Mindfulness
is the permanent and impartial attention to our body, our sensations and our
mental states. The habit of mindfulness, according to the Buddha, is the path
that leads to the elimination of suffering and hence to the blossoming of inner
harmony. Though some people seem to be mindful by nature, most of us must work
on our faculty of awareness through the practice of meditation.
Psychologist Eleanor Longden, a researcher at
the University of Leeds, England, was not acquainted with or interested in the
Buddha’s teachings; she developed her mindfulness out of necessity. As reported
by her, the careful observation of her auditory sensations and her mental states
was the approach that helped her out of the annoying imaginary voices that
tormented her for many years.
It
was an ordinary day when Eleanor, leaving a college class, heard for the first
time a voice, coming out of nowhere, that clearly said, "She is leaving the
building." The terrified girl ran home and, as she arrived, heard the voice
again, "She is opening the door." The drama, which soon after included a
repertoire of phrases, unknown narrators, hallucinations, doctors,
psychiatrists, hospitalizations, medication and, sadly, the social stigma of
schizophrenia, lasted several years.
Thanks
to the continued support from a few people and, in particular, from a
fair-minded doctor, Eleanor began to understand that the voices resulted from
traumatic events in her life and were subtle guides to see into her emotional
problems. The realization that the voices would facilitate her healing brought
her to the careful attention to the signs that both these voices and her mental
states were communicating.
Ten
years after the first 'spooky' messages, Eleanor earned with honors a degree in
psychology, soon followed by an also lauded master's degree. Now, when she
stills hear voices, the psychologist is completing a PhD in Leeds.
Until
recently, medical science attributed hallucinations to unknown genetic factors
that condemned their victims to schizophrenia or predisposed them to such
grievance. This verdict is changing.
Psychologist
Longden is now an activist of a group that promotes the natural acceptance of
the ‘noisy inner voices’. According to her, "a high proportion of the 1.5
million people who are diagnosed each year with schizophrenia are not victims of
chemical imbalances or genetic mutations; rather they are exhibiting a complex
response to abuse, loss, neglect or other past trauma."
The
occurrence of hallucinations is much more common than we recognize. Our brain
has embedded the neural design to generate such experiences; our dreams confirm
this statement. Perhaps the children's imaginary friends are more 'real' than
what we adults think. Likewise, this 'natural anomaly' could eventually explain
the apparitions of sacred prophets, virgins, angels and ghosts that devout
people often report. Soon we will know much more about these mysteries.
Returning
to schizophrenia as such, even in its extreme cases, as the well-documented
experiences of Dr. John F. Nash, it is in the blunt acceptance of the
'unreality' of visions—what a paradox!—that healing starts. (Do you remember "A
Beautiful Mind,” the movie?) The 1994 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences
expressed it frankly in an interview, “I would be sweeping the
delusions under a rug and they were able to come out later on, and could be
triggered, and I would move very quickly to accepting it again. A delusional
state of mind is like living a dream. Well I knew where I was.”
"Society
has a long way to go before fully shakes the stigma associated with
schizophrenia," says the future Dr. Longden. "One place to start is by asking
not 'what's wrong with you?' but rather 'what's happened to you?'" She
concludes, "Treating 'voices' like a symptom rather than an experience can only
worsen the condition."
Only
every individual —not her analyst—can observe and draw reliable conclusions from
what is happening within her life. Mindfulness is personal. The professional's
role is helping, not judging. In these matters, the patient-therapist
interaction is likely to be imprecise. The 'expert' compares the collected data
with her diagnostic manuals and extrapolates cloudy symptoms to verdicts that
most patients tend to consider definite. Their suffering, already severe,
becomes more intense and the determination to look keenly and impartially to
their mental states becomes hardest to pin down... Precisely when it is most
needed.
Gustavo
Estrada
Autor de ‘Inner Harmony through Mindfulness Meditation’
Autor de ‘Inner Harmony through Mindfulness Meditation’
No comments:
Post a Comment