october 10, 2015 handout - summit for clinical excellence · 2015-10-13 · hasenkamp et al....

21
10/13/2015 1 The Art and Science of Mindfulness Mark Levine M.D. Intention What is mindfulness? How is it helpful? What is the scientific evidence that supports its value? Afternoon workshop What is compassionate mindful attention? How do we integrate this mindful attention into psychotherapy? How do patients learn and apply these skills? Surgeon General If I could tell you that there was one factor in your life that could lower your risk of having a heart attack or stroke, that could increase your chances of living longer, that could increase your productivity at work and the likelihood that you get a promotion, and that could even increase your success in losing weight… What would that factor be? Vivek Murthy M.D. 4 Happiness What is happiness? When do you feel happy and what about that makes you happy? 6

Upload: others

Post on 05-Aug-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

1

The Art and Science of Mindfulness

Mark Levine M.D.

Intention

• What is mindfulness?

• How is it helpful?

• What is the scientific evidence that supports its value?

Afternoon workshop

• What is compassionate mindful attention?

• How do we integrate this mindful attention into   psychotherapy?

• How do patients learn and apply these skills?

Surgeon General

If I could tell you that there was one factor in your life 

that could lower your risk of having a heart attack or 

stroke, that could increase your chances of living 

longer, that could increase your productivity at work 

and the likelihood that you get a promotion, and that 

could even increase your success in losing weight…

What would that factor be?

Vivek Murthy M.D.

4

Happiness What is happiness?

When do you feel happy andwhat about that makes you happy?

6

Page 2: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

2

Qualities of Happiness

• Many kinds of emotions• Feel present, undistracted, in the moment • Awareness or a knowing of being happy.

7

“A deep sense of flourishing that arises from an exceptionally

healthy mind… not a mere pleasurable

feeling, a fleeting emotion, or a mood,

but an optimal state of being.”

Matthieu Ricard , PhD

Can we influence these mental condition ?

YR: 0 1 2 3 4 5

7654321

Happiness Set Point

Win Lottery

Paralyzed for life

The How of Happiness

Sonia Lyubomirsky Ph.D. reviewed research which found several key factors which maximized happiness:

• Gratitude

• Self‐appreciation

• Kindness

• Curiosity

• Optimism

• Savoring

She and other researchers noted  that all of these qualities depend on awareness of self and of others.

Page 3: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

3

By awareness , I mean a knowing of thoughts, emotions or sensations that comes from paying attention on purpose.

Exercise: Bringing attention to the sensations in the  right hand, left foot then both hands.

Discussion: Observing how attending lights up the awareness of sensation. 

13

In the 1990’s the connection between emotions, happiness and awareness became the focus of research by psychologists Drs. John  Mayer and Peter Salovey who introduced the term emotional intelligence.

• Their work was popularized by  Dr. Daniel Goleman who summarized hundreds of studies which showed that performance, leadership and happiness were dramatically enhanced by emotional intelligence.

• This research identified 5 innate capacities which could be learned and strengthened..

• Self-Awareness

• Self-Regulation

• Motivation

• Empathy

• Social Skills

• Their research showed that awareness was the foundation for emotional intelligence.

• This was the first body of western research to support the idea that happiness, performance and leadership could be enhanced by strengthening awareness.

Dr. Flow

fully immersed

aware of the moment

present 

free of preoccupation

Page 4: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

4

Dr. Flow

Prior to this research psychologist  Mihaly

Csikszentmihalyi (pronounced Mee‐hy Cheek‐sent‐

me‐hy‐ee) had spent two decades studying happiness 

and peak performance and coined the term flow to 

describe this experience in which people are fully 

immersed and aware of the moment, in which people 

feel present and free of preoccupation . In such 

moments, people are happy.

19

“A deep sense of flourishing that arises from an exceptionally

healthy mind… not a mere pleasurable

feeling, a fleeting emotion, or a mood,

but an optimal state of being.”

Matthieu Ricard , PhD

The challenge here was that flow was something that happened to people in certain activities. Some people might say that “golf” or “cooking” or “hiking” was their meditation.

The process was passive, even random, because there was no method to reliably train people to  get into flow. It mainly happened.

When are humans most happy? 

When are humans most happy? 

To gather data on this question, Matt Killingsworth Ph.D., who researches happiness, recently built an app, Track Your Happiness, that let people report their feelings in real time. Among the surprising results: We're often happiest when we're in the moment. And the flip side: The more our mind wanders, the less happy we can be.

23

3 Questions

• How do you feel?

• What are you doing?

• Are you thinking about something other than what you’re currently doing?

24

Page 5: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

5

650,000 real‐time reports from over 15,000 people

Forty‐seven percent of the time, people are thinking about something other than what they’re currently doing.

Dr.  Killingsworth found that people are less happy when they’re mind‐wandering no matter what they’re doing. 

For example, people don’t really like commuting to work very much; it’s one of their least enjoyable activities. Yet people are substantially happier when they’re focused only on their commute than when their mind is wandering off to something else. This pattern holds for every single activity we measured, including the least enjoyable. 

25

Wandering Attention:

47 %

About Wandering

The mind's innate capacity to wander appears to serve at least two creative purposes: • scanning for opportunity and threats and • processing sensory and cognitive information

27

Why wandering often makes us unhappy

When our minds wander, we often think about unpleasant things: our worries, our anxieties, our regrets, comparisons, criticisms. 

We then have mental reactions to these negative thoughts and emotions which adds to our distress . We start reacting to our thoughts and emotions as if they were real threats. These negative thoughts turn out to have a gigantic relationship to unhappiness.

28

All mood fluctuates. It is not the mood that does the damage. It is our mental reaction to our mood.    

Mark Williams

Compassionate attending allows us to improve the mental conditions in which these negative thoughts arise.

29

Even when people wander into neutral thoughts they are often less happy than when they are 

present with an unpleasant experience.

30

Page 6: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

6

Dr. Killingsworth concludes that presence, what Goleman called awareness, makes us happy. 

31

Awareness makes us happy.

32

Why learn mindfulness  to train awareness?

Albert Einstein observed that “We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” 

It may be ineffective to only use intellectual intelligence to train emotional intelligence.

“We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” 

Albert Einstein 

34

In other words 

We can’t strengthen emotional intelligence by simply increasing our  information.

35

An ancient approach toemotional intelligence

Mindfulness refers to a 2500 year old training in attention and awareness. Mindfulness emphasizes training in awareness .

Like emotional intelligence mindfulness training  is primarily experiential rather than intellectual.

36

Page 7: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

7

Mindfulness

The awareness that arises by paying attention on purpose with a gentle curiosity to the present moment.

This natural capacity for awareness can be strengthenedthrough practice.

How awareness arises aswe pay attention 

Exercise: Bringing attention to the sensations in the  right hand, left foot then both hands.

Discussion: Observing how attending lights up the awareness of sensation. 

38

Meditation on the Breath

Meditation: Physical sensation of the breath

Bringing attention to the physical sensation  of the  breath

wherever this sensation is more prominent.

40

Attending & Reattending to  the breath

• Wandering– to  Thoughts, Emotions & Sensations– Pleasant , unpleasant or neutral

• Awareness of wandering

• Reattending– Natural , Effortless Capacity

• Attention has a quality or attitude:either critical harsh judgmental struggling or gentle curious inquisitive.

41

Meditation on the breath

What happens when we bring

a gentle curiosity to whatever arises and then 

Gently shift attention

back to the breath?

42

Page 8: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

8

Noticing

• The Awareness Cycle

• As awareness of wandering arises, gently shifting attention frees us from any struggle.

• This gentle attending and shifting is conscious and purposeful. 

Neuroscientists can now measure brain activity in each phase of this cycle.

43

Wandering Awareness of Wandering

Shifting AttentionAttending

Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760Ricard et al. Scientific American (2014) 311:38-45

Insula

Why is attending with gentle curiosity important for happiness?

Attending in this way , influences the mental conditions in which thoughts, emotions and sensations become connected or shaped to produce the experience of each moment.

45 46

Thoughts, emotions and sensations spontaneously arise in mental conditions which are influenced by the focus, attitude and intention of our attending . Mindfulness practice strengthens a kind, curious, purposeful attitude of attention. This combination of focus, attitude and intention nurtures mental conditions which Mathieu Ricard describes as healthy or flourishing, enhancing ease and diminishing stress.

47

Mental conditions

Attention

Attitude Intention

48

Thoughts, Emotions

&Sensations

Page 9: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

9

Mental Conditions are like a chemical solution in which thoughts, emotions and sensations arise . Attention, attitude and intention all  influence the mental conditions in which these thoughts, emotions and sensations arise . Attitude can be harsh and critical or curious and compassionate. Intention, the reason that we are attending, influences both where we focus our attention and the attitude of that attention. ( ant story )

In this way attention, attitude and intention reinforce each other.

49

By training where, how and why we pay attention mindfulness allows us to cultivate mental conditions which  influence how we organize  thoughts, emotions and sensations to shape  moment by moment experience.

50

Mindfulness trains

Attention

Attitude Intention

51

The Neuro-science

What is the evidence that awareness from gentle curious attention changes the structure and function of the brain?

52

Neuroplasticity

What we pay attention to and how we pay attention changes the structure and  function of our brains. 

The brain is plastic. 

We are always shaping our brain, however, mindfulness offers us  a choice to intentionally  rather than unconsciously shape our brain with training. 

What we practice becomes stronger.Shauna Shapiro Ph.D.

What do you want to practice?

Page 10: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

10

Superhighway Habit of struggle and distress Country Road of Compassion

London

57

The London Cabby studies:

Research has shown that the part of the brain associated with memory and spatial navigation, the hippocampus, is bigger and more active in London cabbies than in the average person.

And the longer someone has been driving a cab in London, the larger and more active their hippocampus. 

(Lazar et al., 2005)

Increased cortical thickness

59

•The insula, part of the cortex, processes sensory and emotional information .

•In meditators, after 8 weeks, the insula becomes thicker. (Lazar et al., 2005

Page 11: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

11

Amygdala

Pre-Frontal Cortex

61

The amygdala generates  positive and negative emotional signals.

Research at Stanford ( Goldin ) in social phobia showed decrease size and activity of the amygdala after only 8 weeks of meditation training.

Human telomeres lengthen

Recurrent major depression

Psoriasis heals faster

PFC ,Optimism& Immunity

Elissa Epel, PhD et al. 2014)

• (Siegel Archives., 2010

(Jon Kabat-Zin et al., 2012)

(Davidson, Kabat-Zinn, et al 2003)

Studies• Psoriasis heals faster after 8 weeks of meditation with improved immune 

function.

Jon Kabat‐Zin et al., 2012

• Increase in left PFC activity associated with  optimism  and stronger immune function after 8 weeks of mindfulness training.  

(Davidson  and Kabat Zinn 2003)

• In recurrent major depression, meditation worked as well as medication.

Siegel Archives., 2010

• Human telomeres, the protein caps on end of genes, lengthen following 8 

weeks of meditation.

Elissa Epel, PhD et al. 2014

Four Decades of Research

Significant Effects on both Physical and Psychological Health

Page 12: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

12

Mindfulness and Health

Medical Benefits– Psoriasis– Chronic pain– Fibromyalgia– Cancer– Multiple Sclerosis– Tension Headaches– Hypertension– Immune Functioning– Increased Telomerase

Psychological/Behavioral – Decreased Depression– Decreased Anxiety– Decreased Panic Attacks– Decreased Insomnia– Decreased Binge Eating– Decreased ADD– Decreased OCD– Decreased Substance Abuse– Smoking Cessation

Research demonstrates that meditation decreases pathology.

The original intentions of Meditationwere not to reduce hypertension and

panic attacks...

Expanding the Paradigm• Self-Awareness (Kabat-Zinn, 1996)

• Self-Regulation (Shapiro et al 2006)

• Empathy (Lesh, 1970, Shapiro et al 1998)

• Self-Efficacy (Kabat-Zinn, 1996)

• Happiness (Smith, Compton, & West, 1995)

• Sense of control (Shapiro, 1998; Astin, 1997)

• Spirituality (Shapiro, Schwartz, Bonner, 1998, Astin, 1997).

• Compassion (Self and Other) (Neff, 2010, Shapiro, et al, 2008).

• Moral Development (Nidich et al 1983)

Cognitive Capabilities• Attention (Jha et al, 2007; Slagter et al, 2007)

• Concentration (Murphy & Donovan, 1996)

• Creativity (Murphy & Donovan, 1996)

• Memory (Jha, Stanley 2012; Cranson et al, 1991)

• Academic Performance (Hall, 1999)

• Reduces Cognitive Rigidity (Greenberg et al, 2012)

• Ethical Decision Making (Shapiro, Jazzeri, Goldin, 2012)

In 2013, over 2200 research studies on mindfulness Integrating Mindfulness and

Compassion into the Helping Professions

Mark Levine M.D.

Page 13: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

13

Reviewing the a.m. session

Mental Conditions are like a chemical solution in which thoughts, emotions and sensations arise . Attention, attitude and intention all  influence the mental conditions in which these thoughts, emotions and sensations arise . Attitude can be harsh and critical or curious and compassionate. Intention, the reason that we are attending, influences both where we focus our attention and the attitude of that attention. ( ant story )

In this way attention, attitude and intention reinforce each other.

73

By training where, how and why we pay attention, mindfulness allows us to cultivate mental conditions which  influence how we organize  thoughts, emotions and sensations to shape  moment by moment experience.

74

Mental conditions

Attention

Attitude Intention

75

Thoughts, Emotions

&Sensations

Mindfulness trains

Attention

Attitude Intention

76

The Science of the Pleasant

Why compassionate, gentle , curious attending to the neutral and the pleasant is important

How attending  to the pleasant builds healthy mental conditions

77 78

Page 14: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

14

Chill monkeys & Worried Monkeys

Human beings had two types of  evolutionary ancestors : worried monkeys who thought there was a tiger behind every bush and chill monkeys who weren't so worried about the tigers.

We survived as a species because we excelled at worry.

79

Brain research is now showing that the default state of the brain is to notice, remember and react more intensely to the negative than the positive. 

As psychologist Rick Hanson notes, “ The brain is good at learning from bad experiences but bad at learning from good ones.” In other words, our brains have a negative bias.

80

Observations about Negative Bias

People really thrive when positive moments outnumber negative ones by at least a three‐to‐one ratio. ( Sonja Lyubomirsky PhD)

Intimate relationships usually need at least five positive interactions to balance every negative one. ( John Gottman PhD )

If 7 things go well in a day and 1 goes poorly, what do we remember most that night?

81

How the negative bias creates stress

82

The negative bias creates stress because it focuses our attention on negative thoughts .

Over millions of years our biologic systems developed to respond to acute immediate danger such as the lions and tigers that might eat us. Our innate fight or flight response is a cascade of stimulating alerting neuro‐hormones, such as adrenalin and cortisol , which prepares us to fight or flee by increasing heart rate, respirations, blood flow, muscle tension and vigilance.

However, we are biologically unprepared for chronic stress.

In his book, Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers,  neuro‐psychologist  Robert Sapolsky PhD notes that the fight or flight response is designed to react to an  immediate danger that is followed by periods of rest. Our bodies are not designed to tolerate the repeated daily stress from overreacting to our own thoughts as if they were dangers.

Pausing and staying with the feeling of  pleasant or neutral sensations is a way of retraining our negative attention and  changing our attitude towards our own thoughts.

83

Pausing into Pleasant

A practice for restoring healthy mental conditions

• Let’s begin by pausing and• Paying Attention to a Pleasant or Neutral* Sensation then• Staying with this sensation for one or two breaths.• As we wander, gently shifting attention back to the neutral 

or  pleasant sensation.

* Noticing  how attending to a neutral sensation also supports a gentle curious attitude of attention and sometimes also reveals what is pleasant in this “neutral” moment.

84

Page 15: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

15

Attending to the Pleasant Discussion:Rebalancing the negative bias

Attending to the pleasant is one way of “rebalancing” our negative bias . We can train ourselves to feel the positive as well as the negative.

By staying briefly, for a breath or two, with positive sensations , we allow our bodies to receive the benefit of pleasant moments and nurture positive mental conditions.

Bringing a gentle curiosity to each moment is like adding an alkaline substance to an acid solution. We can neutralize the “acidity” of stressful mental conditions of our mind.

When we feel the sensations of pleasant moments, our bodies  decrease the production of  stress hormones such as adrenalin and cortisol and release     neuro‐hormones associated with ease such as oxytocin and endorphins.

86

Two different effects

So we have two different effects:• a short‐term immediate effect of enriching the moment and • a longer term effect of rebalancing our mental systems.

In any moment, this rebalancing of our negative bias requires only a few breaths of attending to whatever pleasant or even neutral sensation is available .Later, we shall see how even attending to the negative with a particular attitude of gentle curosisty can rebalance our mental conditions.

87

Practicing Again

• Again let’s pause

• Paying attention to a pleasant or neutral sensation 

• Staying with this sensation for one or two breaths.

• When we wander, gently shifting attention back to the neutral or  pleasant sensation.

88

5 Practices to nurture positive mental conditions

• Meditation

• Mindful Listening

• Journaling

89

Meditation :An image that makes you feel happy

• Bring to mind an image that makes you feel happy in whatever way. This might be the image of a person, a pet, a place or any happy recollection

• Observing whatever image arises and then feeling the sensations in the body now.

• As the mind wanders, noticing and gently returning to that image, and then back to the sensations.

90

Page 16: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

16

Mindful Listening

• For the listener, simply listening without speaking and as we listen bring attention to the physical sensations in the body.

• For the speaker simply speak with whatever comes to mind and allowing ourselves to pause into the silence when nothing comes to mind. Feeling the physical sensation of speaking and pausing.

• And for both noticing as the mind wanders in bringing the tension back to the felt sense of speaking or listening.

Dyad

What do we notice?

93

Mindful listening has many benefits & applications

Perhaps the most important thing we ever give each other is our attention.... A loving silence often has far more power to heal and to connect than the most well-intentioned words."

Rachel Naomi Remen

Journaling

Writing down our thoughts anchors our attention into the felt physical sensations of the writing: the pen, the paper, seeing the words , feeling  the movement of our fingers, hand and arm. 

Attending in this way encourages a gentle curious attitude towards our thoughts and emotions  and frees us from our tendencies to judge, compare, and criticize our thoughts. 

This freedom encourages an unimpeded flow of thought, creativity and insight. 

Page 17: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

17

Journal

Describe five things that you appreciate about yourself. Be specific and include some details or examples.

As you write, occasionally pausing and  feeling whatever  sensations  might be in the body now.

Then returning to the writing.

97

Dyad

Share

in whatever detail you choose

what you wrote.

98

• For the listener, simply listening without speaking and as we listen bring attention to the physical sensations in the body.

• For the speaker simply speak with whatever comes to mind and allowing ourselves to pause into the silence when nothing comes to mind. Feeling the physical sensation of speaking and pausing.

• And for both noticing as the mind wanders in bringing the tension back to the felt sense of speaking or listening.

Emotions are contagious.

Our brain is wired to feel in our body the emotions that we observe in others moment by moment.

100

Dyad: Gratitude

• What do you feel grateful for?

• Answer

• Attending to Sensation

• Thank each other

• What do you feel grateful for?

With each answer pausing and  feeling into the felt emotional and physical sensations in the body now. If the mind wanders, gently noticing . Also, pausing into silence as needed.

101

Popcorn discussion

What did we notice?

102

Page 18: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

18

Self-Regulation

Part FourExploring

Negative Mental ReactionsThus far we have been learning how gentle curiosity  and embodiment (connecting to physical sensations) cultivate  healthy mental conditions in which thoughts, emotions and sensations arise.

We have also explored how this curiosity and embodiment enriches moments and restores mental balance.

Next , we will explore how  the awareness cultivated by curiosity and  embodiment can free us from the impact of negative stressful thoughts.

104

Can we bring the same gentle curiosity to thoughts ?

Often our attention wanders into thoughts. What happens when we make thoughts the object of attention.

105

Meditation on thoughts:Observing vs. Caught

What happens when we bring this gentle curiosity to thoughts?• Thoughts like leaves or clouds• Neutral, pleasant or unpleasant• Observing is effortless and innate.

Noticing when we are observing thoughts and when we are caught in our thoughts about the thoughts . Noticing how we effortlessly wander from observing to caught, how we notice  when we wander and effortlessly shift back to simply observing our thoughts..

107

Discussion

108

Page 19: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

19

Journal & Dyad

• Bring to mind a mildly distressing situation

• Noticing the thoughts that come to mind.

• Record those thoughts.

• Attending to the sensations in your body now.

• Dyad: describing the situation, thoughts , emotions & sensations.

110

Struggle

In our thought logs we can see how  we sometimes struggle with our own negative thoughts as if they were real threats. This struggle triggers a reinforcing chain reaction of negative thoughts and emotions which cause us to suffer. We might also notice how thoughts & emotions reinforce each other and  how the more we struggle, the more we suffer.

111

We cannot avoid or deny a distressing thought or emotion.

We might also notice how we cannot avoid or deny a distressing thought or emotion.

In order to avoid a thought we must pay attention to it. Struggling with a thought actually intensifies the thought.  

112

Suzuki Roshi

Suffering = Pain * Resistance

113

Freedom from distressing thoughts & emotions requires a change in attitude. This gentle curious “mindful” attitude changes the mental conditions in which thoughts, emotions  and sensations arise. In this gentle nurturing environment distress slowly over time  dissipates and transforms.

114

Page 20: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

20

Negative Bias

Our brain’s negative bias not only means that we are more attentive to negative events but also that we are more aware of even minor negative moods and thoughts than we are of positive moods and thoughts. 

Our natural bias to focus on and then struggle with our own negative thoughts and emotions can sometimes turn moments of discomfort into chronic feelings of anxiety, depression and pain. 

115

As psychologist Dr. Mark Williams notes

“All mood fluctuates naturally. It is not the mood that does the damage but our mental reaction to our own mood.”

116

Practicing the Tool: 3P’s

• Bring to mind a mildly distressing situation

• Also bring attention to what you are  feeling in the body.

• Then…

• Pausing into the breath sensation… then

• Paying attention to thoughts, emotions and sensations then

• Pondering: What’s really important here?

117

Working with Distress

Pause into the Breath

Pay Attention

Ponder what is Important

118

Discussion

Notice that the benefit of these practices does not depend on what arises during the practice ‐pleasant, unpleasant or neutral.

We are able to cultivate healing mental conditions with whatever thoughts, emotions or sensations arise.

Healing

The real source  of happiness and stress in our lives is our own mental reaction to situations which includes our thoughts about our thoughts. 

By cultivating a different attitude of attention to our own thoughts and  emotions ‐pleasant, unpleasant or neutral ‐ we can  strengthen  healthy conditions of the mind that are the foundation for  happiness and for  flourishing.

120

Page 21: October 10, 2015 handout - Summit for Clinical Excellence · 2015-10-13 · Hasenkamp et al. Neuroimage (2012) 59:750-760 Ricard et al. Scientific American(2014) 311:38-45 Insula

10/13/2015

21

The Guest HouseThis being human is a guest‐house.Every morning a new arrival.A joy, a depression, a meanness, some momentary awareness comes as an unexpected visitor.Welcome and entertain them all! Even if they're a crowd of sorrows, who violently sweep your house empty of its furniture,still, treat each guest honorably. He may be clearing you out for some new delight.The dark thought, the shame, the malice, meet them at the door laughing, and invite them in.Be grateful for whoever comes, because each has been sent as a guide from beyond.

Rumi