that a clear plan for the completion of the game has been put in place to ensure continuity in the case of Rasheeds disappearance, injury or demise at the hand of the continuously expanding Israeli aggression in the West Bank.The goal is to let the player feel and understand what happened to the Palestinians during this dark era, which is still shaping our daily lives, says Abueideh. I want to deliver a message that the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians is an ongoing process that started in 1948. At that point, [players] will be able to understand what is happening today and can take a stand.0 Comments 0 Shares
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WWW.DAILYSTAR.CO.UKNintendo Switch 2 accessories leak via GameStop employee here's what we learnedOne alleged GameStop employee has seemingly confirmed that Nintendo Switch 2 accessories have been added to the company's store here's all we've learned about the must-have console of the yearTech13:56, 09 Jan 2025Is this the Nintendo Switch 2?(Image: @KirPinkFury/X)Nintendo's hotly anticipated follow-up to the Switch, reportedly called the Switch 2, is leaking all over the place at the moment.Reports have suggested it'll use AI upscaling for 4K visuals, have new magnetic Joy-Con controllers, and it could welcome a AAA title as a third-party launch game.Just days after a Switch accessory maker claimed to have a Switch 2 and even predicted a release month, one Reddit user has posted GameStop's stock-keeping system which showcases a series of Switch 2 accessories that hint at a big upgrade from the first model.According to the post, GameStop is expecting to be able to sell a variety of MicroSD cards, and a joy-con charger grip.None of those are particularly surprising, of course, but a follow-up suggests there are cases, and tempered glass screen protectors planned, too.Again, not all that surprising, but it looks like it'll be using Express microSD cards which have drastically faster speeds than current SD cards. That could help with the AI upscaling since it'll be done on-device, so speed will be important.Aside from comments wondering how the poster is able to share this without getting a telling off, many seem to think next week could be the perfect time for the Switch 2 to be revealed.That would be after CES in Las Vegas has concluded, and before the Xbox Developer Direct reportedly coming on January 23.Time will tell, but it's interesting that we're seemingly hearing a lot about the console just not from Nintendo again.For more on handheld consoles, be sure to check out why your next system should be a Steam Deck OLED.Article continues belowFor the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.RECOMMENDED0 Comments 0 Shares