Network with me:

Free Report

   
 
Name:
Email:

Subscribe by RSS or Email

Enter your email address to receive these posts by email:

blogtalkradio

Listen to Healthy Mind & Body on Blog Talk Radio

Tune in to Dr. Deri's Online Radio Show. Next show is on Wednesday, May 19, 2010 at 8:00 PM Pacific Time. A Psychiatrist’s Journey: The Human Family
www.blogtalkradio.com/Healthy-Mind-Body

Posts Tagged ‘psychotherapy’

Blog Talk Radio Show: How Does Psychotherapy Heal?

Sunday, April 25, 2010 posted by admin

Picture 31 Blog Talk Radio Show:  How Does Psychotherapy Heal?

Dr. John Deri’s next Blog Talk Radio Show: Healthy Mind and Body will be on Wednesday, April 28, 2010 from 8-9:00 Pacific Time.

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

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

share save 171 16 Blog Talk Radio Show:  How Does Psychotherapy Heal?

Dissociation

Wednesday, April 7, 2010 posted by admin

Picture 6 300x288 DissociationDissociation refers to the splitting off of painful experience from awareness.  Dissociation is the hallmark of trauma.  A child experiences abuse or neglect as an unbearable catastrophe.  Dissociation is the psychic defense of last resort.  Unable to cope or to flee, the child simple “spaces out.”  People sometimes refer to this state as “going out of body.”

In the context of the original traumatic situation, this defense preserves the child’s sanity.  Unfortunately, dissociation tends to persist as the primary mode of psychic functioning throughout the lifetime of the individual.  Such people have great difficulty in knowing or communicating what they are feeling.  These deficits lead to an impoverishment of the person’s emotional life.  Such people tend to experience themselves as ephemeral, or insubstantial.  They usually have great difficulty in achieving or sustaining intimacy in their relationships.

Causes


There has been speculation regarding both biological and psychological causes of dissociation.  From a neurologic standpoint, studies have shown a decreased corpus callosum in traumatized people.  The corpus callosum connects the two hemispheres of the brain.  The right hemisphere processes emotional experience.  The left hemisphere includes the language region of the brain, in most people.  A constricted connection between the two hemispheres could result in a limited capacity for recognizing and articulating emotional states.

From a psychological point of view, Joyce McDougall, a French psychoanalyst, believes that dissociation is the effect of exposure to overwhelming emotion that threatens to attack an individual’s sense of integrity and identity.

Within a developmental context, a child acquires the capacity for emotional experience, regulation and expression, through the parent’s capacity for attunement to the child’s emotional state.  If the adult is incapable of recognizing and distinguishing emotional expressions in the child, it can impair the child’s capacity to experience his own emotional states.

Treatment


Psychotherapy offers a reparative experience for a person suffering from dissociation.  Suffering is actually a misleading term.  Many dissociated people are unaware of their own dissociation.  Often, such a person seeks psychotherapy due to a spouse’s frustration with them.

Working with a profoundly dissociated person in psychotherapy is challenging.  The engine for psyche change is psychic distress.  If the distress itself is dissociated, there may be minimal motivation to engage in psychological work.  Moreover, it is difficult to establish an emotional connection of any depth with a dissociated person.

Often a starting point involves gradually drawing the person’s attention to her state of dissociation.  The therapeutic process is one of symbolically reparenting the child.  The therapist, unlike the actual parent, is able to register and to articulate her patient’s emotional states.  Through repeated interactions in which the therapist is able to service this function accurately, the patient gradually internalizes the process.  As she incrementally acquires the capacity to recognize what she is feeling, the therapy gains traction.

As a person develops increasing awareness of his own emotional states, both present and past experiences come to life.  It becomes possible to narrate, to process and to release the previously frozen residue of early trauma.  As parts of the self that had been dissociated become available for integration, the personality becomes richer, more complex, more textured and more vibrant.

Dissociation makes people feel like ghosts or robots.  Experience has an “as if” quality.  Integration of a full range of feelings gives rise to a robust, embodied passion for life.

As Walt Whitman wrote in “Song of Myself”:

“Urge and urge and urge, 

Always the procreant urge of the world.”

share save 171 16 Dissociation

Picture 31  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, March 31, 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 psychotherapy 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

share save 171 16  Blog Talk Radio Show: How Does Psychotherapy Heal, Part III  – Psyche, Soma and Spirit

The Alchemy of Healing

Monday, March 15, 2010 posted by admin

Tai Chi Symbol1 150x150 The Alchemy of Healing“The psychoanalyst listens, the shaman speaks.”

Thus wrote Claude Levi-Strauss, the French anthropologist.  Levi-Strauss, like Carl Jung, was intrigued by pairs of opposites.

I have been reflecting on this particular pair of opposites, listening and speaking, in the context of psychotherapy.  I have come to think of listening and speaking as representing the yin and the yang of the healing process.

The Yin and the Yang of Healing

From a Taoist perspective, yin energy is associated symbolically with the feminine, yang with the masculine.  These energies are not, however, linked with gender.  We all embody the potential for both yin and yang poles of energy.

Yin energy in therapy is manifested through phenomena including listening, empathy and nurturance, as well as through a metaphoric “holding space” for the other.

Yang energy may be expressed through speaking, interpretation, emphatic engagement or confrontation.

Both patient and therapist must develop a full range of these capacities.  The process of healing is catalyzed by a creative dance between these polar energies.  Both therapist and patient need to cultivate their respective abilities to speak freely and to listen fully.  Each must be able to listen to herself as well as to the other.

The Role of Early Life Trauma

The reason why listening and speaking are healing can be understood against the backdrop of early life trauma.  The traumatized child goes unheard.  Neither parent has the wherewithal or the willingness to listen to the child.  As a consequence, the child comes to feel alone, uncared for, disconnected and afraid.  Moreover, such a child is liable to grow up as an adult who is wary of closeness to others.  Such an individual is prone to seek social isolation.

Wilfred Bion, a British psychoanalyst, in his paper “Attacks on Linking,” put forth the premise that such a child is deprived of a primary experience of emotional bonding or “linkage,” with either parent.  This absence breeds in the child an experience of sadness, a sense of futility and ultimately of rage.  The child’s rage has the potential to generalize into an unconscious hatred of all “linkages”: between the child and another human being, between thought and feeling, between the child and himself, and ultimately between the child and reality.  Such broken or unconsummated linkages are the substrate for unspeakable suffering.

The Alchemy of Healing

Through reciprocal speaking and listening within the therapeutic relationship, emotionally meaningful linkages are formed.  The patient’s capacity to achieve emotional connection with the self and with the other is enhanced.  Dissociation between thoughts and feelings, between feelings and images, is transformed into integration.

Through integration of split off parts of the self, healing occurs.  Through relatedness with self and others, the full potential of the patient blossoms and flourishes.

These transformational processes are always reciprocal, between patient and therapist.  Witnessing and participating in this alchemy of healing is deeply moving.  Such participation is the central calling of my life.

share save 171 16 The Alchemy of Healing

Blog Talk Radio Show – Panic Disorder: The Absent Self

Monday, March 8, 2010 posted by admin

Blog Talk Radio logo Blog Talk Radio Show – Panic Disorder: The Absent Self

Due to popular demand, we have decided to rerun last week’s Blog Talk Radio Show – Panic Disorder: The Absent Self.  Our show Healthy Mind and Body will be on Wednesday, March 10, 2010 from 8-9:00 PM PDT.

The topic will be -  Panic Disorder: The Absent Self

Panic disorder is a terrifying, potentially disabling condition. It can be viewed as a specific form of separation anxiety: separation from the self.

In this episode, Dr. Deri will discuss psychological and pharmacological approaches to the treatment of panic disorder. The role of early life trauma as well as the potential co-occurrence of substance abuse will be highlighted.

Dr. Deri will discuss a clinical case, by way of illustrating and elaborating on these themes.

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

share save 171 16 Blog Talk Radio Show – Panic Disorder: The Absent Self

Blog Talk Radio Show – Panic Disorder: The Absent Self

Friday, February 26, 2010 posted by admin

Blog Talk Radio logo5 Blog Talk Radio Show   Panic Disorder: The Absent Self

Dr. John Deri’s next Blog Talk Radio Show: Healthy Mind and Body will be on Wednesday, March 3, 2010 from 8-9:00 PM PDT.

The topic will be -  Panic Disorder: The Absent Self

Panic disorder is a terrifying, potentially disabling condition. It can be viewed as a specific form of separation anxiety: separation from the self.

In this episode, Dr. Deri will discuss psychological and pharmacological approaches to the treatment of panic disorder. The role of early life trauma as well as the potential co-occurrence of substance abuse will be highlighted.

Dr. Deri will discuss a clinical case, by way of illustrating and elaborating on these themes.

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

share save 171 16 Blog Talk Radio Show   Panic Disorder: The Absent Self

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.

share save 171 16 A Buddhist Perspective on Healing: Wisdom and Compassion

Panic Disorder: The Absent Self

Monday, February 15, 2010 posted by admin

Picture 63 300x237 Panic Disorder: The Absent SelfPanic disorder is a terrifying, potentially disabling condition.  In my experience, it is a specific form of separation anxiety: separation from the self.

Richard was a 39 year old married man living with his wife and their two young children.  He was a self employed businessman.  He presented with an acute onset of panic attacks.  These episodes had been occurring with increasing frequency, during the weeks prior to our first session.

Richard and I worked together in twice a week psychotherapy for a period of four years.  His symptoms of panic disorder were relieved by high doses of antidepressant medication, during most of this time.

Early Life

Richard’s early life experience was powerfully influenced by his distant, critical, cynical father.  The father, a successful professional, was rarely at home.  Richard’s mother was comparatively more available to him.  However, she was primarily focused on her husband.  Moreover, she was largely preoccupied with her own painful feelings of isolation.  As a result, Richard was on his own emotionally.

Polysubstance Abuse

Like Sophia in my previous blog posting, Richard turned to alcohol as a young man.  He used alcohol as a way of deadening and escaping from his psychic pain.  Some years later, he began regularly using cocaine.

When I met Richard, he was drinking 6-9 drinks per day, as well as the occasional bottle of wine.  Despite this clearcut pattern of alcohol abuse and dependence, Richard was in complete denial about his alcoholism.

Themes in Therapy

The primary theme in Richard’s therapy was to draw his attention to his repetition compulsion.  He abandoned his family and himself much as he had been abandoned.  A recurring memory wove like a thread throughout the therapeutic work.  Richard had been put out in the back yard whenever he had cried as an infant.

A key dream, to which we often returned, consisted of a brief exchange between Richard and his mother.  In the dream, Richard told his mother, “I’m in pain.”  To which she replied, “I’m in pain, too.” In other words, Richard was entirely excluded from his parents’ minds.

As a young unemployed adult, Richard literally went hungry.  His wealthy parents withheld financial support.

As a mature adult, Richard abandoned his own family, through alcoholism and workaholism.  He was absent to himself as well.  He would often work for long stretches, without eating or sleeping.  He was entirely out of touch with his emotional states.  Alcohol and work were his psychic refuges of unconsciousness.

The Therapeutic Work

The initial therapeutic task was building Richard’s capacity for mindfulness regarding his own self states.  This work began with developing his attention and appropriate responsiveness to basic bodily sensations, e.g. eating when hungry.  This process of growing self awareness then extended to his emotional states.  During the early phases of our work, Richard would compulsively play video games, when he was neither drunk nor working.  Gradually, he learned to make space for his own psychic experience.  He developed an increasing repertoire of healthy activities in synch with his emotional states.

The next major hurdle in therapy was overcoming Richard’s denial of his addictions.  To put it briefly, this achievement was won as a result of a two year long intrapsychic and interpersonal tug-of-war.  Once Richard joined AA and CA, our therapeutic work truly blossomed.  The step work and the psychotherapy were mutually synergistic.

Within the context of the fourth step (“performing a searching and fearless moral inventory”), it became possible to draw Richard’s attention to his abandonment of his family.  This was an extraordinarily painful phase of the work.

Another key component in Richard’s healing process involved helping him to recognize and to neutralize his own inner critic.  This voice was a direct internalization of his critical father.

Finally, through a combination of the psychotherapy and the twelve step programs, Richard overcame his narcissism.  He developed a genuine, growing capacity for concern for others.  This transformation in his character was deeply moving for both of us.  Our own relationship with each other was immeasurably enriched accordingly.

Outcome

Richard became clean and sober.  His panic attacks resolved, off all medication.

His marriage dissolved.  His business went bankrupt.  His life, as he had known it, came crashing down around him.

Yet, paradoxically, Richard was happier and more grounded  than he had ever been in his life.  He had a greatly enhanced capacity for intimacy.

Once again, we encounter the archetype of death and rebirth: the phoenix rising from the ashes.

When I called Richard to request his permission to tell his story, he readily assented.  “I tell my story all the time in the [12 step] meetings,” he said.  “And, guess what?  I’ve just celebrated my fifth year of sobriety.”

When I ponder the question of the meaning of life, I no longer have to search for an answer.

share save 171 16 Panic Disorder: The Absent Self

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

share save 171 16 Blog Talk Radio Show:  How Does Psychotherapy Heal, Part III    Psyche, Soma and Spirit

Blog Talk Radio Show: The Shadow Side of Human Nature

Tuesday, February 9, 2010 posted by admin

Blog Talk Radio logo Blog Talk Radio Show: The Shadow Side of Human Nature
Dr. John Deri’s next Blog Talk Radio Show: Healthy Mind and Body will be on Wednesday, February 10, 2010 from 8-9:00 PM PST.

The topic will be:  The Shadow Side of Human Nature. It will be a rerun of a recorded episode.

“Everyone carries a shadow, and the less it is embodied in the individual’s conscious life, the blacker and denser it is.” (Carl Jung, Psychology and Religion, p.131). All too often, we turn a blind eye to the shadow side of human nature. It is only with an enormous effort that we can acknowledge this side of ourselves. In the context of trauma, we invariably have to deal with a considerably intensified shadow. If such a person wants to be cured, it is necessary to find a way in which his conscious personality and his shadow can live together.

During the show Dr. John Deri will share with us:

➢    Why we turn a blind eye to our shadow side

➢    How we become aware of our shadow side

➢    How to integrate our shadow side.

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

.

share save 171 16 Blog Talk Radio Show: The Shadow Side of Human Nature