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Story by Rohan

Converting my Anxiety into my Motivation

I am grateful for the life experiences that brought me to this moment, including the painful ones.

Fortunately, I found a book called Freedom From Sadness, and that marked the beginning of a shift in my perspective. The book began with an anecdote about why cows don’t get sad; they don’t ruminate in the past, or worry about the future, but stay grounded in the present moment. Even though it may not sound life-changing, the simple observation relayed in the book changed my life because it led me to the practice of meditation. As I meditated more and more, I found relief from the darkness that had been casting a shadow across my mind. It wasn’t that my social anxiety was completely gone, or that I felt like a brand new person. Rather, I just didn’t feel as bad anymore, which was enough for me to continue on. It wasn’t a perfect solution, but it was better than doing nothing. At that point, I knew I’d experienced a glimpse of a journey into mindfulness that I’d be on for the rest of my life. 

After college and my first job, I trekked through the Himalayas talking to monks who were masters of meditation. I told them, “I’m trying to build a meditation machine to help people meditate, who can’t come to the mountains.” They obliged my endless questions and even let me measure their brainwaves and heartbeats with a prototype wearable device I’d built in my garage. Luckily, the monks were exceedingly patient, kind, and compassionate, and let me gather their brainwave and heartbeat data without complaint. 

The data from these readings was incredible. The monks, who were expert meditators, demonstrated clear differences in their physiology. Not only were their brain waves different, but their heart rate variability, a key biomarker for mental health, was significantly higher during meditation. Based on my experiences meditating, building my first piece of meditation machinery, and working in neuroscience labs, I knew it must be possible to create a tool that could help individuals create the same physiological patterns that these monks exhibited.

I wanted to combine the power of technology with meditation, by showing real time insights on the positive effects of mindful breathing on the body. This led me to develop a digital health product, which helps wearers become aware of their triggers for stress, and train their body to calm down by tracking their heart rate variability in real time and delivering personalized heart rate variability biofeedback exercises during moments of acute stress. By syncing breath with heart rate, heart rate variability biofeedback exercises can help maintain balance in the autonomic nervous system by activating its parasympathetic “rest and repair” mode – a sort of “quantified meditation”.

When I look back on my path to founding my company, I am grateful for the life experiences that brought me to this moment, including the painful ones. Without experiencing mental and emotional challenges in my formative years, I imagine my capacity of empathy would be less developed, and perhaps I wouldn’t feel as intrinsically motivated to help others struggling with mental health challenges. I feel lucky to have discovered meditation when I needed it most, and to be inspired to create a health technology product that has turned my pain into purpose. 

Orexo AB (Publ.)

The opinions expressed in this blog are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of Orexo AB or Orexo Inc. The authors have been asked not to reveal specifics around potential medically assisted treatments used to reach recovery to Orexo or the readers.

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