|
|
In the first case below,
the mystical experience led to a mild form of spiritual emergency.
A woman in her early thirties sought out therapy to deal
with unresolved parental struggles and guilt over a younger
brother's psychosis. Approximately two years into her therapy,
she underwent a typical mystical experience, including a state
of ecstasy, a sense of union with the universe, a heightened
awareness transcending space and time, and a greater sense
of meaning and purpose to her life. For ten days, she remained
in an ecstatic state. She felt that everything in her life
had led up to this momentous experience and that all her knowledge
had become reorganized during its course. Due to the rapid
alteration in her mood and her unusual ideation, her therapist
considered diagnoses of mania, schizophrenia, and hysteria.
But he rejected these because many aspects of her functioning
were either unchanged or improved, and overall her experience
seemed to be
more integrating than disintegrating. . .While a psychiatric
diagnosis cannot be dismissed, her experience was certainly
akin to those described by great religious mystics who have
found a new life through them (p. 806).
This experience increasingly became the focus of her continued
treatment, as she worked to integrate the insights and attitudinal
changes that followed. The therapist reported that the most
important gain from it was a conviction that she was a worthwhile
person with worthwhile ideas, not the intrinsically evil person,
'rotten to the core', that her mother had convinced her she
was. Her subsequent treatment focused on expanding the insights
she had gained and on helping her to integrate the mystical
experience.
(Adapted from Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry, 1976).
<< Back to Case Library |