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Overview
of Treatment
The
Mystical, Near-Death, Meditation and Spiritual Practice, Visionary and
Shamanic types of spiritual problems have been associated with crises
("spiritual emergencies") where a person has difficulty functioning.
Each
of these problems has a section on Therapy
Mystical
experiences
Near-death
experiences
Meditation
and Spiritual Practice
Visionary
experiences
Shamanic
experiences
There
are also a number of therapeutic strategies that apply to all spiritual
crises. Stanislav Grof, MD, and Christina Grof, founders of the Spiritual
Emergence Network, describe a spiritually-sensitive approach:
The
most important task is to give people in crisis a positive context for
their experiences and sufficient information about the process that
they are going through. It is essential that they move away from the
concept of disease and recognize the leading nature of their crisis...
Whether
attitudes and interactions in the narrow circle of close relatives and
friends are nourishing and supportive or fearful, judgmental, and manipulative
makes a considerable difference in terms of the course and outcome of
the episode...
[Therapy]
should not be limited to talking and should allow full experience and
direct release of emotion. It is absolutely essential to respect the
healing wisdom of the transformative process, to support its natural
course, and to honor and accept the entire spectrum of human experience
(Spiritual Emergency: When Personal Transformation Becomes a Crisis,
p. 195)
Interventions
can range from support for a time-limited crisis, with possible involvement
of relatives, friends, support groups, and medical persons, to intensive
long-term psychotherapy. Choice of specific interventions depends on the
intensity, duration, and type of spiritual problem, and also on the individual
and their support network.
Therapeutic
Interventions for Acute Crises
Therapy
with spiritual emergency patients in crisis ("spiritual emergency")
can include the following 9 interventions.
Normalize
People
in the midst of intense spiritual experiences need a framework of understanding
that makes sense of them. Mental health theory has provided little guidance
in this area, and has often pathologized religious and spiritual experiences.
Often it is the lack of understanding, guidance and support that allows
such experiences to go out of control. Jung described how providing
a normalizing framework helped in the following case:
I
vividly recall the case of a professor who had a sudden vision and thought
he was insane. He came to see me in a state of complete panic. I simply
took a 400-year-old book from the shelf and showed him an old woodcut
depicting his very vision. "There's no reason for you to believe
that you're insane," I said to him. "They knew about your
vision 400 years ago." Whereupon he sat down entirely deflated,
but once more normal
(Man
and His Symbols, p. 58).
In
a similar way, Ram Dass, a spiritual teacher, originally trained as a
clinical psychologist, helped a person in distress by framing his experience
as a kundalini reaction. He recounted a telephone call from someone saying
he thought he was going crazy. After the caller described uncontrollable
tearfulness and so much energy he couldn't sleep, Ram Dass said,
Brant
Cortright, PhD, describes the clinical value of educating the patient
and significant others:
Education
about spiritual emergency serves two primary functions. First, it gives
the person a cognitive grasp of the situation, a map of the territory
he or she is traversing. Having a sense of the terrain and knowing others
have traveled these regions provides considerable relief in itself.
Second,
it changes the person's relationship to the experience. When the person
(and those around him or her) shifts into seeing what is occurring as
positive and helpful rather than bad and sick, this changes the person's
way of relating to the experience. To know that this process is healing
and growthful permits the person to turn and face the inner flow of
experiences, to welcome them rather than turning away or trying to suppress
them (Psychotherapy
and Spirit, p. 173)
The
term spiritual emergency is one that describes and normalizes such
crises. It provides a nonpathological understanding and is a gateway for
patients, family and friends to the rapidly developing literature on these
types of problems.
Ed
Podvoll, MD, a psychiatrist who has used Buddhist approaches including
compassion and mindfulness training with patients, points out that this
is not an easy process:
The
difficult task becomes the need to shift one's view from seeing the
experience as a totally destructive cataclysm to being able to see and
appreciate the constructive attempt at self-transcendence, to see that
its conscious goal is not a relinquishing of life but an attempt at
renewal. The
Seduction of Madness, p. 587).
Usually,
the patient's family and friends play a critical role in implementing
and maintaining the spiritual and grounding interventions described below.
Therefore, they also need to be educated about the potential for positive
transformation and how to support a person in spiritual crisis.

Create
a therapeutic container
John
Perry, MD, who founded Diabysis, a residential treatment center for working
with people in visionary psychotic states, emphasized that when a person's
psyche in energized and activated, what he or she needs is contact with
a person who empathizes, who actively encourages the process, who provides
a loving appreciation of the qualities emerging through the process, and
who facilities the process rather than attempting to halt or interfere
with it. Brant Cortright, PhD highlights the qualities required
of the therapist:
In
spiritual emergency, the personal presence of the therapist is key.
Although some people are able to sail these waters successfully by themselves,
for many people the presence of one or more wise compassionate guides
on this journey can be of enormous help...Warmth and compassion combined
with a degree of softness and gentleness are essential, for hardness,
coldness, or insensitivity can be highly jarring to the delicate and
refined perceptions of a person undergoing these consciousness changes.
Additionally, a certain calmness and quiet confidence serves to energetically
reassure and soothe the apprehension and alarm that are frequently present
(Psychotherapy
and Spirit, p. 174).
Help
patient to reduce environmental and interpersonal stimulation
The
person undergoing a spiritual emergency needs to be shielded from the
psychic stimulation of the everyday world, which is usually experienced
as painful and interfering with the inner process. The therapist needs
to work with the patient to determine the specific people and situations
that exacerbate the dysfunctional aspects of the spiritual emergency.
Have
patient temporarily discontinue spiritual practices
Meditation
has triggered many reported spiritual emergencies. Meditation teachers
who hold intensive retreats are familiar with this form, and have developed
strategies for managing such occurrences (case
example).
Yoga, Qi gong, and other spiritual practices can also be triggers. Usually
teachers advise ceasing the practice temporarily. It can be reintroduced
as the person becomes more stable.

Use
the therapy session to help ground the patient
Therapy
sessions can be used in various ways depending on the phase of spiritual
emergency, and its specific features. In the case vignette below, Stuart
Sovatsky, PhD, Clinical Director of the Kundalini Clinic, gives an
example from his psychotherapy practice of grounding a patient in a spiritual
emergency into the present during the therapy session:
Client:
I'm, overwhelmed, (crying, sobbing) with this kundalini, I can't take
it anymore, I don't know what to do.
Therapist: (Talking right over the client, simultaneously). You have
an amazingly musical voice, I hear it as you are sobbing.
Client: I have been a singer, I want to be one."
Therapist: Then that will be a big part of our goal. That goal will
channel a lot of this energy into a creative outlet, the vishuddha chakra,
the throat wants to sing, you want to sing.
The client listened for half of what I said, then eyes went down and
sobbing returned.
Therapist: Please, look back at me, you slipped back out of rapport
with me and into your cycling thoughts of despair. Look. See, I am actually
admiring you, which I do.
I admire how courageous you are, coming to a stranger out of the hope
that he could help. I admire your ability to trust, yes, yes, NOW you
are growing in your trust of me, I see it in your eyes as you look (Client
smiles).
This
is our cooperative relationship....This "looking" is the beginning
of open-eyed meditation that grounds the client in time/space, so she
won't drift back into her mind-chatter of despair.
Suggest
the patient eat a diet of "heavy" foods and avoid fasting
Grains
(especially whole grains), beans, dairy products, and meat are considered
grounding ("heavy") foods as opposed to fruit and fruit juices,
salads. Sugar and stimulants like caffeine are also not advised.
Encourage
the patient to become involved in simple, grounding, calming activities
Gardening
is one such activity, or any simple tasks, such as knitting, housecleaning,
shoveling, sorting. Encourage the patient to participate in regular exercises.
Walks are probably the best way to help a person bring their consciousness
back into their body. Walks in nature have the added benefit of enhancing
tranquility and a calm mind. If the patient is a regular participant in
other activities such as swimming or biking, they could engage in that.
However, competitive sports would be too stimulating.
Encourage
the patient to draw, paint, mold clay, make music, journal, write poetry,
dance, both in the sessions and at home.
These
creative arts can help a person express and work through their inner experience.
The language of symbol and metaphor can help integrate what can never
be fully verbalized.

Evaluate
for medication
Some
practitioners, such as John Perry, MD, have argued that medication only
inhibits a person's ability to concentrate on the inner work and it mutes
the psychic energy needed to sustain the effort to move the process forward.
When medication is used to simply repress the inner process, it becomes
frozen in an unfinished state. Suppression can impede the potential for
a complete working through to a point of resolution.
Sometimes
the process is so intense that the person is overwhelmed and becomes very
anxious. That person could benefit from slowing down the process. Bruce
Victor, MD, a psychiatrist and psychopharmacologist, uses low doses of
tranquilizing or antipsychotic medication to alleviate some of the most
distressing feelings and allow the person to better assimilate the experience.
The
resolution of this seeming contradiction lies in the assessment of whether
the presence of the debilitating state serves the function of psychological
growth. Although the experience of pain, whether psychological or physical,
can be a powerful motivator for personal change, its persistence beyond
a certain point can retard it...
It
becomes a challenge to determine whether the person can actively work
with the pain therapeutically toward further psychological growth...One
important role of pharmacotherapy is to titrate the level of symptoms,
whether they be pain, depression, anxiety, or psychotic states, so that
they can be integrated by the person in the service of growth. (Textbook
of Transpersonal Psychiatry and Psychology, p. 332)
Some
psychiatrists with a sensitivity to the spiritual emergency process have
discussed their methods at conferences. Their approach is to prescribe
dosages of medication that dampen down the inner process so the patient
can continue work on an outpatient basis instead of an inpatient basis
(e.g., Robert Turner, MD). Medication practices have already been influenced
by new understandings of spiritual emergencies. For example, Bruce
Greyson, MD reports that persons in intensive care units (ICU) who
report out-of-body experiences and encounters with angels are no longer
seen as having "ICU psychoses" requiring treatment with antipsychotic
medication.
The
major criterion I use in deciding whether to make a referral for medication
evaluation is whether the person is in a situation which can support his/her
involvement in intensive inner process. A person living in a communal
setting, such as a spiritual retreat center, can go much deeper while
being cared for physically and supported in working through the crisis.
I observed this at The Ojai Foundation, a retreat center, when a person
went into a spiritual emergency that required round-the-clock attention.
The community provided full-time support for 2 weeks until she could maintain
on her own.
However,
people living in less supportive environments often do need to maintain
themselves at a higher level of functioning. Otherwise, they risk hospitalization,
loss of their livelihood, living situation, and other essentials. I have
referred such individuals for medication if I assessed that they were
a risk to themselves in this way. I would always refer for a medication
evaluation if I thought a patient might be a risk to others, but this
is rare in a spiritual emergency. However, spiritual emergency patients
can engage in risky behaviors such as driving recklessly, which does endanger
others. Therefore, a risk assessment is part of an assessment for medication
and must take into account the spiritual emergency patient's support system.
Of course, any use of medication should be with the full understanding
and consent of the person, who should be an active participant in the
decision-making.
Case
Example
Emma
Bragdon
describes her personal crisis which involved questioning of spiritual
values.
Separating
From a Spiritual Teacher can
lead to a loss of spiritual connection as the individual questions, and
then severs, the social support for that belief system and set of practices.
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REQUIRED
QUIZ ITEM
29
Meditation
Meditation is
always a helpful intervention for spiritual crises.
True
False
Record your answer
for later insertion into the Quiz.
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REQUIRED
QUIZ ITEM
30
Medication
Medication is
always contraindicated in spiritual crises.
True
False
Record your answer
for later insertion into the Quiz.
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