For thousands of years, people across different cultures have turned to meditation, quiet sitting, prayer, and other contemplative practices to steady the mind and cultivate inner peace. Long before brain scans or blood tests existed, ancient traditions seemed to understand that stillness could do more than calm a busy mind.
Modern science is now beginning to explore that connection in measurable ways.
A study published in Communications Biology by researchers at the University of California, San Diego, found that a 7-day intensive mind-body retreat was linked to noticeable changes in brain activity, blood biology, metabolism, immune signaling, and markers related to neuroplasticity — the brain’s ability to adapt and form new connections. The retreat included guided meditation, lectures, and other mind-body practices, making it more than a simple relaxation exercise.
The findings do not mean that a single week of meditation can cure illness or transform the body overnight. The study was small, involving 20 healthy adults, and more controlled research is needed. Still, it offers a fascinating glimpse into how deeply the mind and body may be connected.
More than relaxation
Many people think of meditation as a way to relax, reduce stress, or take a break from daily pressure. Those benefits are real, but the UC San Diego study suggests that intensive contemplative practice may engage the body on a much broader level.
Before and after the retreat, researchers used brain scans and blood tests to observe changes in the participants. They found shifts in brain network activity, immune-related signals, metabolic pathways, and molecular markers linked to nervous system function. In one part of the experiment, blood plasma taken from participants after the retreat appeared to encourage lab-grown neurons to extend and form new connections.
This does not prove that meditation alone caused every change. Because the retreat combined several practices, researchers cannot yet say which element had the strongest effect. But the results suggest that focused inner work may leave measurable traces in the body.
That idea is not unfamiliar to traditional cultures. In Chinese thought, the mind, spirit, energy, and body have long been viewed as deeply interconnected. Modern science uses a different language, but it is beginning to examine a similar question: Can the way a person directs attention and cultivates inner states influence physical processes?

How the brain may quiet its inner noise
One of the most interesting findings involved the brain’s “internal chatter.” Researchers observed changes in areas associated with self-focused thought, mental wandering, and the constant stream of inner commentary that often fills the mind.
This may help explain why meditation can feel difficult at first. In the early stages of practice, many people notice more thoughts, not fewer. Sitting quietly can make the mind’s restlessness more obvious. Instead of creating noise, meditation may simply reveal how much noise was already there.
Over time, however, attention can become steadier. The mind may begin to shift from scattered thinking to a clearer awareness of the present moment. From the outside, a person may appear to be doing very little. Internally, the brain may be learning a different way to organize attention.
In this sense, meditation is not merely “resting the brain.” It may be more like training the brain — teaching it to reduce unnecessary mental loops and return more easily to direct experience.
A signal carried through the blood
The study’s blood-related findings were especially striking. When researchers exposed cultured neurons to plasma collected from participants after the retreat, the neurons showed signs of increased growth and connection-forming activity. The researchers also observed changes related to immune function and metabolism.
These findings suggest that mental and emotional states may be linked with chemical signals circulating through the body. A quiet mind is not separate from the bloodstream, the immune system, or the nervous system. What happens inwardly may, under certain conditions, be reflected outwardly in the body’s biology.

This is where ancient and modern perspectives can meet in a thoughtful way. Traditional ideas about qi and spirit should not be treated as if one study has “proven” them in scientific terms. Yet the study does echo an older intuition: the mind is not an isolated, invisible thing floating apart from the body. It participates in the body’s life.
Why stillness matters today
If such practices mattered in ancient times, they may be even more important now.
Modern life keeps attention in a constant state of interruption. Messages, notifications, headlines, videos, and endless digital tabs pull the mind in many directions. Even during physical rest, the brain may continue running through unfinished tasks, worries, and background thoughts.
Meditation offers a different kind of pause. It asks a person to stop reacting and reaching, and to return to what is happening now. That simple act can be surprisingly difficult, but it may also be deeply restorative.
The UC San Diego study does not settle every question about meditation. It does, however, add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that contemplative practices are not just matters of belief or mood. They may influence measurable systems in the body, from neural networks to immune signals.
For people who already practice meditation, the findings may feel like scientific confirmation of something they have experienced personally. For those who have never tried it, the study offers a simple invitation: quiet sitting may be more active than it looks.
A person sitting silently with closed eyes may seem to be doing nothing. Yet beneath the stillness, the brain may be reorganizing, the body recalibrating, and the mind learning to return to balance.
Translated by Patty Zhang
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