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        <title><![CDATA[Midfield Meditation: Stanford Seeks Serenity to Strengthen Players' Minds]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Midfield Meditation: Stanford Seeks Serenity to Strengthen Players' Minds</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Since his sister&#8217;s suicide two years ago, former Stanford defensive  tackle Solomon Thomas has become an advocate for mental health awareness  and is trying to help players at his alma mater find inner peace on the  football field.</p><p>A calm British voice gives instructions over the speaker system at Stanford’s football field.</p><p><em>Scan down through the body now, before shifting your attention to the breath. </em></p><p>The
 Stanford players are all frozen in place with their eyes closed. Some 
are lying down on their backs on the grass. Others are sitting up 
cross-legged. The California summer sun beats down on their sweaty 
brows.</p><p>This moment of stillness in Stanford’s fall camp practice 
is a far cry from the loud hip-hop music that typically blares from the 
speakers as the players are constantly in motion. This is Stanford 
football’s daily camp meditation, a five-minute transition between the 
warm-up running and the rest of practice.</p><p><em>Imagine a ray of 
sunlight slowly moving down from your head, and filling up the rest of 
your body. Your shoulders, your arms, your finger tips… </em></p><p>In 
advance of the 2019 football season, Stanford football alum and 49ers 
defensive tackle Solomon Thomas made a $5,000 donation to the football 
program to cover five years of subscriptions to Headspace, a popular 
meditation app.</p><p>Thomas’s sister Ella committed suicide two years 
ago, weeks after Thomas’s rookie season ended. Since then, he’s become 
an advocate for mental health awareness. Ella was a survivor of sexual 
assault and she struggled with anxiety, depression and PTSD. After his 
sister’s death, Thomas dealt with his own mental health issues, and is 
still going through them. He cycled through anger, depression and 
confusion, and learned to find his own mental health routine of seeing a
 therapist weekly and meditating around twice a week to help him 
“untwist his mind.”</p><p>Thomas’s
 donation was inspired by Cavaliers center Kevin Love, who was the first
 athlete to donate subscriptions to the app. Love’s foundation covered 
subscriptions for all UCLA student-athletes and coaches.</p><p>“I 
thought it was important to start in college sports, at my own school,” 
Thomas says. “Self-love is the most important love you can give 
yourself. It’s important to have that foundation that you can work on 
every day, so when things aren&#8217;t going your way you have something you 
can go back to, a coping mechanism. We all should be doing that no 
matter how happy or how sad we are.”</p><p>Stanford head coach David 
Shaw says his team immediately embraced meditation, particularly for 
help with improving their sleep. “This age of young people, this college
 age group, it’s the highest percentage of anxiety and depression as 
long as we have been tracking that, “ he says. “So for them to have 
tools to help them sleep and get some rest so they can be better 
students and better athletes and rested to handle the next day is as 
important as anything else we have done with it.”</p><p>Junior tight  end Colby Parkinson, who is currently preparing for the NFL draft, used  to have trouble falling asleep at night. Because of their class  schedule, Stanford practices late in the day, and the adrenaline from  practice made it difficult for him to shut his brain off. He tried  everything, putting his phone away an hour before bed time, and moving  to sleep on his couch. Nothing worked until he tried the app’s guided  sleep meditation.</p><p>“I used it for 60 days straight or something like that,” he says. “My
 phone kept sending me congratulations [on your streak] alerts. It&#8217;s 
nice now because I don&#8217;t have to use it every single night to fall 
asleep. I can kind of take myself through the meditation and then if I 
am restless, I can play it on my phone really quick.”</p><p>Shaw also 
likes to meditate as he winds down at the end of a long day. “It’s like,
 let me center myself at the end of the day and I can catalog what I did
 today,” he says. “I can prepare myself for tomorrow and be able to feel
 like, now I can rest because I have an idea of where my place is in all
 the things going on in my life.”</p><p>Shaw says the two position 
groups who use meditation practice the most on Stanford’s team are the 
quarterbacks and specialists, whose jobs involve the most mental 
processing, visualization and repetition among the team. Offensive 
coordinator Tavita Pritchard actually started using the meditation app 
with Stanford’s quarterbacks before Thomas made his donation, so the 
quarterbacks were the guinea pigs with the meditation experiment before 
it was rolled out to the rest of the team.</p><p>“Our guys have  embraced the idea of the mind controlling the body,” Shaw says. “The  benefits of not just meditation but visualization and positive thinking,  internal motivation and directed intentionality.”</p><p> Thomas likens the feeling of a good meditation session to the mental  release found in yoga’s final resting pose, Shavasana. “You feel like  you are there for two hours but you are really there for three minutes,”  he says. “That&#8217;s what my second or third session felt like. I was like,  wow, I felt like I just got a great rest and I&#8217;m mentally set.” </p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[GAGmen]]></dc:creator>
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