What is MBSR?
Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) is the original evidence-based, user-friendly program that brings the principles of mindfulness meditation into everyday life by teaching specific skills and practices to help break cycles of anxiety, stress, unhappiness and exhaustion.
Openground is proud to be endorsed by Emeritus Professor Jon Kabat-Zinn – who developed MBSR at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in 1979 for people suffering chronic and acute stress, chronic pain and illness, and associated anxiety and depression. As seen on ABC Catalyst TV.
What does it involve?
- An individual phone interview, and ongoing support from your teacher
- A 2.5 hour class, over eight weeks, plus one full retreat day
- Mindfulness meditation and body awareness training
- An exploration of your own patterns and how to transform them
- Scientific rationale for the practice
- Access to Openground audio app for practice and a 100 page course book
Course Pricing & Scholarships
- Standard Rate $695 — if you can afford to pay the full fee
- And we are delighted to offer discounted places for those who need financial support to come along.
If you have access to some financial security: that is, have a job, have some assets (savings, shares, property) and/or superannuation income we ask you to pay your way (with a payment plan if needed).
Uncover the benefits of mindfulness education.
With over four decades of rigorous, research-based evidence supporting it, the mindfulness training provided by this program is known to:
- Improve mental and emotional health
- Foster a more balanced nervous system
- Enhance focus and attention
- Improve sleep quality and overall well-being
- Reduce symptoms like negative thinking, fatigue, poor concentration, muscle tension, and emotional reactivity
- Clarify life goals, priorities, and personal purpose
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) can effectively manage chronic pain and improve physical health beyond traditional treatments. Research indicates that MBSR participants experience improved mental health, including reduced anxiety, depression, and PTSD symptoms. Additionally, eight-week mindfulness programs have shown benefits in cognitive functions like sustained attention and emotional outcomes by reducing rumination.
Explore how mindfulness-based stress reduction can benefit you:
- Shift your focus away from spirals of worry
- Cultivate a calmer nervous system over time
- Navigate challenging emotions without over-analyzing or suppressing them
- Understand how your mind functions and intervene in restrictive patterns
- Face your fears and take meaningful action in line with your values
- Embrace the positive aspects of your life
- Live in the present moment, becoming more mindful of your thought patterns. Calm your nervous system and mind, learning to live with greater intention, reducing reactivity and negative self-talk. Understand the effects of chronic stress, enhancing focus, productivity, and relationships.
What kind of commitment does it require?
To fully benefit from this course, a deep commitment is necessary. Like training in sports or music, achieving mindfulness benefits requires consistent practice and dedication. Enrolling in this course means committing to daily mindfulness meditation practice for 30 to 45 minutes six days a week (in addition to weekly classes and day-long retreats). Wholehearted commitment offers the most reliable path to discovering new possibilities and creating lasting changes from the core of your own life.
Come and see how this inspiring course can help you develop more mental, emotional, physical and psychological resilience and well-being.
Book early as our Wollongong courses fill up quickly.


"Wow, this MBSR course really was a transformative process. I had no idea it would be so profound. I enjoyed every class and sharing and listening with others. I really feel every human being needs to do this mindfulness training course!"
Where can I do MBSR courses in Wollongong
Russell Vale |
Russell Vale Community Hall: 36A Keerong Ave, Russell Vale NSW 2517 | Register Here |
Meet our Wollongong Mindfulness Teacher
Dr Adele Stewart
Dr Adele Stewart MBBS FRACGP has been a GP for about 30 years in the Illawarra. Adele is registered to provide focussed psychological strategies and practices in a trauma informed framework. She is trained in Acceptance and Commitment (ACT) Therapy under Dr Russ Harris, Internal Family Systems therapy at the IFS institute, Mindfulness integrated Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (MiCBT) under Bruno Cayoun and Explain Pain with NOI. She did her first 10 day silent meditation retreat in 1987 and in the last 15 years or so has done yearly week long silent retreats and has been increasingly absorbed in yoga, qigong and mindfulness meditation practices. She offers a down to earth, engaging and compassionate attitude to teaching mindfulness. Adele is a certified MBSR teacher and trained MSC (Mindful Self Compassion) teacher. She finds these mindfulness courses as both a participant and teacher increase the meaning and richness of daily life as well as building a wonderful sense of connection. See her website Mindfulness & Pain Explained with Dr Adele Stewart for loads of free resources on mindfulness, self compassion and chronic pain, especially chronic pelvic pain.
Why learn with Openground?
Personal attention and skilled teaching
Learning mindfulness with an experienced teacher can’t be compared with using an app. We take a genuine, personal approach and our highly trained and dedicated teachers go the extra mile to help you engage with your practice in ways that can bring real transformation.

Evidence-based program
MBSR is an authentic, evidence-based program of mindfulness training, grounded in 39 years of research. Unlike many shorter mindfulness courses, which have no evidence of benefit, MBSR is globally recognised as the gold standard for mental and physical health in the field.

Excellent value
Our immersive, eight-week courses include 28 hours of personal mindfulness training. Many short courses only give you a taste of mindfulness, and are actually more expensive than MBSR on an hourly rate basis. Our courses offer significant value, and we can also arrange serious discounts if you need a helping hand.
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I've tried meditation and can't do it.
Yes, we know! Everybody has this experience when they first start mindfulness practice, and most people in your class will feel the same way. Don't worry – it won't prevent you from developing more ease and peace in your life through mindfulness training.
We all need to start with the mind we have, and if that is a busy and preoccupied mind, then that’s the perfect place to begin. Initially, mindfulness practice is about becoming familiar with your own mind and body, and exploring ways to soothe, calm, and simply explore how you tick.
Step-by-step throughout the course, you’ll be offered different ways of practicing so you can bring more of this way of being to support your mental health. By exploring the science of mindfulness, you’ll also discover why so many of us have such jumpy, 'jack-rabbit' minds and learn what you need to do to cultivate a calmer and clearer mind.
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What is an evidence-based mindfulness course?
Openground has 20 years of experience in helping people with serious mental and physical health challenges. and our programs spring from a long tradition of preventative and behavioural medicine which has been researched over decades. Much of the more recent mindfulness stuff has been watered down:
- using videos V being supported by a dedicated teacher
- just using an app, rather than a detailed exploration of your patterns and how to interrupt them
- focussing on "well-being" rather than acknowledging just how tough mental health problems can be.
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Why is it important to practice?
Mindfulness meditation is not just a good idea – it’s a practice! As with any new skill – like learning to swim, do Pilates or play golf – just hearing or reading about mindfulness can only take you so far. Experience and practice are the two things that will lead to lasting and profound changes.
For the meditation training to make a real difference to your mental health, ask yourself if you are willing to make a commitment to undertake some formal meditation practice each day over the eight weeks of your course. This will make all the difference to your satisfaction with the course, the benefits you experience, and your life.
Training in mindfulness will equip you with a very portable set of skills that you can practice anywhere, anytime. Give it a go and let's see what happens! -
Do mindfulness apps work?
We may not like it, but real change takes time. This is why your training for stress and burnout, anxiety, depression and trauma unfolds over eight weeks plus a whole day retreat – a total of 27 hours of training, as well as your home practice.
Promises of a quick fix are always tempting. There are many apps and pre-recorded short courses about recently, that don't have the clinical evidence behind them. If you have tried these and only had minimal benefit, that makes sense.
We encourage you to do some research of your own. If you are quite stressed, or you’re facing some big challenges, you may find greater benefit in an in-depth, evidence-based program.
Change happens through practice, and evidence suggests that for clinical conditions eight weeks is an optimum time for new cognitive, emotional, neurological and behavioural changes to become embedded. Our experience is that practice develops most effectively and sustainably when there is an ongoing personal relationship with a teacher who really knows their stuff.
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Is this course for Health Professionals?
The eight week mindfulness training can assist with your capacity for listening, empathy, compassion and genuine curiosity. It can also help you see into our own patterns that can get in the way of being truly helpful.
However these programs are not a professional training program for using mindfulness with clients. We welcome you to join the course as a participant, leave your professional hat at the door, and immerse yourself in mindfulness practice. Our courses present an opportunity to learn about mindfulness from the inside out, by engaging in the group process and learning from your fellow participants.
There are good ethical and professional reasons to develop an in-depth understanding of your own personal mindfulness practice before teaching others. A sustained mindfulness practice, including completing an MBSR course and a teacher-led silent mindfulness retreat, is a pre-requisite for training to teach -
Can I claim through Medicare?
Unfortunately, not all health professionals can be registered to offer a Medicare rebate. Although many of our teachers are among the best trained and most skilled in the country, they are not able to offer a rebate. However, we do offer discounts for people whose circumstances make it impossible to afford the full fee, and we’re happy to discuss this option with you.
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What if I miss a class or the Day of Mindfulness?
In some locations, there are a few courses happening simultaneously, so you could arrange to attend one of the other locations for that week. If that is not possible in your area, the course book is quite detailed in terms of covering the material each week, and you will be able to keep practicing and arrange to check in with your teacher by phone or email about your process that week.
Missing the Day of Mindfulness is also sometimes inevitable. However, this day-long meditation retreat is held every quarter, so you can always attend next time.
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Difference between MBSR and a silent retreat?
Both of these can be valuable pathways for learning mindfulness meditation. However, many people find the intensive retreat process more manageable after they have built some basic practice skills.
One of the advantages of choosing the more gradual, eight-week process is learning to integrate your practice into day-to-day life, and creating mindful habits in the way you relate to yourself, your family, work colleagues and the world. -
Is my teacher is qualified to teach mindfulness?
All Openground teachers engage in regular professional development, silent retreats, and ongoing personal practice. The University of Massachusetts Medical School Center for Mindfulness (CFM) and the Mindfulness Training Institute Australasia (MTIA) recommends a sequence for MBSR teacher training involving foundational training, initial teaching, supervision, advanced training and certification.
To ensure you are receiving the best possible guidance from a suitably experienced mindfulness teacher. You could ask your potential teacher if they:
- have their own personal meditation practice
- take regular silent retreats
- have trained in a reputable form of group-based mindfulness training (such as MBSR)?
- And, if so, what form of training did they do?
To find out more, take a look at this article from Rebecca Crane about standards and competency in teaching: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/234071305_Competence_in_Teaching_Mindfulness-Based_Courses_Concepts_Development_and_Assessment/link/0fcfd50a94ad6677f0000000/download -
Why choose MBSR over free local options?
Many people come to MBSR because they specifically want a mindfulness training that is secular and has no particular spiritual orientation or beliefs attached to the process.
In addition, most ‘free’ meditation centres depend on the generosity of people to support and sustain their work. If you want these centres to survive, you may want to offer payment for the services you receive, so these wonderful resources can continue to thrive.

Experiences
Evidence based 8 week programs
Saturday , 2:00-4:30pm
If you need a reduced rate, please apply for a discount via the questionnaire, above.