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Basic Takeaways
Many clients wonder how to meditate and are looking for strategies to help them get started. In this blog, will learn why meditation and mindfulness are vital to success both for you and your customers, and how to incorporate meditation into busy lifestyle. Here are some key takeaways from this conversation with Lauren Aguon, LMSW, YACEP, E-RYT500, of my Vinyasa practice:
Watch the lesson: The foundations of meditation
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Meditation is a mindfulness practice that helps individuals focus pay attention and cultivate awareness. Research continues to show that a consistent meditation practice can support mental clarity, emotional stability, self awarenesssmallsmall and overall prosperity. For health and exercise professionals, incorporating meditation into personal routines or clientsprograms can enhance mind-body awareness, support adhesion and help loosen unhelpful thought patterns. Despite its growing popularity, meditation is often misunderstood or oversimplified, leading to uncertainty about what it really is and how it works.
To clarify this practice and its modern relevance, ACE is proud to introduce the fundamentals of meditation from My Vinyasa Practice. In this blog, Lauren Aguon, LMSW, YACEP, E-RYT500, explores the science behind meditation and offers practical application strategies that you can use both for yourself and in your work with clients.
What inspired you to create the foundation of meditation and why do you think meditation is especially important for today’s health and exercise professionals?
After more than 10 years of teaching yoga and running a wellness business, I saw a consistent gap: meditation was often treated as an “add-on” rather than a foundational skill. Many practitioners wanted to teach or recommend meditation but did not feel confident in their own practice or in their language around it. Foundations of Meditation was created to demystify the practice and make it accessible, practical and instructive.
For today’s health and exercise professionals, many of whom are dealing with burnout, nervous system overload and increasingly complex client needs; meditation is not optional. Of a critical tool for self-regulation, presence and sustainable leadership. When professionals incorporate these skills, this naturally improves quality service provide.
Meditation is often misunderstood or oversimplified. What do you think people do most often wrong with meditation?
One of the biggest misconceptions is that meditation is about “clearing the mind” or achieving a constant state of calm. This idea makes people feel like they are failing before they even start. Meditation is actually about building awareness of thoughts, sensations, habits and patterns, without immediately reacting to them.
Another misconception is that meditation is passive. In fact, it’s an active, trainable skill that builds focus, emotional resilience, and discernment over time. It’s not about running away from life. it is to learn how to meet life more skillfully.
How does journaling and self-reflection enhance meditation practice, both personally and professionally?
Journaling creates a bridge between inner experience and conscious understanding. In my own practice, and with students, I have found that reflection helps clarify what meditation really reveals. It can provide insight into patterns of reactivity, moments of insight, or shifts in perspective that might otherwise go unnoticed.
Professionally, journaling supports integration. It helps practitioners articulate their experience, improve their teaching language and develop greater empathy for clients. Reflection turns meditation from something you do to something you actively learn from.
What skills or insights do professionals tend to pick up that most surprise them as they progress through the course?
Many professionals are surprised by how much their listening skills improve, both internally and with clients. They often report greater patience, clearer boundaries, and an increased ability to stay present without having to correct or perform.
Another common understanding is the realization of this meditation it doesn’t require perfection or rigidity. Practitioners gain confidence in adapting practices to real people bodies and real lives, without losing its integrity the tradition.
Can you offer strategies for sustainable, real-world integration of meditation into daily life and work, especially for professionals or clients who feel “too busy” to meditate?
Sustainability begins with removing the idea that meditation has to be long or formal. Consistency is far greater than duration. Even one to five minutes of deliberate practice before sessions, between clients, or at the end of the work day can be transformative.
I also encourage practitioners to incorporate mindfulness into what they already do: conscious breathing while moving, short pauses for awareness of sensations, or reflexive check-ins at the end of the day. Meditation becomes sustainable when it supports life, rather than competing with it.
How can practitioners talk to clients who may be reluctant to try meditation while still honoring the traditional practice and offering an evidence-based explanation?
Start by meeting customers where they are. Not everyone resonates with spiritual or traditional language, and that’s okay. Meditation can be framed as attention training, nervous system regulation or stress resilience without diminishing its depth.
At the same time, it is important to honor the roots of the practice by teaching with respect, clarity and humility. You don’t need to over-promise the results. Offering simple, factual explanations, while also eliciting curiosity rather than compliance, builds trust and transparency over time.
Final Thoughts
Meditation is a skill that develops over time, supporting presence, clarity and regulation of the nervous system in both personal and professional settings. For health and exercise professionals, these qualities can enhance self-awareness, communication, and the ability to create supportive environments for clients. In addition, it supports ACE’s holistic approach when working with clients, addressing not only physical performance, but also the mental and emotional factors that influence behavior, resilience and overall well-being.
| For those interested in exploring these concepts more deeply, The foundations of meditation (value 0.7 ACE CEC) offers a flexible, self-paced learning experience approved for Yoga Alliance credits. Designed for exercise professionals, yoga instructors and health coaches, the course provides practical tools for integrating meditation into everyday life and professional practice, without adding more to an already full schedule. |
