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Tune in to Dr. Deri's Online Radio Show. Next show is on Wednesday, February 24, 2010 at 8:00 PM PST. How to Stay Calm in an Age of Anxiety
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Posts Tagged ‘healing’

A Buddhist Perspective on Healing: Wisdom and Compassion

Monday, February 22, 2010 posted by admin

Picture 2 300x225 A Buddhist Perspective on Healing: Wisdom and CompassionMy immersion in Tibetan Buddhism has influenced my perspective on the healing process. The central tenets of Tibetan Buddhism are wisdom and compassion.

Wisdom in Healing

From a conventional point of view, phenomena are incontrovertibly how they appear. At this level, healing in psychotherapy includes the kinds of work that I have described in previous blogs and radio shows.  It is essential to bring dissociated feelings and memories into conscious awareness.  Doing so in the context of a caring psychotherapy relationship allows the “working through,” the integration and the release of these emotions.  Mourning is central to this process: mourning for both what was wounding and for what was lacking in the patient’s early life.

Another key component of the healing process is working on the patient’s “shadow” side.  Trauma propagates through identification with the aggressor.  It is a painful, but vital, step to recognize one’s own propensity to hurt others.

From an ultimate point of view, all phenomena are inherently “empty.”  I am not qualified to discuss the Buddha’s teachings.  So, for our purposes, let me just say that healing is facilitated by the cultivation of the awareness that all of our perceptions, all of our experiences, are like a mirage, like an illusion.  We all construct our own “psychic reality.” 

This realization is very powerful.  It gives us the freedom to construe the past from multiple vantage points.  We can achieve release from an identity as a perennial victim of circumstances.  We can develop the capacity for what Carolyn Myss has called “symbolic sight.”  We can learn to “learn from our experience” (Wilfred Bion).  We can develop the potential to do things differently, to experience transformation. 

Viewing life as an open field, rather than as a constellation of solid figures, liberates us from fixity, from the unconscious compulsion to repeat the past.

Compassion In Healing

Compassion for others is the antidote for narcissism.  Narcissism is the root of all suffering.  When we fixate on an “I,” we experience ourselves as fundamentally disconnected, constricted, anxious and depressed.  When we cultivate our compassion for others, we feel alive, related and infused with life energy.

Wisdom and compassion are inseparable, like the two wings of a bird.  In conjunction with one another, they liberate us from suffering, allowing our spirits to take flight.  The darkness of our delusions is dispelled.  The radiance of our innate nature shines forth unimpeded.  We are free.

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Blog Talk Radio logo3 Blog Talk Radio Show:  How Does Psychotherapy Heal, Part III    Psyche, Soma and Spirit

Dr. John Deri’s next Blog Talk Radio Show: Healthy Mind and Body will be on Wednesday, February 17, 2010 from 8-9:00 PM PDT.

The topic will be: How Does Psychotherapy Heal, Part III  – Psyche, Soma and Spirit

Psychological growth and spiritual development are mutually contingent on one another.

This week, Dr. Deri would like to share with you a case that illustrates the interdependence of psyche, soma and spirit in the healing process.  Sophia is a 70 year old member of a religious order.  She and Dr. Deri have been meeting in twice a week psychotherapy for the past four years. Sophia decided to authorize the dissemination of her life story.  She prays that doing so might illuminate the path of healing for others.

During the show Dr. Deri will discuss:

Psyche: Healing Early Trauma
How Sophia reached an experience of genuine compassion.

Psyche and Soma
How our therapy helped Sophia to maintain her physical and emotional homeostasis.

Psyche and Spirit
Sophia felt abandoned by God, the Father.  She underwent a protracted “dark night of the soul” (St. John of the cross). As she healed her psychological wounds, Sophia’s spiritual life, has blossomed.

To listen to the show you can:

1.    Dial the phone in telephone number at (347) 989-0560

OR

2.    Tune in to our online channel at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/Healthy-Mind-Body

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Mt Davidson CrossPsychological growth and spiritual development are mutually contingent on one another.

This week, I would like to share with you a case that illustrates the interdependence of psyche, soma and spirit in the healing process.

Sophia is a 70 year old member of a religious order.  She and I have been meeting in twice a week psychotherapy for the past four years.

Sophia’s father sexually abused her from her early childhood until puberty.  Sophia’s mother was hypercritical, perhaps envious, of her.  At age 20, following one abortive relationship with a man, Sophia decided to enter a convent.

During her early adult life, Sophia turned to alcohol to drown her sorrow.  Some years later, she developed a bipolar affective disorder.  More recently, she was diagnosed with insulin dependent diabetes, as well as with Parkinson’s Disease.

1.    Psyche: Healing Early Trauma
Donald Kalsched, a Jungian analyst, has written a trenchant book called “The Inner World of Trauma.”  In describing the work of recovery from trauma, he suggests “where there is an affect, look for an image.  Where there is an image, look for an affect.”

With this advice in mind, I encouraged Sophia, a talented artist, to create artwork that would give expression to her childhood memories and feelings.  She took to this process readily, with great creativity.  There ensued an extended period during which Sophia would bring drawings, watercolors, paintings or poetry to each session.  Through giving form to her experiences, Sophia was able to access and to express her feelings at a deep level.

These feelings included shame, rage, terror and sadness.  She ultimately reached an experience of genuine compassion, for herself as a little girl, and finally even towards her parents.  Her repertoire of emotions expanded dramatically.  She came to revel in her own sensuality and sexuality.  She came fully alive, before my eyes.

2.    Psyche and Soma
Diabetes and Parkinson’s Disease have profound emotional effects.  Reciprocally, emotional states have a major impact on the manifestations of these physical conditions.  Much work in the therapy has had the goal of helping Sophia to maintain her physical and emotional homeostasis.

At times, I coordinate her care with other treating physicians.  Doing so is both good medical practice as well as an opportunity to model appropriate symbolic parenting.

Psychotropic medications are utilized to stabilize Sophia’s mood.

3.    Psyche and Spirit
Sophia’s sexual abuse, and more specifically her father’s perversion, led her to question her faith.  She felt abandoned by God, the Father.  She underwent a protracted “dark night of the soul” (St. John of the Cross).

As she healed her psychological wounds, Sophia’s spiritual life, has blossomed.  She has developed a vivid, direct personal relationship with Jesus and Mary (the Divine masculine and feminine principles).

Sophia has internally reaffirmed her vows.  She has rededicated herself to minister to those in need, within her community.  She has found and is maintaining an appropriate balance between nurturing herself and caring for others.  She experiences the indestructibility of her own spirit.

Last week, Sophia said to me, “Thomas Aquinas wrote that contemplation yields illumination only when one gives to the world.”

It was in this context that Sophia decided to authorize the dissemination of her life story.  She prays that doing so might illuminate the path of healing for others.

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Blog Talk Radio Show: How Does Psychotherapy Heal, Part II

Friday, January 29, 2010 posted by admin

Blog Talk Radio logo

Thank you to all my loyal Blog Talk Radio listeners for your ongoing support.  Our show “How Does Psychotherapy Heal, Part II – Psychotherapy and Dependent Origination,” that was scheduled for January 27, 2010, will now be aired on Wednesday, February 3, 2010 at 8:00 PM PDT.

Due to technical problems on the Blog Talk Radio Show website this week, we had an unanticipated rerun of a recorded episode: How To Identify And To Deal With Emotional Trauma, in place of the live show that had been scheduled.

During my show on February 3, 2010 I will present and discuss a clinical case.  I would like to express my deep gratitude to my patient for graciously permitting me to make use of our work in the context of this radio show. It is her intention to help to relieve the suffering of others through the sharing of her story.

To listen to the episode you can:

Dial the phone in telephone number at (347) 989-0560

OR

Tune in to our online channel at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/Healthy-Mind-Body

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Blog Talk Radio Show: How Does Psychotherapy Heal, Part II

Monday, January 25, 2010 posted by admin

Blog Talk Radio: Healthy Mind & Body

Dr. John Deri’s next Blog Talk Radio Show: Healthy Mind and Body will be on Wednesday, January 27, 2010  from 8-8:30 PM PDT.

The topic of the episode will be:  How Does Psychotherapy Heal, Part II – Psychotherapy and Dependent Origination

The Buddhist theory of dependent origination will be discussed as a perspective on transference and countertransference in psychotherapy. These psychological phenomena will be explored as a medium for the healing of early childhood trauma in psychotherapy.

During the  Blog Talk Radio Show: Healthy Mind and Body, Dr. John Deri will present a clinical case as an example of the work.

To listen to the show you can:

Dial the phone in telephone number at (347) 989-0560

OR

Tune in to our online channel at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/Healthy-Mind-Body

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How Does Psychotherapy Heal, Part II

Monday, January 25, 2010 posted by admin

J Deri Blog Posting Jan 25 2ndPsychotherapy and Dependent Origination

The Buddhist theory of dependent origination states that all phenomena are contingent on antecedent conditions.  The tree is contingent on the seed, the valley on the glacier and so forth.

This perspective is an extremely valuable lens through which to view the emotions experienced in psychotherapy.  A patient responds to a remark of mine with a mixture of pain and anger.  She has interpreted her therapist’s comment as a callous attempt to exclude her from his inner world.

The therapist knows from previous work with this patient that she had been severely abused by her father throughout her childhood.  Her mother had been completely ineffectual at protecting her daughter from her husband’s rage.  Neither parent had the slightest capacity or inclination to allow their daughter into their minds.  Children will always try to see the parent as “good,” even at the cost of believing themselves to be “bad”.  So, this little girl gradually developed a view of herself as deficient and unworthy.

In her psychotherapy, much work has been devoted to a reconstruction of her memories of this early life trauma.  The terrifying effects of the physical abuse had been greatly compounded by her rage and panic due to her “solitary confinement”.    She had lived her entire childhood utterly alone, despite the physical proximity of her parents.

Freud’s conception of therapeutics had a somewhat cognitive bent.  Remembering the original trauma would afford the patient insight into his own woundedness.  This insight would constitute the vital element that would enable the patient to heal.

Freud’s younger contemporaries, Sandor Ferenczi and Otto Rank, held a very different viewpoint. They believed that only a repetition of the original trauma within the psychotherapy relationship would have the power to heal the patient.  They felt that only through repetition would the patient’s original memories be reactivated with sufficient force and feeling to break through the barrier of dissociation.

The aliveness of the feelings associated with early life trauma, reexperienced within the transference, allows these feelings to be revised and reworked within the context of a caring therapy relationship.

This healing is never a one time process.  In the case of my patient, we repeatedly respond to each other in ways that leave her feeling hurt and excluded.  Each time this occurs, we struggle together to delineate her process from my process.  Each time, we view and review the relationship between the present and the past.  As we do so, she has come to recognize that she does have access to my mind, and to my feelings.  My positive regard for her is genuine and deep.

With each repetition, she emerges stronger and healthier.  The perseverative reenactment of her original wounding, through the shadow play of the transference and the countertransference, engages a gradual but inexorable healing process.  The critical difference between the past and the present is the outcome of the traumatic clash.  In the here and now of the psychotherapy relationship, each repetition of the crisis resolves with enhanced mutual trust and deeper closeness between us.

In her parenting and in her work, this lady has become a beacon of hope and an agent of healing for others.  Within her psychotherapy relationship, two wounded healers have been brought together for the purpose of mutual healing.

I would like to express my deep gratitude to my patient for graciously permitting me to make use of our work in the context of this essay. It is her intention to help to relieve the suffering of others through the sharing of her story.

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Blog Talk Radio Show: How Does Psychotherapy Heal?

Monday, January 4, 2010 posted by admin

Blog Talk Radio logo

Dr. John Deri’s next Blog Talk Radio Show: Healthy Mind and Body will be on Wednesday, January 6, 2010 from 8-8:30 PM PDT.

The topic of the episode will be:  How Does Psychotherapy Heal?

Psychotherapy is a wellspring for new beginnings. At the beginning of a lifetime, the infant forms its first relationship with its mother. The quality of this first human bond will profoundly influence the nature of the child’s subsequent relationships.  This assertion is a central tenet of the school of psychology known as attachment theory.

During the Blog Talk Radio Show Dr. Deri will discuss:

(1) The four distinct patterns of attachment:  secure, anxious, avoidant and disorganized.

(2) The effect of an infant’s mode of attachment to its mother on the quality of that individual’s subsequent relationships.

(3) How trauma and neglect lead to disturbances in attachment.

(4) How the mother’s own early life attachment history serves as a medium for the transgenerational transmission of trauma.

(5) How does psychotherapy heal?  

 

To listen to the show you can:

Dial the phone in telephone number at (347) 989-0560

OR

Tune in to our online channel at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/Healthy-Mind-Body

 

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How Does Psychotherapy Heal?

Monday, January 4, 2010 posted by admin

Corte MaderaAs we enter a new year, I am thinking of psychotherapy as a wellspring for new beginnings.

At the beginning of a lifetime, the infant forms its first relationship with its mother.  The quality of this initial human bond will profoundly influence the nature of the child’s subsequent relationships.

This assertion is a central tenet of the school of psychology known as attachment theory.  This theory was formulated by John Bowlby, a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst.

Subsequent observational research on infants and mothers established four distinct patterns of attachment:  secure, anxious, avoidant and disorganized.  Long term follow up study of these infants validated the predictive value of their mode of attachment to their mothers, with regard to the quality of their relationships in later life.

Trauma and neglect are the two most powerful forces leading to disturbances in attachment.  Another significant determinant of the infant’s mode of attachment is the mother’s own early life attachment history.  This influence undoubtedly accounts for a great deal of transgenerational transmission of trauma.

Environmental influences, however important, are never the whole story, where human development is concerned.  Genetic factors may render an infant more or less vulnerable to the effects of early parenting.

Most people seek psychotherapy due to suffering caused by their relationships with others, and/or with themselves.  The most important healing influence in psychotherapy is the experience of a healthy, trusting relationship.  This environment provides the patient with a “secure base”.  This safe haven offers the freedom and engenders the courage for a person to explore and to expand the realms of relationships with others and with the self.  The medium of this secure base is the emotional bond between patient and therapist.  In therapy as in life, people don’t care what you know unless they first know that you care.

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Blog Talk Radio Show: Healthy Mind and Body

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 posted by admin

Picture 1I would like to announce the creation of a new Blog Talk Radio Show: Healthy Mind and Body. The programs will cover all aspects of life, from health and spirituality to relationships and finance. There will be a particular focus on the healing process, as it relates to depression, anxiety and recovery from trauma. Please tune in to the Healthy Mind and Body Radio Show, every Wednesday at 8 PM PST, starting on 10/21/09.

The topic of the initial episode will be: How to Stay Calm in an Age of Anxiety.

Join me on Wednesday, October 21, 2009 at 8 PM PST and learn:

➢    Why “healthy anxiety” can help you to move forward in your life

➢    How to identify when anxiety overwhelms and paralyzes us

➢    The long term mental and physical consequences of anxiety and stress

➢    Six steps to implement that will help you to reduce anxiety

➢    Spiritual dimensions of overcoming anxiety will be highlighted

For more information, including a phone in telephone number, please visit http://www.blogtalkradio.com/Healthy-Mind-Body

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