Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
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change; they mindfully center themselves and remember why the change
matters in the long run
(Wolever et al., 2007).
This approach is further aided by strategies for setting
S
pecific,
M
easurable,
A
ction-oriented,
R
ealistic and
T
ime-bound (SMART) short and long-term goals. While it remains an empirical question, clinical experience suggests that these additional tools signifi-
cantly augment the mindfulness approach and vice versa.
The choice to add additional tools to mindfulness treatment may depend
in part on the level of mindfulness practice that individuals are willing to
undertake, and their ability to create an environment conducive to internal
listening. Given the practical reality of most clients’ lives, and the fact that
these approaches may benefit many people that are not drawn to medita-
tion per se, it may be wise to use mindfulness to create a learning space to
enhance wise decision making in a more active fashion as well. For example,
when one is deciding whether or not to eat, it is useful to reference physio-
logical hunger cues rather than external signals that it is time to eat (food is
present, meal break begins, etc.). Similarly, when deciding to stop eating, it is
useful to register physiological cues of moderate fullness rather than external
cues that eating is complete (clean plate, time is up, etc.). However, Western
culture is so externally driven and fast-paced, it is often not enough to teach
clients to pay attention to hunger and fullness. They must also carefully plan
to establish an environment in which they can register these signals; and this
requires assertiveness and other traditional techniques. For instance, imag-
ine that you are a nurse working a 12 hour shift without a meal break. While
physiologically, it is important to eat during your shift, the health system
does not build in time for this task. The nurse must use assertiveness skills to
assure even a 15 minutes break to eat, as well as flexibility to sense the best
time to take the break, as well as planning and preparation to ensure that
nutritious food is available in small quickly-edible portions. Similarly, regis-
tering moderate hunger and moderate fullness signals after the work shift
may help the nurse avoid overeating after work, but some nutritious intake
during the shift will also help avoid overeating later.
In such situations, mindfulness helps participants to create an optimum
learning space, and the introduction of concepts and tools from other tra-
ditional approaches may strengthen the intervention. For example, state
of the art treatments for bulimia and BED (e.g.,
Apple & Agras, 1997;
Fairburn, 1995)
encourage participants to recognize and label thoughts and emotions that precede bingeing. Mindfulness, however, can facilitate this
learning by applying a layer of nonjudgment to remove harsh criticism (from
self or others), freeing up participants for more accurate self-observation.
One significant difference in these approaches and mindfulness-informed
approaches, however, is that CBT encourages direct intervention into the
thoughts or behaviors whereas pure mindfulness suggests that just observing
the thought, emotion, or sensation is enough; the mere process of nonjudg-
mentally attending to them allows for a shift from within the participant.
In sum, participants with ED are driven by deficits in the self-regulation
of food intake, emotion and cognition. There is strong theoretical support
280
Ruth Q. Wolever and Jennifer L. Best
for the application of mindfulness to this dysregulation, and an emerging
literature on its efficacy. Some approaches use more traditional MBSR tech-
niques while others apply these mindfulness techniques directly to eat-
ing and compensatory mechanisms characteristic of ED. The EMPOWER
approach conceptualizes mindfulness as a strong self-learning tool in which
individuals explore new ways to self-regulate; some ways are taught through
pure mindfulness whereas others apply mindfulness to other behavior
change techniques (e.g., goal-setting). Additional research will be important
in evaluating the efficacy of various aspects of mindfulness-based treatments
in treating specific issues.
Acknowledgements:
The authors wish to thank and acknowledge Jean
Kristeller, PhD, Sasha Loring, MEd, LCSW, Michael Baime, MD and Larry Lad-
den, PhD whose wise attention to the application of mindfulness has deeply
informed our work.
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