Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
Tags: #Science, #Physics, #Crystallography, #Chemistry, #Inorganic
this. The first class finished with the “body scan,” a lying down meditation in
which participants bring attention to every part of the body in turn.
Doing the body scan during the first week of homework proved challeng-
ing for Fiona. At the second class she reported that she “could not do” the
body scan. She said she had been crying more during the week after the
first class and it emerged that she had experienced feelings of panic on sev-
eral occasions during the body scan, finding it extremely unpleasant. The
instructor explored with Fiona the bodily sensations she had noticed during
the body scan at the start of the second class. However she was unable to
clearly describe them, simply repeating that she felt “panicky.” The instruc-
tor encouraged Fiona to approach the sensations with curiosity should they
arise again, looking in detail at what she experienced in her body during
these periods. He also emphasized to the class that there was no right or
wrong way to feel during the body scan. In the second session of the pro-
gram, themed “Dealing with Barriers,” addressing reactions to the first week
of practice such as Fiona’s is an important feature. Many participants have
questions about whether they are doing the practice right, or expect to find
the meditation relaxing, getting bored and frustrated when this is not their
experience. At this point in the classes it is necessary to emphasize to partic-
ipants that just doing the practice and observing their experiences whatever
they are, is all that is required. It is also critical at this stage that the instructor
models an openness and curiosity toward participants’ experiences, in order
to encourage them to maintain their practice of the body scan for a second
week. The second session is also used to introduce the cognitive model in
order to demonstrate the strong relation between interpretations and emo-
tions.
During the third class participants were introduced to both sitting medita-
tion, and to walking meditation and yoga. Fiona had continued to experience
unpleasant sensations during the body scan meditation but also reported
what she was beginning to relax to some degree in her attempts to control
her emotions. During exploration of her experiences during the sitting medi-
tation in class, Fiona was more able to describe the qualities of the sensations
she experienced (tension in her chest, irregular breathing, sadness). How-
ever after her initial enthusiasm she also reported increasing doubts about
the helpfulness of the classes as she was not yet starting to feel “better.”
This response is not unusual as participants, through their practice, tend
to experience negative thoughts, feelings and body states more clearly or
more strongly. At the same time, they begin to realize how their usual ways
of responding often entail avoidance or ruminative thinking. In contrast to
these habitual tendencies, MBCT teaches participants to become more aware
of difficult aspects of experience. In the third session, themed “Mindfulness
of the Breath,” the focus is on learning how attention to the breath and body
sensations can serve to stabilize the mind and return the focus to the experi-
ence of what is present, even when the mind is drawn toward difficulties.
A big shift came for Fiona as she began to practice the sitting meditation.
She described a period of sitting meditation during which she felt a great
Chapter 12 Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Depression and Suicidality
237
sense of relief in response to the occurrence of the thought “its ok to be
me.” She said that she had realized that she had previously avoided spending
time alone and so had tried to surround herself with other people because
she did not like herself. This contributed to her sense of anxiety and aban-
donment in the face of perceived rejections. Through the sitting meditation
she began to explore her experiences of “being with herself” in this new way.
Spontaneous insights like this frequently arise as the MBCT classes progress
and participants begin to observe the workings of their mind and their reac-
tions to events from a new perspective. Up to session 3, participants are
instructed to respond to mind wandering by noticing where their mind has
gone and then simply returning attention to the object of the meditation.
From session 4 onwards, there is a change in emphasis in that participants are
instructed more explicitly to turn toward difficult experiences and explore
them with gentleness, curiosity and interest. Fiona’s greater sense of compas-
sion for herself nicely reflects this shift in emphasis. The focus in session 4
is on “Staying Present” with difficult experience. Session 5, themed “Allow-
ing/Letting Be,” explores ways of bringing a sense of acceptance to such
experiences, particularly through staying with and exploring the body sen-
sations that come with negative thoughts. Session 6 makes explicit the core
theme of the program, that “Thoughts are Not Facts,” and that they occur
as transient mental events which individuals can choose to attend to or not.
As part of the sitting meditations in these sessions, participants deliberately
bring to mind a difficulty in order to practice these different ways of relating.
Fiona, at first, found it difficult to see the benefit of deliberately approach-
ing difficulties. However, over time it became possible for her to stay with
the distress she experienced when bringing a difficulty to mind, focusing
her attention on the bodily sensations accompanying what she experienced
(tightness in the chest, difficulty breathing, sadness) and the gradual change
in these as she continued to observe them. Hearing other participants of
the class talk about similar experiences helped her to develop compassion
both for herself and others. Many of the participants reflected on the way
that they judged themselves and the consequences this had for their mood
and well-being. The instructor encouraged participants to bring mindfulness
to the occurrence of difficult thoughts during their meditation practice, for
example noting “here is guilt,” “here is judgement” when familiar thoughts
arose. Participants were also encouraged to experiment with techniques to
facilitate de-centering including imagining thoughts as leaves gliding down a
stream, or projected on a cinema screen.
The theme of session 7 is “How Can I Best Take Care of Myself.” In this ses-
sion, participants reflect on the balance of nourishing and depleting activities
in their lives. As often occurs, Fiona realized that she spent very little time
on activities that lifted her mood or improved her well-being, often being so
concerned to meet the needs of others and avoid rejection that she failed
to meet her own needs adequately. In common with other members of the
group Fiona recognized a typical spiral of depression in which, as her mood
deteriorated, she increasingly gave up activities that might give her a sense
of mastery or pleasure. A key part of her relapse planning was therefore to
identify the early warning signs of this process, to take a breathing space
and reflect on an appropriate course of action, and to deliberately engage in
nourishing activities at times of low mood.
238
Thorsten Barnhofer and Catherine Crane
Session 8, themed “Using What Has Been Learned to Deal with Future
Low Mood,” is used to both look back at what has been learned and for-
ward to how what has been learned can be maintained and used to pre-
vent relapse and increase well-being. Fiona identified several areas in which
she had made progress. She was more able to recognize her tendency to
react to social stressors “online” and was able to use meditation, including
short 3-minute breathing spaces, to become aware of her reactions and make
choices. For example Fiona described a situation in which she had been sit-
ting on a train and had smiled at the person opposite who promptly got up
and walked away. Her initial reaction was to assume that the person opposite
had thought her strange and that others had also noticed the situation and
his departure, leading to feelings of embarrassment. However, rather than
triggering a cycle of rumination Fiona was able to stay with her immediate
experiences and observe her thoughts and bodily reactions in response to
the event. Shortly after the person opposite returned to their seat from the
restroom! This experience and others illustrated to Fiona the benefits of stay-
ing in the present moment. and allowing events and experiences to unfold,
rather than getting trapped in habitual but unhelpful patterns and reaction.
Research Findings
Two randomized controlled trials have evaluated the effectiveness of MBCT
for recurrent depression. In an initial multi-center trial by
Teasdale et al.
(2000),
145 recovered depressed patients were randomized to MBCT or treatment as usual and followed up over a period of 60 weeks. MBCT significantly
reduced relapse rates in patients with three or more previous episodes of
depression, with 66% of those in the treatment as usual group compared
to 40% of those in the MBCT group suffering from relapse. A later study
by
Ma and Teasdale (2004)
replicated this finding in a smaller sample of 73
recovered patients, 55 of whom had suffered from three or more previous of
depression. Of this latter group, 78% of those who had continued treatment
as usual relapsed within the one-year follow-up compared to only 36% in the
MBCT group.
The results from both of these trials advocate the use of MBCT to help
reduce risk of relapse in individuals with recurrent depression. The fact that
MBCT reduced relapse rates to about half in individuals with three or more
episodes of depression, but did not produce significant effects in those with
one or two previous episodes, is consistent with its focus on cognitive reac-
tivity and rumination and the assumption that through associative learning
these processes come to be increasingly relevant for relapse as individuals go
through repeated episodes.
Studies explicitly investigating effects on relevant cognitive parameters
and hypothesized mechanisms of action are only beginning to emerge.
Williams, Teasdale, Segal and Soulsby (2000)
found that MBCT can reduce
deficits in autobiographical memory specificity, a phenomenon that has
been shown to be play a central etiological role in depression. In a pre-
post comparison study,
Ramel, Goldin, Carmona, McQuaid (2004)
found
that mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), the generic mindfulness
Chapter 12 Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Depression and Suicidality
239
program developed by John Kabat-Zinn, reduced ruminative tendencies in
previously depressed patients, (2007).
While specifically developed for preventing relapse to depression, the pro-
grams’ focus on changing cognitive reactivity and rumination suggests that
it may also have some beneficial effects for patients currently suffering from
depression. Some preliminary evidence that this may be the case comes from
a pre-post comparison of MBCT
(Kenny and Williams, 2007),
which found
significant reductions in symptoms in individuals with treatment-resistant
depression who were treated with MBCT after CBT. The possibility of deliv-
ering MBCT to patients with ongoing symptoms of depression is welcome
since individuals with highly recurrent depression may experience signifi-
cant residual symptoms and fail to meet the strict recovery criteria that have
been imposed in existing clinical trials (12 weeks symptom free). However,
further randomized controlled trials exploring the use of MBCT for individ-
uals with current depressive symptoms will be required before we can have
confidence in the suitability of the approach for this group.
MBCT for Individuals with a History
of Suicidal Depression
There are several reasons to suspect that the skills acquired during MBCT may
be particularly suitable for patients who become suicidal when depressed
(Williams et al., 2006;
Lau, Segal & Williams, 2004).
First, avoidance tendencies, targeted by MBCT, appear to be critically important in understanding
suicidal ideation and behavior. The desire to escape from an unbearable situ-
ation is one of the most commonly reported motivations for suicidal behav-
ior (e.g.,
Hjelmeland et al., 2002)
and prominent psychological theories of suicidality converge on the suggestion that suicidality can be understood
as an attempt to escape, from aversive self-consciousness (e.g.,
Baumeister,
1990),
unbearable “psychache” (e.g.,
Schneidman, 1997)
or intolerable circumstances in which the opportunity to escape by other means or to be
rescued is perceived to be remote (e.g.,
Williams & Pollock, 2000;
Williams,
2001).
Thus the capacity to remain open to and stay with difficult expe-
riences, responding with self-compassion and acceptance may be critically