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Rahil Rojiani

Center for Mindfulness and Compassion, Cambridge Health Alliance.

2 papers in the library · 233 citations · publishing 2017-2025

Papers

Women Benefit More Than Men in Response to College-based Meditation Training.

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2017 Rahil Rojiani, Juan F Santoyo, Hadley Rahrig et al. 232 citations

Women who took a 12-week college meditation course showed greater decreases in negative affect and larger increases in mindfulness and self-compassion than men. Women's improvements in negative affect were linked to gains in both mindfulness skills and self-compassion, while men showed non-significant increases in negative affect and their affect changes correlated only with the ability to describe emotions, not with experiential or self-acceptance measures. The findings suggest that women may respond more favorably than men to school-based mindfulness training and that tailoring interventions by gender could improve effectiveness.

Love as decolonial praxis: Co-creation of a community-based critical contemplative dialogue intervention.

The American psychologist January 1, 2025 Dominique A Malebranche, Rahil Rojiani, River Chevannes et al. 1 citation

Psychology's colonial roots of disconnection and domination obstruct collective well-being through individualism, disembodiment, and secularization. The antidote is love as a decolonial praxis of reconnection to each other, to bodies, and to Spirit. This praxis is illustrated through the creation of a community intervention called critical contemplative dialogues (CCD), tailored for Black, Indigenous, and peoples of color and piloted with seven contemplatives. The intervention is grounded in critical, contemplative, and dialogic frameworks and manifests love through themes of witnessing, dialogue, embodied practice, emergence, and ceremony. Eight emergent guiding values center radical healing and liberation, pointing toward broader applications in psychology.