Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
Tags: #Science, #Physics, #Crystallography, #Chemistry, #Inorganic
mined) by them. Through reperceiving patients realize: “this pain is not me,”
“this depression is not me,” “these thoughts are not me,” as a result of being
able to observe them from a meta-perspective
(Shapiro et al., 2006).
Another related cognitive process, in which the focus is on changing individual’s relationship to thought rather than attempting to alter the content of thought
itself, is the concept of
cognitive defusion
(Hayes, Strosahl, and Wilson’s,
1999). The authors noted that the ability to pay attention to private experi-
ence and becoming a detached observer of it is often associated with a
shift
in the self-sense
. Through defusion, which is considered a change in per-
spective, identity begins to shift from the contents of awareness to awareness
itself.
Hayes et al. (1999)
define this process as the shift from “self as content”
(that which can be observed as an object in consciousness) to “self as con-
text” (that which is observing consciousness itself). Individuals may develop
a sense of the “self” as an ever-changing system of constructs, concepts, sen-
sations, images and beliefs that are eventually seen to be as impermanent and
transient conditions rather than a stable entity. One final related concept is
the process of
detachment
(Bohart, 1983),
which “encompasses the interrelated processes of gaining distance, adopting a phenomenological attitude,
and the expansion of attentional space”
(Martin, 1997).
As has been well stated by
Schwartz & Beyette (1997),
“there is an observing aspect of the mind that can really maintain its independence even though
the contents of the consciousness are being flayed around by the disease pro-
cess. We are really training the mind to not identify with those experiences
but to see ourselves as separable from those experiences.”
All the metacognitive processes illustrated above, developed through the
practice of mindfulness, can have a significant clinical relevance for obses-
sive pathology. The problem in OCD is that individuals often tend to
reify
their rapport with cognitions and consider thoughts as something real, as a
true and permanent representation of reality or
self
(in particular in patients
with poorer insight). Such “real” thoughts are then given inflated importance
(OCCWG, 1997).
When obsessive sufferers realize the impermanence of all
mental states, they are more able to relate to private experience with a sense
of
non-attachment
, developing a higher level of tolerance for unpleasant
inner states and disengaging themselves from the automatic behavioral pat-
terns (neutralizations, compulsions, reassurance seeking) which maintain the
obsessive syndrome. Thus it can be assumed that for OCD patients, these
mechanisms may lead to an improvement and increase in the level of insight
200
Fabrizio Didonna
and ego-dystonicity (referred to the degree that the content of the obsession
is contrary to or inconsistent with a person’s sense of self as reflected in
his or her core values, ideals, and moral attributes,
(Purdon, 2001;
Purdon
& Clark,
1999).
This, in turn, may decrease both the tendencies to judge and to react (with compulsive behavior) to the cognitive, emotional and sensory experience and to activate thought-action fusion bias. Furthermore, in
mindfulness- and acceptance-based interventions, the therapist often makes
use of metaphors or guided visualization exercises (see Chapter 7) that have
the purpose of allowing patients to internalize and indirectly incorporate
various elements of outer reality (connected in some way with mindfulness
principles – e.g.,
lake meditation
, see Appendix A), which may be subse-
quently be transformed into powerful resources. Metaphor is also proposed
as a therapeutic tool to develop and improve decentering, detachment and
defusion processes.
Acceptance and OCD
A core problem for obsessive individuals is
acceptance
. For them it is very
difficult, or often impossible, to accept several experiences connected with
their problem: intrusive or obsessive thoughts, imagined and feared conse-
quences of not preventing harm or doing things in a wrong way, negative
emotions (anxiety, guilty, shame, disgust), physical sensations. Therefore,
OCD individuals are not able to accept potentially normal and nonthreat-
ening experiences (see also the section on problem formulation and Fig-
ure 11.3).
As it is well illustrated in other chapters of this book, acceptance is one
of the main components of mindfulness-based approaches and it is defined
as a moment by moment process by which one moves away from viewing
thoughts and feelings as reality or things that need to be changed, and toward
embracing them simply as internal events that do not need to be altered with-
out unnecessary attempts to change their frequency or form, especially when
doing so would cause psychological harm
(Hayes et al., 1999).
Through
acceptance, individuals can notice internal events they experience while
simultaneously renouncing any effort to avoid or change these events and
responding to the facts which actually occurred rather than the inner expe-
rience elicited by such events
(Hayes et al., 1996).
The use of acceptance for OCD patients implies a conscious abandonment of behavior that functions
as experiential avoidance and a willingness to experience one’s emotions
and cognitions as they arise, without any secondary elaborative processing
(judgement, interpretation, appraisal, meta-evaluation).
Mindfulness is a training process through which patients learn to calmly
observe their inner experience with a feeling of clarity and without respond-
ing to it (Schwartz & Beyette,1997). The process of observing in and of
itself helps people increasingly come to the realization that they can change
their responses to those thoughts in very adaptive ways. In order to help
OCD individuals to observe and analyze their level of acceptance toward
private experience, in particular thoughts, and to develop and cultivate
this attitude, it may be useful to give patients a task to carry out on their
Chapter 11 Mindfulness and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
201
Thoughts,
Am I trying to
Was I able to allow and
COMMENTS
Emotions,
cultivate
accept this state
How do I feel now if I
Sensations
acceptance
(Emotion, sensation,
was able to accept?
now towards
thought) and stay in
How do I feel now if I
these internal
touch to it, without
was not able to
experiences?
react?
accept?
(Yes/No)
If not why?
What are the
consequences?
Figure. 11.1.
Homework table of acceptance.
own (see Figure 11.1) in which they are asked to fill in a form as nega-
tive internal experiences arise, noticing the private experience (emotions,
sensations, thoughts) during critical situations and whether or not they are
willing accept that state, if they are able to cultivate acceptance toward it,
and if not why, and what the consequences of doing or not doing this are.
This exercise can improve the metacognitive awareness of patients’ attitude
toward private experience and allow them to realize what the consequences
of this attitude are on their cognitive and emotional experience and dis-
ease.
Obsessive Doubt and Self-Invalidation of the
Perceptive-Sensorial Dimension
We do not see things as they are, we see them as we are.
The Talmud
Several studies have found that OCD patients, in particular checkers, lack
confidence
in their memory
(Sher, Frost, & Otto, 1983;
McNally & Kohlbeck
,
1993)
and are less satisfied with the vividness of their memories (Constans, Foa, Franklin, & Matthews,
1995).
Empirical observation and some studies have suggested that this lack of confidence is only related to OCD-related
stimuli
(Foa et al., 1997)
and threatening situations, and is significantly lower or often absent in normal or safe conditions (e.g., during a psychotherapy
session).
More specifically,
Hermans, Martens, De Cort, Pieters, & Eelen (2003)
showed that this low cognitive confidence in OCD patients is present on at
least three different levels: low confidence in their memory for actions, low
confidence in their ability to discriminate actions from imaginations, and low
confidence in their ability of keeping attention undistracted.
202
Fabrizio Didonna
According with the already discussed attentional bias hypothesis (Lavey
et al.,
1994;
Amir & Kozak, 2002),
Hermans et al. (2003),
in order to explain this lack of confidence, suggested that individuals suffering from
OCD would mistrust the accuracy or completeness of previous avoidance
behavior (checking, washing) because important elements of this behavior
might have been missed due to distraction or moments of lessened attention.
It has also been suggested
(Didonna, 2003, 2005)
that this low confi-
dence in cognitive experience in patients suffering from OCD – and “check-
ers” in particular – may depend on a cognitive bias in processing and/or
using relevant sensory information regarding situations that tend to generate
obsessive cognitions. This bias can be conceptualized as a
self-invalidation
of perceptive experience
. It is hypothesized that this problem may play a
decisive role in the activation of pathological doubt and in the relationship
between the patient’s conscious perceptive experience and the obsessive
phenomenology.
Clinical observation
(Didonna, 2005)
suggests that, during psychotherapy sessions, obsessive patients are usually able to recall the perceptive experience they felt during the anxiety-evoking events that activated obsessions.
Nevertheless, we also find that during an obsessive crisis they experience
considerable difficulty in voluntarily recovering and trusting their own sen-
sorial information relating to that event. They then become unsure of their
own experience. If this information were used instead of being discounted,
it might, neutralize obsessive doubt. On account of the vicious-cycle phe-
nomenon in which the patient becomes ensnared (cf. Figure 11.2), this ini-
tial validation deficit consequently leads to an over-evaluation of the doubt,
which tends to
invalidate
and/or increasingly “scotomizes” (to cover or
exclude some elements in the perceptual and experiential field) and obscure
the objectivity of their own perceptive experience. As was stated by Pema
Chodron
(2002),
an American buddhist nun, “Whether we experience what
happens to us as an obstacle and enemy or as teacher and friend depends
entirely on our perception of reality. It depends on our relationship with
ourselves.”
In the following case example, a 23-year-old man performed “checking rit-
uals” consisting in returning home up to 15–20 times to check whether he
had closed the Venetian blinds of his apartment on the eight floor of the
condominium where he lived. He feared that a burglar might break into the
apartment while he was out and steal all of his possessions. During ther-
apy, the patient was able to recall a visual memory of the blinds fully closed
and the darkened rooms; he could visualize his hands moving as he manip-
ulated the strap beside the window to roll down the shutters and he had
an auditory memory of the noise that it made. Both the visual and auditory
memories were related precisely and with considerable detail. The problem
was that during the obsessive crisis, the patient did not use these memories
at all.
To comprehend the underlying cause of the development of the obsessive
phenomenon it may be useful to ask a seemingly obvious question: why do
most people
not
present obsessive symptoms? The hypothesis proposed by
the author – also useful in terms of the process of
normalization
of the
obsessive phenomenon with patients – is that in people who do not have
Chapter 11 Mindfulness and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
203
OCD symptoms, an obsessive doubt concerning actions or events is not acti-
vated because they automatically use, and simultaneously
self-validate
their
own experience in the various situations they encounter, rendering such
consciousness salient and affording it due priority. Even obsessive patients
(in particular those with good insight) would have, in their
episodic memory
store
, a substantially clear memory of sensorial experiences. Awareness or