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Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
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18
Mindfulness and Psychosis
Antonio Pinto
Homo
sum.
Humani
nihil
a
me
alienum
puto
(Heautonti-
moroumenos) (163 A.C.) I am human. Nothing human can be alien
to me.
Terentius
Introduction
In the last years, mindfulness significantly contributed to promote the
ultimate goal of all medical and psychological treatments: easing patients’
suffering
(Segal, Williams, & Teasdale, 2002).
Indeed, patients with disorders of whatever cause or nature all raise the
same desperate and hopeful cry: “help me feel better, help me live better,”
which all the while points out the intolerability of their material condition of
being ill, as well as the existential one of being sufferers.
Thus, all psychotherapies are called upon to deal with the issue and causes
of suffering.
There are no doubt innumerable causes of suffering, such as stress, ill-
nesses, people, one’s own feelings, goals and wishes. Yet most of the times
we suffer occur when different factors combine in a non-harmonious way.
While psychotherapies help people solve, work on, remove or better cope
with what causes their suffering, mindfulness introduces a new important
element: helping its practitioners and patients change their attitude towards
suffering itself. It helps develop the necessary skills to be less reactive to
what is occurring at the moment, allowing us to deal with different types
of experiences in a way that lowers our levels of suffering, while a sense of
well-being is enhanced
(Germer, 2005).
Mindfulness also involves gaining greater acceptance and awareness.
Acceptance of things as they are, without immediately judging and/or reject-
ing them; acceptance of one’s self and others’ selves, which means greater
benevolence towards one’s nature, limits, feelings and thoughts
(Kabat-Zinn,
It is possible to practice mindfulness with varying degrees of intensity:
from everyday practice in our habitual environment, allowing us to expe-
rience mindful moments, to the more intense and continuous one of the
monks or practitioners of meditation who live in extraordinary contexts.
Whatever the level and degree of intensity of our practice, mindfulness
allows us to reach a higher level of awareness of thought, feeling, emotion,
wishes and actions, as well as suffering itself
(Kabat-Zinn, 1990).
339
340
Antonio Pinto
As mentioned before, suffering is a constant in the human condition
and the more it is approached as nonsensical and meaningless, the more
unbearable it is, for the possibility to communicate and share it becomes
lower, which slowly and inevitably leads sufferers to shut themselves away
in a desperate attempt to find possible causes and solutions. Experiencing
suffering merely as an inner private dimension shifts people away from their
possibility to be comforted and open to a relational dialogue that is based
most of all on mutual sharing and understanding (Bowlby, 1969).
Severe Patients
This is the typical inner experience of life of many severe patients who,
besides their great suffering, present a series of issues that thwart treatment
effectiveness, such as poor or absent illness insight, mood instability, wither-
ing emotional intensity, bizarre and hardly understandable behaviours (even-
tually violent towards themselves and others) and a tendency to bring rejec-
tion and to become an outcast. Furthermore, such patients often live within
family environments with predominating high levels of expressed emotions
(EE), which together with criticism and communication problems cause the
pathology to worsen or relapse
(Falloon I. et al., 1985).
These patients’ ascertained deficits make it hard for them to use some metacognitive functions
that are necessary for their therapy to be successful, such as decentraliza-
tion, distancing, mastery and other skills
(Linehan, 1993).
Traditional psychotherapies have proved to be scarcely effective in these cases, as shown
by the high dropout or clinical ineffectiveness levels. Even the widely vali-
dated cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) is not enough with patients of this
kind and adjustments in the standard protocol become necessary. The first
change to make is surely the introduction of a monitoring of the therapeutic
relationship and the therapist’s relational stance towards that particular type
of patient, as a source for learning and changing within the psychotherapy.
Creating a quiet, safe and validating therapeutic environment, in order to
make patients feel safe and trustful towards the therapist, is therefore a cru-
cial step for achieving clinical changes (Bowlby, 1988).
What we have said so far explains and motivates what, in our opinion,
the difficulties are in treating and trying to help these particular patients
return to a living path that is characterized by lower levels of suffering. In
order to achieve this, we believe mindfulness might be a helpful additional
tool that could integrate those kinds of therapies that have already been
shown to be effective.
In fact, owing to what has already been explained, not all psychotic
patients might be eligible for or able to bear mindfulness protocols in the