Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
Tags: #Science, #Physics, #Crystallography, #Chemistry, #Inorganic
or Andrew resided in familiar guilt. In both cases the feeling was unpleasant,
regardless of how hygienic they felt these activities to be. When I pointed out
that, despite their positive intentions, these habits appeared unkind, both got
the message. They had permission to consider their conduct in the light of
compassion, as a form of granting or denying self-care. Redefining their own
mental habits along the axis of “kind and conducive of happiness,” rather
than along dimensions of health or morality, offered them more freedom to
Chapter 21 Mindfulness-Based Interventions in an Individual Clinical Setting
413
experiment. How could each be different with themselves in the moment of
difficulty? Framing actions in terms of compassion, toward oneself as much
as toward others, in practice rather than as an abstract ideal, is both method
and fruit of mindfulness.
Note that none of the examples cited above depended on meditation or
formal mental training, nor is mindfulness invoked to the patient. They are
“interventions” that rest on the therapist’s understanding and personal expe-
rience, communicated in the language of commonsense to the patient. Nor
does the role of mindfulness necessarily lead to a turning away from one’s
history, in flight to the here and now. This is seen in the case of Carol.
Carol was an experienced meditator, but a novice to therapy, having kept
her difficult emotional life from her friends and her kind but unattuned hus-
band. None knew the sort of emotional torment she carried for most of her
50 years. Carol’s mother had been an indifferent parent, entirely uninter-
ested in babies or children, a fact made clear in her failure to mirror her
gifted daughter’s efforts to be seen and accepted. Carol was desperate not
to disappoint her mother, but inevitably failed, as her mother wanted only
to be the center of attention and the life of the party. Her father was loving,
but intolerant and angered by any expression of dissent by Carol. She felt as
though she did not exist, and as a young girl would rock on her bed, repeat-
ing “I
do
exist.” Though she was academically gifted and later, professionally
successful, she received no recognition from her parents, nor nourishment
for herself, for her accomplishments. She felt counterfeit, learning to hide
beneath an exterior of competence to mask a deep sense of illegitimacy. In
adulthood she earned a doctorate, but every step was an enormous chal-
lenge, as she felt she lacked the right to the self-assertion implied by creating
works of original scholarship. What seemed like a natural expression of com-
petence required Herculean effort to overcome a commensurate inner resis-
tance. It was as though she had one foot fully on the gas pedal and another
on the brake. Carol was in a helping profession, and though socially com-
petent, being with others was deeply fraught and exhausting. She avoided
unnecessary contact for measured periods of time.
Carol chose me as her therapist because she knew of my interest in med-
itation, though we rarely discussed – and never used – meditation or mind-
fulness. However, her meditation experience was crucial to the therapy. She
had developed some capacity to tolerate her difficult emotional experience,
enabling her to endure the overwhelming early months of the therapy. The
fear and shame of speaking her formerly disavowed and unspoken thoughts
left her trembling and tearful, and she had to sit in her car for a long spell
after our sessions. She dreaded the sessions, but was surprised to feel relief
as well. Together we learned to pace the therapy to keep it manageable. I
was deeply impressed with her courage.
By contrast with Lydia who needed assistance dislodging her attention
from the personal archeological investigation that characterized her previ-
ous therapies, Carol needed to open to her history and difficult emotional
content, to enter and reclaim her story. In this movement she was honoring
the truth of her experience, which she had formerly sought to deny. This is
the work of conventional therapy, though it felt as if conducted on a high
wire. At one point I asked Carol if she felt there was anything authentic in
her experience. She thought a moment, and said that the direct experience
414
Paul R. Fulton
of the breath, encountered in moments of silent meditation, felt authentic.
While Buddhist meditation is often described in terms of seeking to illumi-
nate the illusory nature of the self, in meditation Carol had found a way to
locate herself, to herself. She was familiar with the Buddhist doctrine of no-
self, but said clearly, “That’s not what this was about.” We both understood
that the self she was in need of inhabiting was something different from the
illusory self described by Buddhist psychology, and we understood that both
activities were real and valid.
Carol’s journey was perilous, and I am convinced that she would have
been unable to undertake it were it not for the qualities of courage and forti-
tude cultivated in her years of meditation practice. It enabled her to become
more real to herself as a counterbalance to her sense of inauthenticity. This
sort of contribution can never be reduced to a set of techniques, a formula-
tion, or a perspective. Nor was her meditation a substitute for psychotherapy,
addressing difficulties that could only be fully summoned in relationship. In
meditation she had skillfully found a form of self-care and a source of emo-
tional survival. Though not an explicitly applied technique in the therapy, as
part of her own background it was an essential ingredient in her treatment
and her life.
Becoming More Explicit
Some uses of mindfulness and its underlying principles are nearer the explicit
end of the spectrum. I have often shared specific suggestions lifted more or
less directly from Buddhist lore, to good effect.
Leonard was a regional vice president of sales for a large national furni-
ture company. He lived in terror of his semiannual sales presentations at his
company’s national office, and would over prepare with reams of overhead
slides and notes. I had referred him to a MBSR program, from which he had
received some benefit, but his fear of these meetings kept him awake at
night. I told Leonard of a sermon given by a Zen master, which, in its entirety,
was two words long: “Soon dead.” Leonard was delighted, and was excited
to tell me, after his return from the sales meeting, that the only notes he
brought with him were these same two words written large on a legal pad.
Leonard knew his material cold, and paradoxically, his voluminous notes only
added to his anxiety. The reminder of the proper place of a sales presenta-
tion in his life was freeing, and he gave his best presentation ever. Rather
than heighten his anxiety, the reflection on life’s transience allowed him to
loosen his frightened grip on how his sales performance would define him.
He saw this event from a larger perspective.
Andrew often wondered when it was appropriate to correct a subordinate,
and how to distinguish when he was acting skillfully from when he was
speaking from anger.
I suggested that when faced with this uncertainty, he could apply three
questions, which I had lifted directly (without full attribution) from one of
the Buddha’s own discourses (the Abhaya Sutta). First, is what he wants to say
true? If not, then don’t say it. If it is true, he might then ask if it is beneficial
to say it. If it is both true and beneficial, then ask if it is the correct time and
place to say it. Besides requiring a moment to reflect (which already helps
Chapter 21 Mindfulness-Based Interventions in an Individual Clinical Setting
415
curtail an impulsive response), posing these practical questions to oneself
provides a way to practice non-harm, thereby avoiding escalation of one’s
own anger and aggression.
The Buddhist formulation for working skillfully with emotions differs from
the clinical notions of “abreaction,” “getting it out,” or catharsis. Anger or
hostility are seen as harmful, whether directed toward others or, through
judgment and self-rejection, toward oneself. While knowing difficult emo-
tions in the fullness of mindful awareness is essential, expressing them in
speech or action requires great care to avoid fueling the anger. This practice
of full present-moment awareness of a difficult emotion delicately balanced
against and verbal/behavioral restraint is a well developed practice in Bud-
dhist psychology.
Consider this dynamic in the case of Margaret, formerly a teacher but now
disabled by the cumulative debilitating effects sadistic childhood abuse. She
had repeatedly asked her neighbor not to walk her dog in Margaret’s tiny
yard. One day, called to the yard by the nearby sound of a fire truck’s siren,
she found herself standing in the midst of voluminous dog manure. Enraged,
she smeared the neighbor’s porch, door, and outdoor children’s toys with the
manure. Then, terrified of what she had done, she called the clinic where I
was providing backup coverage for her vacationing therapist, for an emer-
gency appointment. The “expression” of anger had shaken her badly, and
she was frightened. In the course of our meeting I asked her if there was
someone about whom she felt kindly, even in the midst of this storm. She
was able to locate feelings of kindness toward an elderly shut-in neighbor. I
suggested to Margaret that she consider doing something for this neighbor.
We made a follow-up appointment for the next day. When Margaret returned,
she told me how she had brought ice cream to her elderly neighbor, in the
process breaking the spell of her rage. She asked me, “How did you know?”
She was later able to speak to the neighbor who owned the dog about what
each of them had done, and resolved it amicably in a way that had seemed
impossible in the heat of her fear.
The Buddha purportedly said that hatred is never appeased by hatred, but
only by non-hatred (Dhammapada 5). More than an elevated shibboleth, this
expresses a pragmatic approach to difficult emotions that does not deserve
to be segregated in spiritual literature and admired from a distance. It offers
a practical way to work with inner experience in the interest of cultivating
inner and outer peace. Resisting actions rooted in anger, in speech or behav-
ior, toward oneself or toward others, is the practice of compassion, not one
of avoidance, isolation, or repression. As with most practices offered by the
Buddha, the encouragement is to see for oneself if they work to bring men-
tal peace.
In each case cited above is the invitation to patients to turn toward their
experience
as it is
, in full acceptance, not because of their like or dislike of
it, but because it is “true” for being present. In this movement is the subtle
suggestion that we need not be cured, fixed, or rid of anything as a precondi-
tion for healing. Relief from suffering may be difficult to win, but it is nearer
at hand than the notion of cure would suggest. When suffering is divested of
being regarded as evidence of failure, weakness, or illness, it may become an
opportunity to embrace more of life. This startling reframing points the way
suffering may gradually loses its sting.
416
Paul R. Fulton
Conclusion
These few case examples do not suggest the application of interventions
cribbed from treatment handbooks, but neither are they esoteric or mysteri-
ous in nature. They arise from an understanding of the universal underlying
dynamic of human suffering. Books can provide invaluable guidance, but
mindfulness interventions and formulations arise naturally when, as thera-
pists, we have tested their utility for ourselves in the crucible of our own
experience. The sustained idiographic study of our own minds becomes the
seat of creative discovery, and the potential contributions of mindfulness to
therapy become as countless as the moments we spend with our patients.
When we have come to see how we entrap ourselves and how we might
cease such harming activity, we learn to see how others, too, fall into cycles
of suffering despite their deepest wishes for relief. We are better equipped
to provide guidance to our patients in this movement to well-being when
we have experiential understanding of this path, whether the use of mindful-
ness remains unspoken or becomes an explicit part of the therapeutic con-
tract between ourselves and our patients. Then all that we do as therapists
become mindfulness-based interventions.
References
Benoit, H. (1955).
The supreme doctrine
. Pantheon Books.
Brach, T. (2003).
Radical acceptance: Embracing your life with the heart of a Bud-
dha
. New York: Bantam Dell.
Dhammapada 5, The Pairs: Heedfulness. (1985). Acharya Buddharakkhita (Trans.)
Kandy: Buddhist Publication Society.
Fromm, E., Suzuki, D. T., & DeMartino, R. (1960).
Zen Buddhism and Psychoanaly-