Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
Tags: #Science, #Physics, #Crystallography, #Chemistry, #Inorganic
a way of moving through the earlier stages again as expeditiously as possi-
ble, without getting lost in feelings of guilt, shame, or hopelessness: facing
the unawareness of precontemplation, the ambivalence of contemplation,
the readiness of determination, formulation a plan of action, and develop-
ing skills to stay on track. Once the individual has established a stable, new
way of being in the world without the drug (or, alternatively, a stable state of
moderation), they may be thought of as having exited this process entirely.
Such an individual may no longer see herself as an addicted person, and may
not have to struggle very much to persist in the changed behavior. What
urges may arise from time to time are usually not very strong and are readily
dealt with.
It can be quite helpful to the person trying to change an addictive pattern
to be aware of these stages, and to understand the predictable processes and
potential difficulties. One of the difficulties about changing drug use, par-
ticularly where abstinence is the preferred goal, is that the addicted person
might be successful all day long, and succumb in one weak moment. For
this reason, the skills involved in mindfulness may be very helpful, teaching
the person to see thoughts and feelings as passing phenomena rather than
unalterable truth, changing the way the person relates to these inner pro-
cesses rather than struggling to alter their nature. Patients in therapy often
seem proud to report to me that they are not experiencing any relapse urges,
but I remind them that whether or not urges are present is actually of little
significance. Urges arise or fail to arise, and we are not in control of this pro-
cess. Since we are not in control, we deserve neither credit nor blame for
their occurrence or lack. What matters is how we handle the urge to relapse
when it does arise. Though it may seem counterintuitive, mindfulness sug-
gests that we are in fact better off being aware of the relapse thoughts and
feelings when they arise instead of trying to deny their arising.
Urge Surfing
In the urge surfing approach, one approaches the arising of relapse urges
with mindfulness
(Marlatt & Gordon, 1985).
Instead of struggling against them, which often increases the power of whatever we are trying to suppress, one seeks to ride these feelings out, like a surfer riding a wave. In this
approach, the necessity of the linkage between inner states and outer behav-
ior is challenged. Many of us, in point of fact, have often had feelings about
wanting to do something that we knew to be harmful, or wanting to avoid
doing something that we knew to be beneficial, while discovering that we
can still make the positive choice. On a dreary Monday morning, we may feel
that we would rather stay in bed than go to work, but most of us go to work
anyway.
Once the absolute link between inner states and behavior is challenged,
once we see clearly that we do not, in fact, need to act in accord with passing
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295
moods and emotions, we are then free to experience whatever arises with-
out fear that it inevitably means relapse. The onset of an urge, in its cog-
nitive, affective, and physiological dimensions, can be experienced clearly
without acting on it, especially since we also come to see all such inner
states as impermanent and transitory. Experience with meditation is help-
ful here, since in meditation one learns that every itch does not need to be
scratched, that we can think repeatedly of getting up from our cushion to
perform some “urgent” duty, while still remaining seated, looking into this
impulse calmly and clearly without succumbing to it. In such a way, the indi-
vidual experiencing a relapse urge learns to ask: “What thoughts are arising
in me about this?” It is not even necessary to challenge them as one might in
cognitive-behavior therapy: it is enough to see them clearly
as thoughts
, aris-
ing and passing away. In the same way one can ask, “What are the emotions
coming up for me attached to this urge?” and “What does this feel like in
my body?,” in each case inviting calm, accepting awareness of these passing
inner events. In urge surfing there is a meta-message that relapse thoughts
and feelings are not at all terrifying, since I can experience them without
giving in to them. Attempting to suppress such feelings, however, gives the
opposite kind of message: if we are afraid to even acknowledge such inner
states, they must be truly terrible, and if they are so dangerous, this can cre-
ate a state of chronic guardedness and anxiety rather than free-flowing, open
awareness.
Mindfulness of Life Problems
The relationship between addiction and problems in living is bi-directional:
a person may abuse drugs in a problematic way in part due to difficult life
circumstances, while the abuse itself also creates more problems. Once an
individual begins to change problematic drug use, life problems, often long
avoided, tend to surface. For the person to succeed in establishing a new
pattern of behavior, she must do more than quit. She must also establish a
satisfying and happy life and an adequate way of dealing with problems. If
such a way of life is created, then the temptation toward problematic drug
use will not be overpowering. If not, however, the pull may seem irresistible.
Often life problems are linked with inner states. The recovering person
may want to repair a relationship injured by unskillful speech and behav-
ior during years of drug use, but his anger feels overwhelming, and so he
says something that causes the relationship further injury. An unemployed
person may know she should begin the search for work, but anxiety about
interviewing may inhibit the active and energetic pursuit of this goal.
In order to face such life problems effectively, the individual needs ways
to take care of the emotional state underlying maladaptive behavior or avoid-
ance. Mindfulness is an ideal practice for this, since, as discussed above in the
context of urge surfing, one see through practice that there is no essential
connection between inner states and behavior, and since one experiences
clearly and repeatedly that all inner states, no matter how uncomfortable,
arise and eventually pass away, if not always as quickly as one might prefer.
In this way, one comes to see anxiety is a normal and natural event, some-
thing that all people will experience intermittently. One need not compound
296
Thomas Bien
the problem by becoming anxious about being anxious, but instead, one
can learn to experience anxiety with clarity while still pursuing desirable
life goals. Though anxiety may indeed arise in a job interview, this does not
mean that one has to avoid such situations. Not only would that create many
problems, financial and otherwise, but also, avoidance tends to increase the
anxiety. No one, for example, experiences as much anxiety as people who
have agoraphobia. If avoidance were effective, such individuals would have
extinguished the anxiety by staying within their zone of safety. Unfortunately,
even while doing so, they still experience a great deal of anxiety, probably
more than the person who accepts anxiety as a natural occurrence and faces
the world anyway. In this way, teaching patients to work mindfully with their
thoughts and feelings can have great value in helping them lean into their life
problems and face them effectively, instead of trying to avoid and evade, the
very processes that helped to create a pattern of drug abuse.
Mindfulness and the Therapist
I have suggested elsewhere
(Bien, 2006)
that the most important psychotherapeutic implication of mindfulness may lie not so much in techniques to
teach clients—though these may be valuable—but in the capacity of the
therapist to be truly present. Indeed, Siegel, Williams, and Teasdale (2002)
found, contrary to initial expectation, that teaching mindfulness to clients
was not really possible without practicing it themselves. Lambert and Simon
(2008), for example, report that 30% of the variance in therapeutic outcome
is attributable to common factors such as the therapeutic relationship, while
only 15% of the variance is attributable to specific therapeutic technique.
This is so despite the fact that therapists generally consider their specific
technique to be of greatest importance.
Miller, Taylor, & West (1980),
found that rankings of therapist empathy, one of the important factors in a therapeutic relationship, correlated highly (r=0.82) with therapeutic outcome.
Mindfulness, the practice of moment-to-moment, non-judgmental awareness,
would seem exactly the kind of attention needed to facilitate empathy and a
positive therapeutic relationship. And indeed, while more research is needed
in this area, some initial studies have supported the notion that mindfulness
practice increases empathy
(Aiken, 2006; Wang, 2006;
Shapiro, Schwartz, & Bonner
1998),
and improves the quality of the therapeutic alliance
(Wexler,
2006).
This may be particularly important with a stigmatizing disorder such as addiction, in which the quality of the interpersonal relationship with the
therapist (whether for example the therapist is empathic, on the one hand,
or lecturing on the other) is more determinative of client reactance than
any supposed trait of denial on the part of the client
(Miller & Rollnick,
A therapist who practices mindfulness may be more able to track the
moment by moment changes in a client’s emotional state, to be aware of what
stage of change the client is in (which may make minor swings even within
one clinical session), and to accept whatever the client presents as natural
and understandable including the very human tendency to resist change.
Chapter 15 Paradise Lost
297
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