The Fix

Below is an example of original long-form reporting for TheFix.com.

I covered a discussion on Transcendental Meditation that explored its impact on addiction recovery.

The Event

National Summit: Recovery, Meditation, the Brain — Overcoming Stress, Improving Health, and Managing the Effects of Addiction

April 29, 2016 — The Paley Center for Media — New York, NY

Event information

Russell Brand and Elizabeth Vargas Talk Addiction Recovery at Meditation Summit 

By Victoria Kim

The Fix reports from the National Summit: Recovery, Meditation & the Brain.

A growing number of people are discovering a meditation technique known as Transcendental Meditation as an essential tool in their addiction recovery. 

Drug overdose is the leading cause of accidental death in the United States. Among 47,055 fatal drug overdoses in 2014, prescription painkillers and heroin were attributed to 29,467—well over half of them. The federal government has pumped billions of dollars into funding treatment and prevention strategies, but the epidemic has yet to show any sign of waning.

A part of the solution may lie in Transcendental Meditation (TM). This was the subject of a national summit held in New York on Friday—Recovery, Meditation & the Brain—where medical experts and those recovering from substance use disorder, including comedian Russell Brand and 20/20 anchor Elizabeth Vargas, gathered to discuss the role of TM in addressing the American opioid crisis.

Mindfulness meditation is already a tool in rehab programs across the U.S., but TM is just beginning to gain momentum in the public eye. Panelist after panelist of those recovering from substance use disorder attested to the healing power of the TM technique.

The national summit was sponsored in part by the David Lynch Foundation, whose mission is to teach and apply TM among targeted groups such as military veterans and first responders with the goal of treating posttraumatic stress.

Since the foundation began its work more than a decade ago, executive director Bob Roth said that the results have been positive across the board. Now, given the severity of the heroin and painkiller epidemic, the foundation is exploring the potential application of TM in treating substance use disorder.

The Root of the Problem

“America’s drug problem is brought on, in large part, by the epidemic of toxic stress which pervades American life today,” Roth said at the national summit, held at the Paley Center for Media in New York City.

Stress fuels anxiety, depression, sleep disorders, eating disorders and learning disorders, which can lead an individual to self-medicate to “mute” these issues, Roth said. “But, of course, it doesn’t work.”

“We are by default a pill popping country,” said panelist Dr. Richard Friedman, a professor of clinical psychiatry and director of the Psychopharmacology Clinic at Weill Cornell Medical Center. “It’s much easier to just take a pill.”

But quick fixes fail to address the root of the problem. Award-winning ABC News anchor Elizabeth Vargas struggled with anxiety from a young age. She described having “daily full-blown panic attacks” at the age of six, when her father went abroad to fight in the Vietnam War.

“Doctors don’t ask you about anxiety,” Vargas said. “It took me years and years to screw up the courage to tell somebody I felt anxious. And then once I told a doctor I felt anxious, I was given a prescription.” But pills were a bandaid, a temporary solution for a much deeper issue. “Eventually, in adult life, in the last decade, I turned to alcohol as a way to soothe my anxiety.”

Vargas’ experience illustrates the faulty logic behind the widespread dependence on prescription drugs throughout the U.S. “Nobody’s treating what’s causing the anxiety, they’re just treating the symptoms of the anxiety,” she said.

Vargas has been practicing TM for about a year now. When she got back from rehab in 2014, fellow ABC anchor George Stephanopoulos encouraged her to try the technique. A year later, her anxiety decreased significantly.

“Transcendental Meditation helps you slow down,” said Vargas. “If you can slow down long enough to think clearly, you can start to not only manage that panic, but understand that what you’re so terrified of isn’t really that terrifying.”

Accessing Inner Calm

TM is not about stopping thought, said Roth. It’s about accessing inner calm. “It’s not miraculous. It’s a mechanism,” he explained.

Roth, who is one of the most sought-after meditation teachers in the country, likens the TM technique to being on a boat in the middle of the ocean. “You’ve got this turbulence on the surface, but the depth of the ocean is always silent. And that’s analogous to our mind.”

Dr. Norman Rosenthal, a clinical professor of psychiatry at Georgetown University School of Medicine, recommends TM to almost all of his patients. “I’ve been giving these psychoactive medications for decades, and I still do when they’re needed,” he said. “But over the years, I’ve learned everything that medications cannot do. There are so many things medicines don’t do, plus side effects that are really problematic.”

“We really need to understand interventions like TM and what they can do to enable people to lower dosages, ameliorate side effects, and do things like expand consciousness,” he added.

The Research on Meditation and Recovery

There is already ample research demonstrating TM’s wide-ranging benefits, which include reducing stress, anxiety and insomnia, to name a few. “Even in the mid-nineties, there were 19 controlled studies related to drug and alcohol abuse, where TM was vastly superior,” said Dr. Rosenthal.

But there is always room for more research. In light of the growing opioid epidemic, organizations like the David Lynch Foundation are interested in what TM can do for people living with substance use disorder.

The newest development in TM research is a feasibility study on the impact of the TM technique on preventing alcohol relapse, currently underway at the Avery Road Treatment Center, an inpatient alcohol use disorder treatment facility in Rockville, Maryland. Over the course of one year, TM will be integrated into treatment at Avery Road, which has the highest volume of primary alcohol use disorder patients coming through the facility in the state of Maryland.

According to Roth, the preliminary findings offer “intriguing insights into how the technique can be used to address the problem of opioid addiction.” He calls it an effective antidote to the “nightmare of addiction.”

“When you take these positive results with previously published data that shows TM increases dopamine and serotonin, reduces cortisol and blood lactate (which are high in anxiety states), and increases immune system efficiency, you can see the potential of this simple technique in recovery programs,” Roth told The Fix.

Testimonials

The feasibility study is being funded by the Peter G. Dodge Foundation, an organization dedicated to helping people navigate alcoholism recovery. The founder himself, Peter Dodge, is a recovering alcoholic who says he struggled to find an alternative to Alcoholics Anonymous, which did not work for him. Now in a stable place in his recovery, Dodge works through his foundation to provide research grants and a comprehensive guide to alcoholism recovery.

Dodge began practicing TM two years ago. Since then, he says the difference has been night and day. “My brain has been completely rewired.”

Panelists Jonny Podell and Ruby Warrington agree. They too have struggled with addiction, and found that TM was able to beget not just a spiritual change, but a physiological difference in their recovery.

Podell, who used to work in the music industry, relapsed after he was prescribed pain medication for hand surgery. Eventually, he was taking 200 to 300 pain pills a week. “It was a nightmare,” he said. When Podell was introduced to TM in rehab, he said the “sky opened up.” He hasn’t had a drug urge in four years, he says, an “impossibility that I personally attribute to TM.”

Another panelist, lifestyle journalist Ruby Warrington, was a habitual drinker but wanted to quit for her well-being. Ultimately, her recovery journey brought her to TM. “The craving has just completely gone,” she said. “It’s almost like the final piece of the puzzle in terms of my own struggle with alcohol.”

TM has helped comedian and activist Russell Brand in his recovery as well. “I have found it to be an incredibly useful complement and an incredibly useful component to my own recovery and sobriety, in that it gives me access to a different type of consciousness,” he said at the summit via Skype. However, he acknowledges that TM on its own cannot guarantee stable recovery.

Meditation was able to satisfy what Brand calls “a kind of yearning” that he previously tried to address with substances. “What I believe I was looking for through my continued excessive and abusive use of substances was a different plane of consciousness, a different way of feeling.”

“Anyone who’s an expert in the behavior and thinking of addicts will tell you it is their destructive, compulsive, obsessive thinking that leads them to continually misuse drugs and alcohol,” he said. “This specific technique of TM is a way of addressing thought, of changing consciousness.”

Brand has been meditating for seven years. “Certainly it gives you a different perspective. And perspective is everything.”

Implementing TM in Addiction Recovery

Roth, with the help of big-name TM devotees like Brand, Vargas, and filmmaker David Lynch, is working to bring TM to the masses. The technique not only benefits those suffering mental health or substance use disorders, Brand said. It can have a profound impact on any person.

For those in the audience who work in the field, the summit opened the door to implementing TM in their own practices.

Jo Sullivan, a certified addictions counselor at Nick’s Place, a recovery home for young men in Beltsville, Maryland, said she was intrigued by the panelists’ testimonials. Sullivan herself has been in recovery since 2013. She told The Fix that she plans to use TM in her own recovery and introduce it to the residents at Nick’s Place.

“I have watched them do everything from improv and storytelling to creating their own relapse prevention plans, so I am sure they’d be open to try,” she said.

TheFix.com was an online publication that covered news and essays about mental health and substance use disorder. The website went offline in 2022.

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