Yet, when I ask people in law enforcement if they meditate, I often get a response that is somewhere along the lines of "I tried it for five minutes and it sucked." Why has it sucked for the officers that I asked?
First, it is really hard for humans to go from 0 to 60, or, in the case of meditation, from 60 to 0. Second, in my experience, first responders tend to have very busy brains—this is what makes us great at our professions. Third, there is an overwhelming amount of information out there about how to meditate, the best way to meditate, the various forms of meditation, the number of minutes that should be devoted to meditation, and so on. You read up on it, you try it, your mind races instead of calming down and you feel like you are doing it "wrong." It is stressful. First responders have enough stress without our stress-reducing techniques being stressful.
If you have tried it and hated the experience, if you have tried it and did not feel that it "worked" for you, or if you want to try it but don't know how, understand first and foremost that it is well worth the effort to develop a meditation practice. Scientific studies conducted in the United States have shown that meditation:
Furthermore, as Swami Rama explains in "The Real Meaning of Meditation," "Your normal response is to react to all your thoughts, and this keeps you ever busy in a sea of confusion. Meditation teaches you to attend to what is taking place within without reacting, and this makes all the difference" (www.yogainternational.com). This quote highlights the most important reason that first responders should put the effort into developing a meditation practice; meditation mirrors the essence of how we must approach our work. We must function well through the sea of confusion, and we must not react to our emotions and non-essential thoughts about many of the situations that arise in the course of our duties.