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Katzenstein, Larry. Center for Meditation and Healing integrates psychiatric health. Psychiatric
Times, Jul 1998, 15(7). Article available online:
http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/p980701b.html.


“Is the center unique in what it offers? ‘Jon Kabat-Zinn, at the University of Massachusetts
Medical Center in Worcester, is doing something similar by relying on the Buddhist tradition and
teaching people mindfulness meditation to improve health and for medical problems,’ said
[Joseph] Loizzo[, director of The Center for Meditation and Healing]. ‘But we’re using several
meditative traditions and multiple meditation techniques and adopting them in a more
comprehensive way.’


“As for Benson and his mind-body medical institute at Beth Israel Deaconess, ‘What he has done
is to isolate a single technique-transcendental meditation-from a whole traditional belief system
and graft it into the Western setting,’ said Loizzo. ‘Our center is based on his work but we've
gone several steps further. We’re looking more seriously at the whole paradigm of self-healing
that these alternative traditions offer, studying meditation as a self-healing science and combining
alternative traditions with current developments in neuroscience, medicine and psychotherapy.’”


Kaushik, Y. P., Y. Paul, and M. Gupta. Yoga for memory development of school-going
children. In H. R. Nagendra, R. Ragarathna, and S. Telles, Yoga Research & Applications:
Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Frontiers in Yoga Research and Applications.
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http://www.serve.com/cmtan/buddhism/Misc/p sybudd1.html.


Kempton, Sally. Feel your way: Our intense emotions—even negative ones, like fear, anger,
sadness, and grief—can be a path to spiritual growth. Yoga Journal, Jan/Feb 2004, pp. 61-67.
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