| Mental
Disorders
I have used meditation in my clinical work as a psychologist
at Camarillo State Hospital, UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute,
and the San Francisco VA with serious conditions such
as schizophrenia, depression, PTSD, and chronic pain.
I have taught meditation to patients as a mind calming
technique for over 20 years. As mentioned earlier, I
developed a multimodal holistic health program for schizophrenic
patients at a state psychiatric hospital which incorporated
meditation without any adverse effects. ABSTRACT
Lukoff D, Wallace CJ, Liberman RP, Burke K.
A holistic program for chronic schizophrenic
patients. Schizophr Bull. 1986;12(2):274-82.
Actually what I used at Camarillo State Hospital with
schizophrenic patients was music by Steven Halpern,PhD, a who has researched and
recorded non-melodic, non-rhythmic music that induces
a relaxed state. I found that this music enabled patients
to achieve a meditative sense of calm amidst voices
and paranoid delusions that many were experiencing.
EXERCISE:
Listen to audio files of meditative music from Spectrum
Suite by Steven Halpern. Two brief excerpts are
linked on this page about 2/3 of the way down.
I have also conducted walking meditation sessions with patients
at the San Francisco VA Day Treatment Program where
I worked as a psychologist for 14 years.
The practice is based on the work of Vietnamese Buddhist
monk Thich Nhat Hahn. The patients enjoyed walking
in silence quite a bit and several asked to do this again.
I also have used
a breath meditation on a CD by Andrew Weil,MD in
groups at an outpatient VA clinic for patients with
pain management and chronic illness issues. This
meditation proved effective in helping many cope
better with their medical conditions even though
many also had diagnoses of PTSD as well. This simple
meditation did not exacerbate dissociative symptoms
(which a more intensive practice might run the risk
of doing).
The
Art of Breathing
Substance
Abuse
In mental health applications, meditation has been used
both with and without its religious/spiritual heritage.
For example, Transcendental Meditation (TM), which does
draw upon its roots in Hinduism, has been used in the
treatment of substance abuse, and the results have generally
shown positive outcomes. A review of 24 studies concluded
that TM simultaneously addressed several factors underlying
substance abuse, and provided both immediate relief from
distress (such as urges) and also long term improvements
in well-being, self-esteem, personal empowerment, and
other areas of psychophysiological health.
Gelderloos
P, Walton KG, Orme-Johnson DW, Alexander CN. Effectiveness of the Transcendental Meditation program
in preventing and treating substance misuse: a review. Int J Addict
1991 Mar; 26(3):293-325)
Psychotherapy

In his review of meditation and psychotherapy, Greg Bogart, Ph.D. concludes that meditation
has clinical applications beyond its well documented capacity to induce physiological
relaxation and to alleviate stress, anxiety, and other physical symptoms:
Meditation brings about cognitive shifts that can
be applied to behavioral self-observation and management,
and to understanding limiting or self-destructive cognitive
patterns.
Meditation may also permit deepened access to the unconscious.
However, meditation by itself may not be an effective
means of reflecting upon and giving meaning to the previously
submerged material that may come to consciousness. Here
the interpretive approaches developed by psychoanalytic,
Jungian, and other psychodynamic theorists may prove
more useful. Conversely, meditation techniques like Vipassana
focus attention on the manner in which unconscious conflicts
are being processed and recreated in the mind on a moment-to-moment
basis. Thus, vipassana offers the possibility of not
just understanding such conflicts conceptually, but of
actually penetrating and gradually dismantling them through
meditative insight.

An additional benefit has been observed by Herbert Benson,MD.
Even using his spiritually sanitized version of meditation,
he found one result that surprised him:
Not only did my research -- and that of my colleagues
-- reveal that 25% of people feel more spiritual as
the result of the Relaxation Response, but it showed
that those same people have fewer medical symptoms
than do those who reported no increase in spirituality.
It became clear that a person's religious convictions
or life philosophy enhanced the average effects of
the Relaxation Response in three ways: (1) People who
chose an appropriate focus, that which drew upon their
deepest philosophic or religious convictions, were
more apt to adhere to the Relaxation Response routine,
looking forward to it and enjoying it; (2) affirmative
beliefs of any kind brought forth remembered wellness,
reviving top down, nerve cell firing patterns in the
brain that were associated with wellness; (3) when
present, faith in an eternal or life transcending force
seemed to make the fullest use of remembered wellness
because it is a supremely soothing belief, disconnecting
unhealthy logic and worries.
Examining the Faith Factor

Others, such as Arthur Deikman, MD, have offered a contrary
position and questioned the integration of spiritual
practices such as meditation into psychotherapy:
Another question that arises frequently is whether
techniques from the domain of spiritual practice should
be introduced into the psychotherapy situation. My
own view is that they should not - unless the psychotherapist
is also qualified as a spiritual teacher. Although
a variety of procedures such as meditation, chanting,
and visualization can be used to provide calmness and
relaxation, the mystical literature indicates that
such benefits are secondary. The sages who invented
these techniques emphasized that they should be used
as part of an integrated, individualized teaching system
requiring the supervision of a teacher whose own perceptual
capacity has been developed and who thus knows how
to prescribe them according to the specific spiritual
needs of the student. To use such techniques for lesser
purposes may decrease their effectiveness for spiritual
development. Since locating a competent therapist can
take some searching, and locating a competent spiritual
teacher can take even more, locating someone who is
adequately skilled in both is a difficult undertaking
indeed. I do not regard myself as such a person, nor
do I know of anyone else who is.
Spirituality Expands a Therapist's Horizons
Some groups, such as the Jehovah's Witnesses, have criticized
even the secular forms of meditation:
Dr. Benson's formula is not neutral but religious;
it derives from Eastern Religions, Mysticism and Gnosticism...Dr.
Benson's formula is incompatible with Christianity,
and dangerous.
Jehovah's Witness Web Site

Yet Buddhist practitioners emphasize, and Benson has
actually found the opposite, namely that meditation often
strengthens individuals religious beliefs.
Many Jewish rabbis and Catholic priests and nuns meditate--even
regularly practicing Buddhist meditation--without changing
their religious affiliation. Moreover, there are various
kinds and styles of meditation that have developed
with Buddhism. Some involve visualizing and invoking
Buddhist deities (archetypal representations of the
highest spiritual qualities within us), while others
have virtually no Buddhist content. Buddhism is not
intent upon converting anyone, and there is no conversion
ceremony in Buddhism. Meditation, in short, is a an
excellent example of a spiritual practice that transcends "isms" and
schisms. It's post-denominational and can deepen any
religious quest. (In addition to Buddhist meditation,
there are Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Sikh, Jain, Christian,
Taoist, and other forms of meditation, by the way.)
Meditation helps awaken and enlighten us, grounding
us more in the present moment, the holy now.
Surya Das,
an American-born Tibetan lama, I Sit, Therefore I
Am...a Buddhist?
And research has clearly established that meditation
can be a valuable adjunctive technique in psychotherapy,
pain management, and other situations where cultivating
a relaxed body and calm mind would benefit an individual.
It is still rare to see mind-body-spirit techniques being
taught on psychiatric inpatient units, but there is growing
support for interventions which actively utilize patients'
religious and spiritual beliefs and values as part of
therapy. This can range from using religious or spiritual
practices in the treatment sessions (e.g., conducting
a loving kindness meditation from Buddhist practice)
to adoption of Christian imagery in cognitive-behavioral
interventions.
Meditation has become
acceptably "mainstream" with many perceived
benefits, which the therapist
can use to motivate the patient to try the technique and develop a regular
practice of meditating.
QUIZ EXERCISE 11:
Benson found that religious beliefs ...
a) tend to interfere with meditation practice b) are often strengthened by meditation c) and meditation are incompatible d) none of the above
Record your answers for later insertion into the Quiz. |
QUIZ EXERCISE 12:
Meditation ...
a) is contraindicated while in psychotherapy b) a valuable adjunctive technique in psychotherapy c) is an unethical intervention by current professional guidelines d) none of the above
Record your answers for later insertion into the Quiz. |
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