Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
Tags: #Science, #Physics, #Crystallography, #Chemistry, #Inorganic
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Vanderbilt University. Mr. Treadways
research focuses on the behavioral and neurobiological mechanisms of emo-
tion regulation among healthy individuals and individuals with depression.
He is especially interested in understanding how the utility of different emo-
tion regulation strategies may vary according to context.
Varra Alethea A.
is a Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center
(MIRECC) Postdoctoral Psychology Fellow in Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD) at the VA Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle, WA, USA. Her
primary clinical and research interests involve the application of acceptance
and mindfulness-based therapies to the treatment of individuals with post-
traumatic sequalea including PTSD and substance abuse disorders. She is the
author of several chapters and research articles concerning the application
and conceptualization of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy.
Vijay Aditi
is a graduate student in the Clinical Psychology doctoral program
at the University of Nevada, Reno. Her research interests are in the area of
interpersonal violence and the impact and prevention of sexual revictimiza-
tion. Ms. Vijay’s clinical interests and in the applications of mindfulness based
treatments for trauma survivors.
Walsh Erin
is a doctoral student in clinical psychology at the University
of Kentucky. Her current research examines how particular ways of emo-
tional responding (acceptance vs. avoidance) influence psychological and
physiological states. Other interests include investigating the psychological
and physiological mechanisms of change associated with mindfulness-based
practices, as well as exploring the transdiagnostic utility of such practices.
Warren Brown Kirk, PhD,
completed graduate training in Psychology at
McGill University and post-doctoral training at the University of Rochester.
He is currently an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Virginia Common-
wealth University. His research centers on the role of attention to and aware-
ness of internal states and behavior in self-regulation and well-being. He has
a particular interest in the nature of mindfulness, and the role of mindful-
ness and mindfulness-based interventions in affect regulation, behavior regu-
lation, and mental health in healthy and clinical populations. He has authored
numerous journal articles and chapters on these topics. His research is
funded, in part, by the National Institutes of Health.
Woods Susan
, M.S.W., L.I.C.S.W. is a psychotherapist who has practiced
meditation and yoga for 25 years. Ms. Woods has been a long time teacher of
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and more recently Mindfulness-
Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT). She is certified as an MBSR teacher by
the Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care, and Society, Univer-
sity of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA and has
taught there. Ms. Woods trains health care professionals in mindfulness-based
interventions and teaches a MBCT professional training program with Zin-
del Segal, PhD. Ms. Woods co-designed and leads an Advanced Teaching and
Study professional training program for experienced MBCT teachers.
xxiv
Contributors
Zylowska Lidia, M.D,
adult psychiatrist, is a Co-founder of and the
Assistant Clinical Professor at Mindful Awareness Research Center in the
Semel Institute at UCLA. Her research investigates the use of the Mind-
ful Awareness Practices (MAPs) for ADHD adults and teens. In her work,
Dr. Zylowska promotes integration of conventional psychiatric treatment
with mindfulness training and other self-regulation tools to enhance psy-
chological well-being across the lifespan. http://www.marc.ucla.edu and
http://www.lidiazylowska.com.
Foreword
Anytime a handbook such as this one appears, we know from experience
that it represents a kind of pause in the head-long momentum of research,
inquiry, and application within a field; a moment in which we can individu-
ally and collectively stop and reflect, take a breath so to speak, and consider
where we are at. In twenty years, if it does its job, many of the details herein
might be obsolete, or perhaps seen as na¨ıve or preliminary; even as, in the
broad-brush strokes of the field and its inevitable links to, if not, hopefully,
embeddedness within the dharma, many aspects of these pages and findings
will always be germane, perhaps even timeless and wise. In twenty years,
this book might, as most handbooks do, take on a new role as an historical
object in its own right, a marker of a creative moment in the history of an
emerging field, still in its infancy.
But in this here and this now, this handbook is a marvelous vehicle for
gathering from far and wide a range of different current views and efforts. It
offers the contributors an opportunity to say to the world and to each other:
“This is what we have been thinking,” “This is what we have tried,” “This
is what we have seen,” “This is what we suspect is going on,” “This is what
we have learned.” It is also an occasion to say with a degree of openness
and candor: This is where we have not succeeded, or were surprised, or dis-
appointed.” “This is what we feel is missing. “This is what we don’t know.”
Or even, “This is what we suspect we don’t even know we don’t know.”
Most of the presentations in this book do just that, and the authors are to be
congratulated for their openness and courage in this regard. As a result, this
handbook presents a rich treasure trove of important issues for contempla-
tion, deep inquiry, and study, as well as a hearty invitation to come to it all
with a broad and an open-minded skepticism, renewing hopefully, over and
over again, our commitment to keep a beginner’s mind, in Suzuki Roshi’s
immortal phrase
[1].
A volume such as this one is a potentially powerful resource for actually
educating ourselves to the nature of possibly new dimensions embedded
within our own work and the work of others ... orthogonal ways of thinking
and seeing that can reveal and open up new dimensions of clinical under-
standing and care as well as new dimensions of basic research into questions
such as the nature of what we call
mind
, and how it relates to emotion,
xxv
xxvi
Foreword
thinking, consciousness, awareness, attention, perception, the brain, the
body as a whole, and what we call “the self.”
As so many of the contributors point out, none of us should imagine that
we fully understand mindfulness, nor its implications in regard to these or
other questions. Nor should we fall into the conceit that we come even close
to fully embodying it in our lives or work, whatever that would mean, even as
we speak of the importance of doing so. It is very important that we neither
idealize nor reify whatever we mean when we speak of mindfulness. Really,
we are all beginners, and when we are truthful about it, we also cannot but
be humbled by the enormity of the undertaking. This is a very healthy frame-
work to adopt. Happily, it is palpable in the work presented here by the many
different authors and groups. The editor, Dr. Didonna is to be congratulated
for taking on such an ambitious and challenging project and shepherding it
to completion.
It is also important to keep in mind that, as deep and broad as the author
list is for this handbook, there are many more colleagues out there, liter-
ally around the world, who are doing important work under the umbrella
of mindfulness and its clinical applications who have not contributed to this
volume. Their contributions as individuals and groups to the overall conver-
sation, inquiry, and forward momentum of the field are immense. No doubt
many will study these presentations in some detail, perhaps agreeing with
or arguing with particular formulations or findings, recommending the hand-
book to their students, and possibly here or there making particularly cre-
ative use of some of the nuggets lying within to stimulate their own thinking.
So while a handbook such of this cannot in the end be all-inclusive, it can
nonetheless serve as a catalyst within the entire field (and, dare I say,
sangha
of clinicians and investigators and practitioners, hopefully overlapping in the
majority of people?) in pausing in the way I have just suggested, reflecting
on where things are now in their fullness and their incompleteness, and then
participating in both the inner and the outer conversations (through, respec-
tively, silence for the former, and speech, deep listening, and writing for the
latter), asking the deep questions and trusting our deepest intuitions about
what is called for now, given the scope of the conditions, challenges, and
promises inherent in psychology and psychotherapy, medicine and health
care, neuroscience and phenomenology, and indeed, in the world – domains
in which we are all agents of creativity, wonder, and caring.
The welcome advent of this volume
[2]
is diagnostic of a remarkable phe-
nomenon that has been unfolding in both medicine and psychology over the
past five years or so, and promises to continue long into the future in ways
that may be profoundly transformative of both disciplines and of our under-
standing, in both scientific and poetic terms, of what it means to be human,
and of our intrinsic capacity to embody the full potential of our species –
to which we have accorded the name
homo sapiens sapiens
– for wakeful-
ness, clarity, and wisdom. This intrinsically self-reflective nomenclature and
the implicit promise or potential it carries brings to mind the rejoinder of
Gandhi when asked by a reporter what he thought of Western Civilization,
to wit: “I think it would be a very good idea
[3].
” The same might be said of our species’ name.
For
homo sapiens sapiens
really means
the species that knows and knows
that it knows
, from the Latin verb
sapere
(to taste or to know). To
know
Foreword
xxvii
invokes awareness and meta-awareness, certainly one of the core mysteri-
ous elements, along with language, cognition, compassion, and music that
together constitute the final common pathway, one might say, of what it
means to be fully human. I prefer
awareness
and
meta-awareness
to
cog-
nition
and
meta-cognition
, as the latter formulation unavoidably privileges
conceptualization. Any direct first-person introspective examination of the
human repertoire from the perspective of experience itself requires a much
larger container, one that distinguishes between thinking and awareness, and
differentiates wisdom from knowledge and information; one that includes a
capacity to embody what is known in ways that round out and complete
the full potential of that human repertoire. One might say that the fate of
the earth and of the species itself hangs in the balance. The challenge may
come down to whether or not, and to what degree we can embody and enact
the qualities that this appellation is pointing to. Mindfulness may be the key
to this awakening to the full potential of our nature as human beings, both
individually and as a species.
If one charts the number of scientific papers over the past twenty-five
years or so with the word
mindfulness
in the title, one sees the phenomenon
Fig. 1.
Number of publications with the word “mindfulness” in the title by year since
1982.
It is immediately apparent that the field is growing exponentially. As sug-
gested above, this volume both in number of contributors and in its shear
size represents a watershed in this process. It allows us to drink in the vast
range of interest and potentially useful applications of mindfulness in the dis-
ciplines of psychology, psychiatry, and psychotherapy and the breadth and
depth in the quality of the work and the thought and effort behind it.
The book itself will also very likely serve as a catalyst to amplify even
further the phenomenon depicted in Figure
1,
as it both legitimates aca-
demic and scholarly interest and invites students and young investigators and
clinicians to consider whether this emerging exploration of mindfulness res-
onates in some deep way with their calling in both professional and personal
xxviii
Foreword
terms. My hope is that it will also germinate a whole new generation of
research investigations that bring together the emerging fields of what is now
being called
contemplative neuroscience
or neuro-phenomenology on both
the cognitive and affective sides, with practical high-quality mindfulness-
based clinical applications that may be of benefit to large numbers of people
who are experiencing pain and suffering in their lives, both from outright