Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
Tags: #Science, #Physics, #Crystallography, #Chemistry, #Inorganic
chologies (Walsh, 1996).
The ever-growing integration between mindfulness and psychotherapy is
justified by the fact that mindfulness can be considered a trans-theoretical
construct that has been used and integrated into different Western theo-
retical and therapeutic approaches that up to only two decades ago had
few, if any, points of contact and dialogue. Today, different therapeutic
models (cognitive-behavior therapy, constructivism, evolutionary psychol-
ogy, humanist psychology, psychoanalysis, brain science, traumatology, pos-
itive psychology) now seem to have found a unifying factor and significant
shared element that will make it possible, in the future, to better understand
and develop the therapeutic factors common to all effective psychological
treatments. Indeed, it can be argued that the mechanisms of change that
form the basis of mindfulness meditation can be found in most Western psy-
chotherapeutic perspectives.
Mindfulness-based approaches also pay particular attention to the impor-
tance of personal resources and potential and to the capacity of an individ-
ual’s “system” to heal itself (or healing from within). By doing so, individuals
spontaneously reach a point (especially when properly guided and oriented)
at which they may pass from a state of imbalance and distress to a state of
greater harmony and serenity with respect to themselves with a consequent
enhanced subjective perception of well-being. Mindfulness practice (and all
of the therapeutic possibilities that may stem from its use and application) is
a discipline that unites all of the above “healing” components and provides
a point of convergence in the fertile dialogue that has arisen over the last
two decades between the East and West within the sphere of psychological
science.
The Dialogue Between Western and Eastern Psychologies
Eastern meditative traditions and Western psychology have both aspects in
common as well as significant differences. In order to better integrate the
differing scientific approaches and methods of investigation, these similari-
ties and differences must be fully understood. Western science has histori-
cally focused on the observer-independent physical world that can be stud-
ied objectively, using empirical facts and excluding subjective experience.
Western psychology, and especially neuroscience, tends to view the mind
Introduction
3
from a mechanistic perspective, in which an often used metaphor is that
of the mind as machine. From this perspective, it has been suggested
that meditation works through such psychological mechanisms as relax-
ation, exposure, desensitization, dehypnosis, deautomatization, catharsis,
and decounterconditioning (Murphy & Donovan, 1997). Other suggestions
of cognitive mechanisms include insight, self-monitoring, self-acceptance,
and self-understanding (Baer, 2003). Potential physiological mechanisms
include decreased arousal, changes in autonomic nervous system activity,
stress immunization, and hemispheric synchronization and laterality shifts
(e.g., Cahn & Polich, 2006). Some of these mechanisms have often been mis-
interpreted in a reductionistic way, leading to a limited understanding of the
processes of meditation (Wilber, 2000b). On the contrary, Eastern medita-
tive disciplines have a very different view of the mind. These traditions, and
Buddhism in particular, have focused primarily on the human mind and con-
sciousness as the primary subjects of introspective investigation, which they
see as the source of human joy and suffering, and, in general, as the source
of all phenomena (Walsh & Shapiro, 2006) to the degree that they are con-
sidered to have a tremendous impact on the understanding of the rest of the
world (Wallace, 1999).
Buddhist tradition maintains that, in the words attributed to the Bud-
dha, “All phenomena are preceded by the mind. When the mind is com-
prehended, all phenomena are comprehended,” and “by bringing the mind
under control, all things are brought under control” (Santideva, 1961, p. 68,
as cited in Wallace, 1999). This perspective differs from that of Western mod-
ern science, which assumes that the mechanistic control of the environment,
particularly the body and the brain, can alter one’s sense of well-being, com-
fort, and distress.
Another important point is that Western culture tends to be monopha-
sic, meaning that it is centered on, and conceptualized within, the usual
waking state of consciousness, whereas the culture of meditative traditions
(both Eastern and Western) is polyphasic and multistage, drawing on multi-
ple states of consciousness and multiple adult developmental stages (Laugh-
lin, McManus, & Shearer, 1992; Wilber, 2000a). As meditative practices are
studied using a Western scientific paradigm, there is a danger of “degener-
acy,” in which multiple dimensions are simplified into fewer ones, resulting
in a loss of complexity and multidimensionality (Tart, 1992).
According to Thurman (1991), scientists have more often than not con-
sidered reality to be something external to the world of human thought
in as much as reality is part of the physical world. They have thought that
the environment must be tamed, controlled, and modified in order to be
adapted to human needs. In order to understand the outside world, West-
ern science has without a doubt made extraordinary efforts and achieved
excellent results. Examples of this are the use of chemistry, pharmacology,
and surgery to cure illness, both physical and psychological. However, West-
ern science has focused solely on the study of potential cures outside the
self, introducing them into ourselves via highly advanced technologies. And
yet by doing so, it has given less importance to the positive and therapeu-
tic potential that each one of us has within ourselves. Buddhist tradition, on
the contrary, focuses on the importance of internal science and considers
the science of the mind to be the most important to the internal sciences,
4
Fabrizio Didonna
the king of all sciences. These beliefs have developed, thanks to the intense
and antique tradition based on the practice of meditation.
Another important difference between the two psychologies lies in the
methods and the means for obtaining mental health. Both systems of belief
have their own theories, but there is room for fruitful and effective collab-
oration between the two. Western psychotherapy tends to focus mainly on
the content
of the consciousness and does not try to achieve the more radi-
cal transformation proposed by Buddhist psychology, which focuses on the
process of the consciousness. The aim is to free individuals from negative
mental states by altering the perceptive and cognitive processes.
Westerners that have tried to understand and adopt these meditative prac-
tices have had the opportunity to try them out on themselves involving their
own very intense and profound sensations and emotions. Thanks to these
experiences, they have been able to develop positive psychological compe-
tences, for example, managing “destructive emotions” such as anger, mental
agitation, and attachment. In this process, they have managed to cultivate a
lifestyle that enables them to prevent what Western culture would consider
to be “mental illness”.
In the past few decades, rigorous scientific studies based on Western tech-
nologies have demonstrated that meditation practiced by experts such as
Buddhist monks can modify cerebral activity and have a positive influence
on individual’s health, both mental and physical.
The aim is to open up dialogue on the issue of therapy for mental health
between these two cultures, which differ significantly from technological,
scientific, and ideological points of view. At the same time, they both focus
on the search for human well-being in all of its components and for ways
to overcome suffering. As Engler has stated (Wilber, Engler & Brown, 1986),
when the two psychologies are combined, the result is a much more com-
plete diagram of human development. This combination makes it possible
to trace the developments that have been well founded and well studied in
Western psychology and to see, therefore, how they can be improved by
integrating the techniques of Eastern psychologies.
In many ways this book is the fruit of this fertile dialogue between the two
cultures, the two sciences, and the two psychologies that has taken place
over the past decades. It exemplifies the result of a synthesis, translated into
conceptual models and therapeutic interventions, that is the expression of
the integration of Eastern psychology with its rigorous principles dating back
thousands of years and the ability to translate scientific progress and the-
oretical advances into operational models and therapeutic techniques that
can be scientifically verified and belong, therefore, to Western psychological
cultures.
Unity of the Mind and Body
An important aspect to be emphasized in mindfulness approaches is the
considerable relevance attributed to the
unity of the mind and body
,
whereby the identification and description of bodily sensations and per-
ceptions open up a channel of information with respect to the cognitive-
emotional sphere. It should be noted that in mindfulness interventions, the
Introduction
5
conception of an individual’s relationship with the body is substantially dif-
ferent from that normally adopted in Western culture and, more specifically,
with respect to psychotherapy, in standard cognitive-behavioral approaches
(which make little effort to contemplate the physical dimension), but also
in other psychotherapeutic models that may even involve physical contact
with the patient. While these latter models lead patients to experience bod-
ily sensations and/or emotions evoked by external stimuli, the practice of
mindfulness allows patients to explore the dimension of their own physical-
ity in an autonomous, spontaneous, and decentered manner. This aspect is
found to be all the more useful if one considers that a number of patients
have difficulty expressing their thoughts and emotions through verbal com-
munication and would rather make use of the body as a metaphor of their
experiences.
This fundamental unity of mind and body has basically been lost in Western
culture. In meditative practice this union is a crucial assumption: The two
entities communicate in an active and continuous way leading to a concept
of, a whole living being that continuously interacts with its internal world.
Behind this main difference between the two cultures are a very different
understanding of the concept of mind and a different mental representation
of the idea of health and illness. The point of view of Eastern psychology
stimulates the emergence of a wider vision compared to the Western view in
as much as it recognizes this basic unity of mind and body.
The basis of this difference is a significant dichotomy that has character-
ized Western thought since the seventeenth century when Descartes intro-
duced the subdivision of the whole being into separate entities: the body and
the mind. According to Kabat-Zinn (1990), this is, at one level, an efficient
simplification, but what we often tend to forget is that the mind and the body
are only separated abstractly, from the point of view of thought. This Carte-
sian dualism of mind and body has permeated Western culture to the point
that it has nearly eliminated the entire sphere of body–mind interactions as
a legitimate field of scientific research. We can no longer think of health and
illness as entities that belong separately to the body or the mind because
they are extremely interconnected. Only recently, as the weak points of the
dualistic paradigm have become more evident, has this tendency started to
be turned upside down.
The Concept of Illness in Eastern and Western Cultures
Modern Western medicine has never given great importance to developing
an understanding of the experiences of the internal functioning of individu-
als focusing almost exclusively on external appearances (the symptom) and
concentrating, therefore, on eliminating the external manifestation rather
than the latent cause in the organism, that is, the root of the problem. There-
fore, the fact that Westerners tend to ignore the inside of the body and
its processes comes first of all from our approach to illness: The “miracle
medicines” that were developed and widely diffused in the 1930s and 1940s,
thanks to the discovery of antibiotics, took over the public imagination, and
within a very short amount of time, it was assumed that in the end science
6
Fabrizio Didonna
would be able to demonstrate that every physical problem had its cause in
invasive microorganisms and germs.
This way of dealing with health problems was even extended to mental
illness. This is demonstrated by the often overuse of pharmaceuticals that