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Mindfulness

Body Scan Meditation

A systematic attention practice that reduces pain, improves sleep, and reestablishes connection with a body that may feel foreign or threatening.

What it is

Body scan meditation involves slowly moving attention through successive regions of the body β€” from feet to scalp or reverse β€” with curiosity and without judgment. It is one of the core practices of MBSR, developed by Jon Kabat-Zinn, and has a distinct evidence base from sitting meditation.

Why it matters

Cancer and treatment create a complex, often difficult relationship with the body. Pain, nausea, fatigue, and physical changes can make the body feel like an adversary. The body scan is a practice of systematic, non-judgmental contact β€” not attempting to fix what is felt, but to observe it. This paradoxically reduces pain perception through the gate-control mechanism, improves sleep when done before bed, and rebuilds a sense of agency and presence. For people who find sitting meditation difficult due to pain or restlessness, the body scan offers a structured alternative.

The evidence

Multiple trials within MBSR programs show the body scan specifically improves chronic pain, sleep onset, and sleep quality. A 2014 study in Psychosomatic Medicine found MBSR significantly reduced the stress reactivity biomarker cortisol awakening response, with body scan practice identified as a key mediating component. Pain neuroscience research confirms that directed attention can alter nociceptive processing at the spinal cord level.

This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. Always discuss lifestyle changes with your care team, particularly if you are undergoing active cancer treatment.

How to practice

Lie down comfortably, ideally in the evening. Close your eyes. Begin at the left foot β€” bring deliberate, curious attention to the toes, the sole, the heel. Notice sensations: tingling, pressure, temperature, numbness. Do not try to relax them β€” just observe. Move to the ankle, calf, knee, and progress upward through the whole body over 20–45 minutes. If you encounter areas of pain, tension, or discomfort, bring the same quality of curious attention β€” breathe into the area without trying to fix it. Guided body scans are available free from Jon Kabat-Zinn, the UCLA Mindful Awareness Research Center, and Insight Timer.

Frequency

Daily, preferably evening or before sleep

Notes

Some people with PTSD or trauma history find body scan triggering β€” if this is you, work with a trauma-sensitive teacher first. It is normal to fall asleep during a body scan, especially if sleep-deprived β€” this is not a failure.

Tags

pain

sleep

cortisol

awareness

MBSR

relaxation

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Not medical advice. Always work with your care team.

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Body Scan Meditation β€” GladBoy Lifestyle