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Samurai Mind Training for Modern American Warriors

By BONNIE ROCHMAN Bonnie Rochman

Not long ago at Fort Bragg, N.C., the country's largest military base, seven

soldiers sat in a semi-circle, lights dimmed, eyes closed, two fingertips

lightly pressed beneath their belly buttons to activate their "core."

Electronic music thumped as the soldiers tried to silence their thoughts, the

key to Warrior Mind Training, a form of meditation slowly making inroads on

military bases across the country. "This is mental push-ups," Sarah Ernst told

the weekly class she leads for soldiers at Fort Bragg. "There's a certain burn.

It's a workout."

Think military and you think macho, not meditation, but that's about to change

now that the Army intends to train its 1.1 million soldiers in the art of

mental toughness. The Defense Department hopes that giving soldiers tools to

fend off mental stress will toughen its troops at war and at home. It's the

first time mental combat is being mandated on a large scale, but a few thousand

soldiers who have participated in a voluntary program called Warrior Mind

Training have already gotten a taste of how strengthening the mind is way

different - dare we say harder? - than pounding out the push-ups. (Read a story

on the health benefits of meditation.)

Warrior Mind Training is the brainchild of Ernst and two friends, who were

teaching meditation and mind-training in California. In 2005, a Marine attended

a class in San Diego and suggested expanding onto military bases. Ernst and her

colleagues researched the military mindset, consulting with veterans who had

practiced meditation on the battlefield and back home. She also delved into the

science behind mind training to analyze how meditation tactics could help treat

- and maybe even help prevent - post-traumatic stress disorder.

Rooted in the ancient Samurai code of self-discipline, Warrior Mind Training

draws on the image of the mythic Japanese fighter, an elite swordsman who honed

his battle skills along with his mental precision. The premise? Razor-sharp

attention plus razor-sharp marksmanship equals fearsome warrior. (Read about

the samurai film version of King Lear by Akira Kurosawa.)

The Samurai image was selected after careful deliberation; it was certifiably

anti-sissy. "We took a long time to decide how we were going to package this,"

says Ernst, who moved to North Carolina in 2006 and teaches classes at Fort

Bragg as well as Camp Lejeune, a Marine base near the coast. "There are a lot

of ways you could describe the benefits of doing mind training and meditation.

Maybe from a civilian approach we would emphasize cultivating happiness or

peace. But that's not generally what a young soldier is interested in. They

want to become the best warrior they can be." (See pictures of ninja warriors,

from myth to the movies.)

The benefits of Warrior Mind Training, students have told instructors, are

impressive: better aim on the shooting range, higher test scores, enhanced

ability to handle combat stress and slip back into life at home. No

comprehensive studies have been done, though a poll of 25 participants showed

70% said they felt better able to handle stressful situations and 65% had

improved self-control.

The results were intriguing enough that Warrior Mind Training has been selected

to participate in a University of Pittsburgh study on sleep disruption and

fatigue in service members that will kick off early next year.

For now, success is measured anecdotally.

On patrol in Iraq two years ago, John Way would notice his mind straying.

"Maybe I should be watching some guy over there and instead I'm thinking, 'I'm

hungry. Where's my next Twinkie?'"

With privacy at a premium, he'd often retreat to a Port-A-Potty to practice the

focusing skills he'd learned from Ernst at Fort Bragg. "To have a way to shut

all this off is invaluable," says Way.

The importance of the mind-body connection is being acknowledged at the highest

levels of the military. The West Point-based Army Center for Enhanced

Performance (ACEP), which draws on performance psychology to teach soldiers how

to build confidence, set goals and channel their energy, has expanded to nine

army bases in the past three years since the Army's chief-of-staff praised the

program.

"The Army has always believed if we just train 'em harder, the mental toughness

will come," says Lorene Petta, a psychologist at Fort Bragg who works for ACEP.

"A lot of times with this population, because they're so rough and tough, they

tend to say, 'This is too touchy-feely for me. No thanks.' But we talk about

the importance of being a good mental warrior too."

Free to members of the military and their relatives, Warrior Mind Training

classes are offered at 11 U.S. military installations and veterans centers

across the country; an online option opened up this spring. At Naval Amphibious

Base Coronado in California, for example, Warrior Mind instructors prep elite

Navy SEALS candidates for Hell Week, when potential newbies are vetted in a 5

½-day sleepless trial of physical and mental endurance.

Beefing up the brain for combat is one aspect of the training; another is

decompression. If one day you're dodging snipers in Iraq and the next you're

strolling the aisles at Wal-Mart, Warrior Mind Training techniques can ease the

transition.

"It's kind of like a reset button," says Erick Burgos, a military paramedic who

takes classes at Coronado. "It's a time-out for you to take a break from the

chaos in your life."

If the Army's new mental-toughness initiative, set to kick off in October, is

to be successful, it needs buy-in from the people it plans to train. It can be

a tough sell. At Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, in N.C., Adam Credle, who

teaches military, law enforcement and Coast Guard personnel how to drive boats

equipped with machine guns really fast, has encouraged his students to try out

the meditative techniques. So far, he's been rebuffed, though he continues to

try to persuade them to give the discipline's central exercise a chance. The

mental focusing technique is called deep listening and it sounds super-simple

but - unless you're accustomed to meditation - it requires exquisite

concentration.

To help develop this skill, Warrior Mind, relies upon music. The idea is to

listen, really listen, to the wail of the guitar or the staccato tap of the

drums instead of letting your mind wander. In athletics, this concept is called

being in "the zone."

As with anything, practice makes perfect, which is reassuring for rookies -

like me - who find it next to impossible to rein in their thoughts at first.

During the course of one five-minute song, I thought repeatedly about whether

I'd remembered to lock my car and turn my cell phone to vibrate. And, because

I'm a reporter, I thought about what everyone else might be thinking about,

which, if they were doing it right, should have been nothing at all.