Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
Tags: #Science, #Physics, #Crystallography, #Chemistry, #Inorganic
adjusted. Mindfulness posits the opposite that by being curious about all
inner sensorial experiences, (body, emotions, cognitions) an uncovering of
intrinsic health occurs, and in this insight lies the recognition of being a part
of a greater whole
(Kabat-Zinn, 1996).
This has important implications for those mental health illnesses that present with excessive attachment to ego-centric thinking.
Awareness in Dialogue
Mindfulness stays firmly in the present moment. Its focus is on what is here
right now; what is present. This stance has a different center from many
psychological methods, where examination of past history as it relates to
current difficulties is a critical focus. A central and important theme in the
MBSR and MBCT programs is allowing awareness and attention to be directed
toward the inner exploration of the unfolding nature of physical, emotional
and cognitive sensations in the present, and also the outward articulation of
that process. This requires a special kind of responsiveness on the part of the
teacher.
The word “inquiry,” often used to describe this process, can sometimes
convey a sense of looking for something in particular, and has its deriva-
tion in the Latin, “quaerere” and “inquirere” to seek (Concise Oxford Dic-
tionary,
2004.
Eleventh Edition). This suggestion that there is something to
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find can create a more narrowly focused framework for what is unfolding
in the MBSR and MBCT groups. Using the word “dialogue” to describe the
unfolding meaning of the process of inquiry allows for a more spacious frame
of reference which supports a sense of discovery and “exploration of a sub-
ject”
(Concise Oxford Dictionary, 2004.
Eleventh Edition.) rather than looking for answers.
To some extent the instruction and delivery of the mindfulness practices
in MBSR and MBCT can be learned through modeling and repetition until
the basic language of instruction is committed to memory. But the teacher
who operates solely from a position of rote learning and intellect will find it
difficult to facilitate the discussion and exploration of mindfulness practice,
which comprises a significant portion of the classes. The teacher who relies
primarily on technique will be challenged to learn to sit with and be with
the comments, questions and experiences arising from mindfulness practice.
To respond from a mind solely orientated toward the concepts of patient,
diagnosis, illness, or disease is to leave out what mindfulness has the potential
to offer.
Instead the MBSR/MBCT teacher encourages the group participants to
encounter a place of “not-knowing.” Where meaning is uncovered moment
by moment without moving to “fix” or shape the essence of what is being
experienced. The teacher offers and invites open-ended conversations that
can reveal the unfolding nature of what is present in the room rather than
a quest for answers, closure, or even requiring anything to be found. The
conversations open up into the possibility of rediscovering and befriending
empirical connections to meaning. This requires from the teacher a gentle
and compassionate attentiveness and steadiness, an understanding born of
her/his own encountering of what comes up in personal practice. Otherwise
there is a tendency to rationalize this observed learning. This is where the
instructor’s personal practice becomes central to working with the material
presented by the participants. It is where Segal et al. noticed, when observ-
ing the MBSR instructors at the Center for Mindfulness (Appendix B) “the
remarkable way they were able to embody a different relationship to the
most intense distress and emotion in their patients. And we had seen the
MBSR instructors going further in their work with negative affect than we
had been able to do in the group context, by staying within our therapist
roles.”
(Segal et al., 2002).
Experiential Engagement
Both MBSR and MBCT emphasize that the instructor teach from an experien-
tial engagement with mindfulness rather than through a cognitive process.
The reasons for this are described by the developers of MBCT when they
articulate their own learning process in
Segal et al. (2002).
Their initial view was that mindfulness-based interventions could be taught in very much the
same way as any other therapy, through learning about the rationale for the
techniques and then applying them. However as they continued to observe
the MBSR teachers at the Center for Mindfulness, they came to appreciate
the qualitative difference it made to the teaching when the instructor spoke
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from a place of personal experience with the practice of mindfulness. As they
noted, “A vital part of what the MBSR instructor conveyed was his or her own
embodiment of mindfulness in interactions with the class
. . .
Participants in
the MBSR program learn about mindfulness in two ways: through their own
practice, and when the instructor him- or herself is able to embody it in the
way issues are dealt with in the class.”
(Segal et al., 2002).
The transformational potential of mindfulness practice can only be avail-
able to participants and teachers alike if one is living with the practice by
actively employing the attitudinal foundations within the fabric of one’s own
life. It is this quality that is referred to in the reference manual of the Center
for Mindfulness. “In order for a class or for the program as a whole to have
any meaning or vitality, the person who is delivering it must make every
effort to embody the practice in his or her own life and teach out of personal
experience and his or her own wisdom, not just in a cookbook fashion out
of theory and out of the thinking mind. Otherwise, the instruction becomes
a mechanical didactic exercise at best and the true virtues of the mindful-
ness approach will be lost. We never ask anything of our patients that we
are not asking of ourselves to a greater degree, moment to moment and day
by day.”
(Kabat-Zinn & Santorelli, 1996).
In teaching MBSR and MBCT, the teacher is embracing a specific way of being with and engaging in experience, by paying deliberate attention to it with an attitude of kindly interest.
There is nothing foreign about awareness and paying attention for it is an
innate human ability, but mindfulness illuminates and reinforces this faculty
in a clearly defined and organized manner. This is because there are specific
aspects within the attending – that of non-striving, compassionate listening,
deepening self-inquiry and self-acceptance – which require an ongoing and
sustained focus. The intention is that nothing is pushed away, chased after or
tuned out. Eventually, more difficult mind states such as anger, hatred, hope-
lessness and helplessness can be seen for what they are – the proliferation
of unconstructive qualities of mind created by contact with an unpleasant
moment.
Often it is our reactions to difficult and stressful situations, or from wanting
to hold onto and find ways to replicate pleasurable experiences, which lead
to much “thinking,” problem solving and “doing.” Sometimes this method of
processing the emotional, cognitive and feeling material born out of experi-
ence works well. But at times it can lead to an impasse. Then it is as though
thinking takes over and we become engaged in creating a potent narrative
about what we are going to do, what we could have done and what we
should have been able to do.
The MBSR/MBCT teacher will encounter this type of thinking many times
from the group participants as they struggle to make sense of their relation-
ship to difficulties, disappointments and pain. It is here, at this intersection
that mindfulness (and the teacher’s manner of embodying this) offers the
possibility to step out of all this “doing” mode, and into “being” mode, by
moving toward all sensations just as they are in this moment. It is an insight-
ful process of attending to and allowing for what is here. In acknowledging
what is present, observation of the sensations can include a narrow focus of
attention or a broader frame of awareness. This is not easy and requires con-
centration and effort that kindly notices when the attention has moved away
from the present moment. It involves a gentle mindful intention to return
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back to a commitment to be present for each moment along with patience
and a quality of friendliness and openness. This requires practice over time
because it needs remembering and reinforcement. It is difficult to see how
this process can be revealed and acknowledged by the teacher in any other
form than from a deep sense of having encountered these moments many
times in one’s own practice.
It is when meeting suffering in its entirety and in the present moment
that a quality of awareness and self-kindness, directed toward the unwanted,
is embodied by the teacher through the discovery in personal meditation
practice of being able to be with her/his own unconstructive and difficult
modes of mind. Over time and with practice, aversive states (a need to create
distance from negative affect and to remove and reject difficulty and suffer-
ing) are lessened. This is not a passive stance but rather one of receptivity,
acknowledgment and compassionate action. A “willingness to embrace in
awareness and nonjudgmentally those aspects of oneself that one is most
highly defended against, are essential qualities for the successful pursuit of
this work”
(Kabat-Zinn & Santorelli, 1996).
It is only through the instructor’s own experience with mindfulness practice, that she/he improves the possibilities of representing these qualities of acceptance, nonjudgment, kindness,
continuing investigation, self-inquiry and compassion in their fullness.
Relevance of Personal Practice
Directing awareness through personal mindfulness practice toward strength-
ening such positive mind states as loving-kindness and compassion requires
attention, receptivity, patience, and trust, all attributes of a practical engage-
ment with mindfulness. This takes practice and time. By working regu-
larly and directly with what arises from her/his experience of mindfulness
practice, and cultivating such attitudinal modes of mind as nonjudgment,
patience, beginner’s mind, trust, non-striving, acceptance and letting go, the
teacher conveys the possibility to MBSR and MBCT participants of develop-
ing a different relationship to difficulties and stress
(Kabat-Zinn, 1990).
These attitudinal elements of mindfulness become very much a part of what the
teacher embodies in instruction and can also be seen as important features
of psychotherapy.
Highlighting the efficacy of continuous personal work in this particular
way is a somewhat unusual approach in the delivery of clinical training pro-
grams, although there is a similar association in of undergoing personal ther-
apy when training as a psychodynamic therapist. The difference here is that
embedded in the practice of mindfulness is the assumption that continuing
to practice in this way provides an authentic way of being that adds a rich-
ness for living in the world.
By sustaining effort, patience and friendliness to the contents of our own
mind/body, particularly those aspects of thinking and feeling that we have
the most difficulty with, understanding grows about hearing, receiving and
being with all the reactions and responses presented by the MBSR and MBCT
group participants. Curiosity and compassion are conveyed by the clini-
cian’s ability to authentically present the process of returning to the present
moment. This is the platform the instructor can offer to the participants,
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originating as it does from having met oneself again and again in personal
practice with a sense of nonjudgment, self-acceptance and compassion.
Professional Training Programs in MBSR and MBCT
Combining an emphasis on the clinician’s personal mindfulness practice
alongside her/his development of knowledge and theory requires careful
consideration when designing professional training for MBSR and MBCT
teachers. At a basic level, professional training in MBSR and MBCT will
develop and advance teaching skills for the practice of mindfulness. It will
foster the enhancement of group process as it relates to mindfulness, encour-
age and support interpersonal skills, such as warmth, acceptance, compas-
sion and respect alongside appropriate professional and personal bound-
aries. In the case of MBCT, it will also include the understanding, placement
and implementation of the cognitive behavioral segments embedded in the
program. Additionally, there is a responsibility to convey intention and mean-
ing to the unfolding nature of mindfulness practice and the various ways that
this can be communicated by the clinician.