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Thread: Questions for our Mental Health Professionals: Dark Thoughts

  1. #1

    Questions for our Mental Health Professionals: Dark Thoughts

    Hi,

    I have a question or two for all our mental health professionals at Treeleaf.

    I was listening to an episode of a new science podcast on the subject of "Dark Thoughts" (be warned, if others will want to listen and are sensitive, that some of descriptions during the episode are very very dark and violent).

    http://www.radiolab.org/story/invisibilia/

    During the first 30 minutes of the program, they discuss 3 schools of therapy:

    -1- Analysis seeking for the meaning of thoughts, usually Freudian. Thoughts have meaning, often hidden in the subconscious.

    -2- Dr. Beck's Cognitive Behavioral Therapy "don't take one's 'automatic negative thoughts' seriously, challenge them and don't buy in", which has come to largely replace analysis for most therapists.

    -3- "Third Wave" or "Mindfulness" Therapy which, without seeking to contradict thoughts as in CBT, just "lets them go without engaging" in meditation, not buying in. This kind of therapy is experiencing a boom.

    I am wondering how you feel about all this.

    Also, it is my impression that 3 (and aspects of 2 too) have the flavor of Shikantaza. There are differences too from Shikantaza, which emphasizes much more. Based on your experience in our Community and with Shikantaza, how do you find Shikantaza to be similar or different from 2 and 3?

    It would be very helpful to hear from all our professionals.

    Gassho, Jundo

    PS - Do you agree that the therapist allowing these patients to hold a knife to his throat is perhaps taking some chances?
    Last edited by Jundo; 03-26-2015 at 08:08 PM.
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

  2. #2
    Looking forward to what the professionals here have to say about this.

    Gassho,
    Alan
    sattoday
    Shōmon

  3. #3
    Hi,

    using CBT and variants of mindfulness for a long time, I was attracted to Shikantaza because of the easy fit. There is a flavor and there are differences. When I use mindfulness with a client I am stealing happily from Jundo's videos. Clients for the most part seem to benefit.

    So so far as the P.S. is concerned, yes a therapist who allows a patient to hold a knife to his/her throat is taking some chances. In my opinion.

    Gassho
    Meishin
    sat today

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Meishin View Post
    Hi,

    using CBT and variants of mindfulness for a long time, I was attracted to Shikantaza because of the easy fit. There is a flavor and there are differences. When I use mindfulness with a client I am stealing happily from Jundo's videos. Clients for the most part seem to benefit.

    So so far as the P.S. is concerned, yes a therapist who allows a patient to hold a knife to his/her throat is taking some chances. In my opinion.

    Gassho
    Meishin
    sat today

    Hi,

    Psychiatrists of my generation focus on psychotropic medications to manage psychiatric illness. I defer to Meishin and others that do therapy routinely on this subject.

    Gassho, Jishin, _/st\_

  5. #5
    I can see shikantaza in the free associations of Freud's patients as they focused on reporting, moment-from-moment, what was going through their mind. I can see shikantaza in the automatic thoughts that the patient undergoing CBT scribbles down on their worksheets. I can see shikantaza, obviously, in the new mindfulness therapies. I can see shikantaza in the often given advice to panic attack patients: "Do not fight it. Do not think about it. Just float through it." There are those aspects in therapy where one just follows the mind, observes, and is instructed by what one sees. More often, however, in my opinion, thoughts, along with the "self," are reified and the view of "me" becomes more solidified. What all therepies do, however, share with the Buddha, is a desire to understand and alleviate suffering. I just find the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path more substantive than the unconscious, reformulated cognitions, etc.

    Gassho,
    Lowell

    Sat Today

  6. #6
    Hi there,

    interesting programme.

    I can see that 2 and 3 have a flavour of shikantaza but as the focus of the programme is on case studies of OCD - specifically - I guess we're mainly comparing an overlap in positions
    as to how we regard the reality of thoughts?

    I think when we sit shikantaza we do become more aware of the obsessive nature of our thoughts - and gradually learn to change our relationship to our thoughts - so
    it may well have a therapeutic effect.

    However - if we broaden out (which the programme didn't do) - some intrusive, troubling thoughts may require a more psychoanalytic route. Psychoanalysis has really moved on
    since Freud and some therapists work within a number of modalities - choosing which is the best intervention for the client. It's quite possible to synthesize all 3 of the approaches discussed.

    I'd say the therapist with an arsenal of knives, poisens, etc is pretty confident in his approach !!

    The thing is he knows that the clients coming to him are tormented by their thoughts because they have a conscience - and would never act on what they fear. They are not psychopaths or sociopaths - hopefully!

    I think the mindfulness therapies are really helpful - and yes - there is some element of shikantaza within them - but perhaps something has been 'lost' in the borrowing/extracting
    from Buddhism.

    Personally - I'd like to see a re-integration of Buddhist psychology/ teachings into some mindfulness based therapies - and a synthesis with other approaches as well. We have so much knowledge now to help people.



    Willow

    sat today
    Last edited by Jinyo; 03-26-2015 at 11:56 PM.

  7. #7
    Hi all,

    I'm not a mental health professional, but I've recently taken a major leap in my college education and decided to change my major to B.S. Psychology.

    Psychoanalysis has moved away from Freudian theories to other theories and they still have a place in today's therapies. As Willow mentioned, some thoughts really do need some analysis. It's called the psychodynamic approach nowadays, which includes Freudian psychoanalysis. Some events in one's childhood, which may or may not have been repressed, may be the model from which someone's pathological behavior is based on. For example, someone who seems to have ended up in a series of abusive relationships in adulthood may have had an experience of domestic abuse as a child and is actually searching for love in the same way that he or she was treated in childhood, whether consciously done or not.

    Here is a nicely animated video giving an overview of various forms of therapy that professionals use. In it, it's stated that therapists usually use a combination of various forms of therapy in treating patients.

    P.S. There seems to be a concern about prescription of medication for various disorders. I am not entirely aware of the situation in the United States, but medication does help alleviate symptoms, but more often than not, there is always therapy involved to correct unhelpful thoughts and behaviors learned from being ill all that time. Depression, for example, is seen to be a complex disorder arising from an intricate play of social, psychological, and physiological factors, all of which must be addressed.

    Gassho,
    Ben
    Sat today.
    Last edited by Tiwala; 03-27-2015 at 10:52 AM.
    Gassho
    Ben

  8. #8
    Dear all

    I am not a mental health proferssional but have had conversations about this subject with both my ex wife (a Theravadin buddhist and clinical psychologist) and someone who attended my sitting group, a clinical psychologist who teaches and researches mindfulness based stress reduction.

    The way they have both explained it to me is that both CBT and mindfulness-based therapy such as ACT (Acceptance Commitment Therapy which has in some ways taken over from CBT in a new wave of therapists in the UK) are ways of dealing with thoughts and feelings as they arise. ACT/mindfulness is more akin to the meditation technique of just letting things be as they are and not engaging with them whereas CBT tends to challenge the accuracy of thoughts that arise. Psychotherapy, in contrast, is used to tackle more deep-seated problems in which tackling the symptom thoughts is insufficient and there is a need to understand the deeper basis of where the thoughts come from.

    Anyway, this is my lay-person's understanding. I have also personally found CBT a very helpful method for dealing with negtive thoughts that can arise as a result of physical illness.

    Gassho
    Kokuu
    #sattoday

  9. #9
    Good luck with your course Ben - it feels like you have a good grasp/overview of this fascinating subject area.



    Willow

    sat today

  10. #10
    By coincidence I just asked the following question on reddit (under my reddit name Objectalone) and have received responses that seem relevant to our teacher's post, and may be of interest to mental health professionals. 800 responses since yesterday.

    "Have you ever been disturbed by an aspect of your character revealed by a stressful or threatening situation"

    http://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/co..._by_an_aspect/

    Edit: question was removed from reddit after 1600 responses for being of a yes/no survey nature according to the mods. Cest la vie. The linked page is still readable.


    Gassho
    Daizan

    sat today
    Last edited by RichardH; 03-27-2015 at 11:00 PM.

  11. #11
    Shikantaza seems very prevalent in the Third Wave (the humanistic perspective). Like others have said, therapeutic mindfulness can be a bit watered down though. It's like they take the Buddhism out of Zen. Shikantaza can be a bit like CBT at times, but the approach tends to be a bit different. CBT involves actively reshaping our thought patterns by seeing that negative thoughts, self-concepts and phobias are unfounded. A degree of reconditioning occurs, in which triggers become associated with new, more wholesome, states of mind.As for psychoanalysis goes... There may be a degree of unconscious stuff coming to the surface in Zen practice, but I don't buy any of Freud or his counterparts' theories behind them. And letting a client hold a knife to you sounds like a very experimental form of therapy Haha. Mind you, I'm not a professional, just a psych student. Gassho, John Sat Today

  12. #12
    Hi !

    I've been in "traditional" psychoanalysis for the last five years (meaning, not having a face to face conversation but lying on a couch talking while the analyst listens and - rarely - notices stuff to talk about), and i started practicing zazen during the first. I don't know which did what, but this took me from an anxious wreck, unable to do stuff on his own and to be responsible, to a quite normal guy who can lead his life more or less as he wants to and without too much harming others. I found that it was a very good combination to be in psychoanalysis while practicing zazen and vice versa.

    During those years i found that there was a lot in common between psychoanalysis and zen. I recently discovered that (and it did not suprise me at all) in Lacan's first book of his seminars, the very first paragraph is about... zen. I'm not a professional, but i can write about it if you are interested. There are a few books about the links between zen and psychoanalysis, the most well known was written by Erich Fromm ("Bouddhisme zen et psychanalyse" in French, I suppose it's "Zen Buddhism and psychoanalysis" in English), and is a great read.

    Gassho,

    Ugrok

    Sat Today
    Last edited by Ugrok; 03-28-2015 at 12:31 AM.

  13. #13
    Hi everyone!
    I'm not a professional, but have quite a bit of experience as a patient. For me there's the medical or chemical element, treated with meds. Then the therapy aspect. For years the only "therapy" I was taught was breathing exercises and relaxation techniques. Over the past few years I've been with a good therapist doing CBT. I find it very helpful.

    All of the methods discussed (including #3) have the goal of a therapeutic result. Shikantaza doesn't look for a goal. I try to view my therapy and sitting separately. I analyze enough as it is! So for me, there's a time for the couch and a time for the cushion.

    Just some thoughts.
    Gassho, Entai

    #SatToday

    泰 Entai (Bill)
    "this is not a dress rehearsal"

  14. #14
    Hi,

    A psychiatrist once told me talk therapy can work well in augmenting medication treatment of certain conditions such as schizophrenia and bipolar type one.

    Gassho, Jishin, _/st\_

  15. #15
    First, I am not a psychotherapist or similar professional.

    Second, this is an important topic. It is important to know the difference between the purposes of psychotherapy and the process of zen/shikantaza. Altho related, they are very different. Perhaps I am putting it too simplistically, but for me "therapy is about growing up, zen is about waking up." Therapy is about bringing into awareness and easing the maladaptive strategies from our conditioning and history; zen is about seeing thru the whole process of making up strategies, to be present in what is here-now.

    Just my perspective. Glad to hear others' views.
    _/st\_ Shinzan

  16. #16
    Quote Originally Posted by Shinzan View Post
    First, I am not a psychotherapist or similar professional.

    Second, this is an important topic. It is important to know the difference between the purposes of psychotherapy and the process of zen/shikantaza. Altho related, they are very different. Perhaps I am putting it too simplistically, but for me "therapy is about growing up, zen is about waking up." Therapy is about bringing into awareness and easing the maladaptive strategies from our conditioning and history; zen is about seeing thru the whole process of making up strategies, to be present in what is here-now.

    Just my perspective. Glad to hear others' views.
    _/st\_ Shinzan
    I like this. Very cool.

    Gassho, Jishin, _/st\_

  17. #17
    Some insight, from a sufferer of dark / intrusive thoughts.

    This thread struck a deep chord in me. Four years ago, much like the man in the podcast I started to suffer from intrusive thoughts that seemed to come out of no where. Also, much like the man in the podcast, I was unable to function normally since I was almost besieged by them several times a day. The gaps in between were blissful, almost euphoric, until the next thought decided to slip in undetected and unwanted. Each thought seemed almost tailor made by an invisible enemy who knew exactly what to suggest that would cause me the most suffering. Which images about my wife and children would be the absolute worst for me to see, and then showing me in vivid detail using my own imagination as it's engine. I'm a calm man, docile even. I wouldn't be able to carry out such atrocities, but that was part of this whole mental process. I wasn't a danger to anyone, but I started to wonder if I was. I've never hurt anyone in my life, but then I wondered if I could. If I could sit here and picture the steps that would be needed to do such terrible things, I thought to myself, then I have to be capable of it, right?

    I know now that the answer is 'no', but I didn't then. I went to a councilor, we tried CBT for a long while, but I was never able to relax enough to be 'ok' with the thoughts themselves. No matter how hard I tried, thoughts led to anxiety, anxiety led to "what if" and the cycle continued to feed itself. I attribute this period of my life as the darkest point of it. Next came medication. Medication chopped the highs and the lows off my emotional sine wave, allowing me to live comfortably in the middle, but it didn't (and still doesn't) completely stop intrusive thoughts from happening. I also now know that it's a form of OCD that you're never cured of, you just learn to manage. So now I'll touch on Jundo's list from a personal standpoint.

    1) Analysis: Trying to understand them made them worse. Why am I thinking such horrible things? The conclusion was always the same for me. Because I am a terrible human being capable of great atrocity. Obviously this only dug me deeper in to despair.

    2) CBT: As I'd mentioned, not much success. My volume was simply turned up too high for me to ever find peace in this.

    3) Mindfulness/Zazen: Here, friends, family, is where my personal Zen rubber hits the road. Where it's taken off the cushion in to life's practice. Learning to let thoughts come and go, with nothing to add, nothing to take away... Seeing them as just that. Thoughts, not actions, but thoughts allowed me to learn to peacefully abide while on the cushion. Months of practice turned in to the thoughts whispering in to my ear, and not screaming. Months more, and I was able to treat them as I treat everything when in Zazen. See it's there. Don't engage, don't acknowledge, let it go. This has become the cadence of my life now, and I've become so good at ignoring them as free floating things with out impact, that's even rare when I know they happen anymore. Every so often an image will flash and I'll frown, but that's the extend of it anymore. Most times, it doesn't even break whatever train of thought I'd been on before it reared it's ugly head.

    So there you have it, I've certainly written a lot but not really sure if I've said anything. I guess that's up to how ya'll interpret it for yourselves. Heh. Ya'll. Is my Texas showing?

    It is. Isn't it?

    ~Jigetsu
    _/\_
    Jigetsu

  18. #18
    Quote Originally Posted by Jigetsu View Post
    Some insight, from a sufferer of dark / intrusive thoughts.

    This thread struck a deep chord in me. Four years ago, much like the man in the podcast I started to suffer from intrusive thoughts that seemed to come out of no where. Also, much like the man in the podcast, I was unable to function normally since I was almost besieged by them several times a day. The gaps in between were blissful, almost euphoric, until the next thought decided to slip in undetected and unwanted. Each thought seemed almost tailor made by an invisible enemy who knew exactly what to suggest that would cause me the most suffering. Which images about my wife and children would be the absolute worst for me to see, and then showing me in vivid detail using my own imagination as it's engine. I'm a calm man, docile even. I wouldn't be able to carry out such atrocities, but that was part of this whole mental process. I wasn't a danger to anyone, but I started to wonder if I was. I've never hurt anyone in my life, but then I wondered if I could. If I could sit here and picture the steps that would be needed to do such terrible things, I thought to myself, then I have to be capable of it, right?

    I know now that the answer is 'no', but I didn't then. I went to a councilor, we tried CBT for a long while, but I was never able to relax enough to be 'ok' with the thoughts themselves. No matter how hard I tried, thoughts led to anxiety, anxiety led to "what if" and the cycle continued to feed itself. I attribute this period of my life as the darkest point of it. Next came medication. Medication chopped the highs and the lows off my emotional sine wave, allowing me to live comfortably in the middle, but it didn't (and still doesn't) completely stop intrusive thoughts from happening. I also now know that it's a form of OCD that you're never cured of, you just learn to manage. So now I'll touch on Jundo's list from a personal standpoint.

    1) Analysis: Trying to understand them made them worse. Why am I thinking such horrible things? The conclusion was always the same for me. Because I am a terrible human being capable of great atrocity. Obviously this only dug me deeper in to despair.

    2) CBT: As I'd mentioned, not much success. My volume was simply turned up too high for me to ever find peace in this.

    3) Mindfulness/Zazen: Here, friends, family, is where my personal Zen rubber hits the road. Where it's taken off the cushion in to life's practice. Learning to let thoughts come and go, with nothing to add, nothing to take away... Seeing them as just that. Thoughts, not actions, but thoughts allowed me to learn to peacefully abide while on the cushion. Months of practice turned in to the thoughts whispering in to my ear, and not screaming. Months more, and I was able to treat them as I treat everything when in Zazen. See it's there. Don't engage, don't acknowledge, let it go. This has become the cadence of my life now, and I've become so good at ignoring them as free floating things with out impact, that's even rare when I know they happen anymore. Every so often an image will flash and I'll frown, but that's the extend of it anymore. Most times, it doesn't even break whatever train of thought I'd been on before it reared it's ugly head.

    So there you have it, I've certainly written a lot but not really sure if I've said anything. I guess that's up to how ya'll interpret it for yourselves. Heh. Ya'll. Is my Texas showing?

    It is. Isn't it?

    ~Jigetsu
    That is wonderful how your practice has helped you. I can be a little OCD myself at times and can relate to what you said about how practice helps. Letting things come and go with nothing to add and nothing to take away. Thank you for sharing and thank you Jundo. I can hear your voice behind those words.


    ..sat2day•

  19. #19
    Hello !

    Just wanted to chime in to say that by "analysis", i think Jundo meant "psychoanalysis". Psychoanalysis has nothing to do with trying to "understand the content of thoughts". Instead, it sees the unwanted thoughts as a symptom of something unresolved in the unconscious structures of the patient, which are built from the first relations until adulthood and are evolving constantly - and which you can't figure out consciously, at all.
    Psychoanalysis is not about analyzing thoughts logically and trying to figure them out ; it's the practice of a totally clear relationship with someone who is not emotionaly involved with you, which allows to firstly revisit the old, difficult schemes we are entrapped in, and then to rebuild, almost from scratch, a "sane" relationship background. It's a long process, but it has nothing to do with "understanding". Trying to understand symptoms or unwanted thoughts and fantasies is in fact a major - and often unavoidable - hindrance and resistance in a psychoanalytic process.

    Gassho,

    Ugrok

    Sat Today
    Last edited by Ugrok; 04-09-2015 at 10:16 PM.

  20. #20
    Quote Originally Posted by Jigetsu View Post
    Some insight, from a sufferer of dark / intrusive thoughts.

    This thread struck a deep chord in me. Four years ago, much like the man in the podcast I started to suffer from intrusive thoughts that seemed to come out of no where. Also, much like the man in the podcast, I was unable to function normally since I was almost besieged by them several times a day. The gaps in between were blissful, almost euphoric, until the next thought decided to slip in undetected and unwanted. Each thought seemed almost tailor made by an invisible enemy who knew exactly what to suggest that would cause me the most suffering. Which images about my wife and children would be the absolute worst for me to see, and then showing me in vivid detail using my own imagination as it's engine. I'm a calm man, docile even. I wouldn't be able to carry out such atrocities, but that was part of this whole mental process. I wasn't a danger to anyone, but I started to wonder if I was. I've never hurt anyone in my life, but then I wondered if I could. If I could sit here and picture the steps that would be needed to do such terrible things, I thought to myself, then I have to be capable of it, right?

    I know now that the answer is 'no', but I didn't then. I went to a councilor, we tried CBT for a long while, but I was never able to relax enough to be 'ok' with the thoughts themselves. No matter how hard I tried, thoughts led to anxiety, anxiety led to "what if" and the cycle continued to feed itself. I attribute this period of my life as the darkest point of it. Next came medication. Medication chopped the highs and the lows off my emotional sine wave, allowing me to live comfortably in the middle, but it didn't (and still doesn't) completely stop intrusive thoughts from happening. I also now know that it's a form of OCD that you're never cured of, you just learn to manage. So now I'll touch on Jundo's list from a personal standpoint.

    1) Analysis: Trying to understand them made them worse. Why am I thinking such horrible things? The conclusion was always the same for me. Because I am a terrible human being capable of great atrocity. Obviously this only dug me deeper in to despair.

    2) CBT: As I'd mentioned, not much success. My volume was simply turned up too high for me to ever find peace in this.

    3) Mindfulness/Zazen: Here, friends, family, is where my personal Zen rubber hits the road. Where it's taken off the cushion in to life's practice. Learning to let thoughts come and go, with nothing to add, nothing to take away... Seeing them as just that. Thoughts, not actions, but thoughts allowed me to learn to peacefully abide while on the cushion. Months of practice turned in to the thoughts whispering in to my ear, and not screaming. Months more, and I was able to treat them as I treat everything when in Zazen. See it's there. Don't engage, don't acknowledge, let it go. This has become the cadence of my life now, and I've become so good at ignoring them as free floating things with out impact, that's even rare when I know they happen anymore. Every so often an image will flash and I'll frown, but that's the extend of it anymore. Most times, it doesn't even break whatever train of thought I'd been on before it reared it's ugly head.

    So there you have it, I've certainly written a lot but not really sure if I've said anything. I guess that's up to how ya'll interpret it for yourselves. Heh. Ya'll. Is my Texas showing?

    It is. Isn't it?

    ~Jigetsu
    Beautifully expressed, Jigetsu. Recognition and non-engagement are at the core of treatment goals with many of my patients. Thank you for writing about your experience.

  21. #21
    Jeremy
    Guest
    As a preface, I'll say that I'm not a professional or a patient. I'm just someone whose interest was piqued in Mindfulness by lots of positive and negative press reports, so I did an MBCT course in the UK. Other than this post, I'm not going to comment any further in this thread - my only interest is to point anyone who's interested towards some meditations that are used in Mindfulness courses.

    On the MBCT (Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy) course that's taught in the UK, there are a range of meditations, of which the closest to Zazen is probably "Sounds and Thoughts". There's a link to this at http://franticworld.com/free-meditat...m-mindfulness/ (Click on the image or title "Sounds and Thoughts Meditation"). It's only about 8 minutes, so worth a quick listen.

    Please bear in mind that this meditation is taught in week 4 of an 8-week MBCT course designed specifically by clinicians for the treatment of patients with recurrent depression. Typically participants will have had no prior exposure to meditation.

    Gassho
    Jeremy
    Will sit later

  22. #22
    Hello,

    Directed meditation is worth some thing.

    Zazen is totally worthless.


    Gassho
    Myosha sat today
    "Recognize suffering, remove suffering." - Shakyamuni Buddha when asked, "Uhm . . .what?"

  23. #23
    Quote Originally Posted by Jeremy View Post
    MBCT (Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy)
    Hi Jeremy,

    Some places practice Karate, some Kung Fu, some Judo and some Jundo. We practice Jundo here.

    Gassho, Jishin, _/st\_

  24. #24
    I'm on my lunch break from working with migrant workers through a volunteer program with my school. We have limited resources with regards to pharmacological treatments for mental health on this trip because we don't have a lot of follow up ability. Because of that we have been using some family therapist with came with us and they have been using CBT and mindfullness to great effect in the camps. They seem to tailor the technique to the problem and the person. For instance if the negative feelings are normal (like sadness from being away from their family) they might "give them" permission to feel the feelings, but to just feel them and let them go. However, if it a more destructive thought (i.e. smoking from stress) they might use the CBT techniques. It is a little out of my lane since I'm mostly taking care of their bodies, but I've watched a few therapist do some good work.

    I'll add to Jishin's comment that right now us new students are taught to try meds first or a combo of meds and therapy for most problems. However, there are a few really exciting therapies that are being developed now, like virtual reality based therapy and prolonged exposure therapy that show promise in treating PTSD and phobias without as much medication.

    Gassho
    If I'm already enlightened why the hell is this so hard?

  25. #25
    Hello:

    An interesting thread and one that it near and dear to my heart. In recent years, working in the field of substance abuse treatment providing therapy in both individual and group settings, I have introduced mindfulness-based relapse prevention (MBRP) to clients. Of the 3 mentioned by Jundo, this would, in my opinion, be most closely related to Shikantaza for it focuses on establishing nonjudgemental awareness of thoughts. One of the exercises is called "urge surfing" which is a form of imaginal exposure therapy. Using this technique, clients are asked to imagine themselves in high risk situations. They are asked to picture themselves in such situations (such as sitting at a table with using friends and drugs), but they are instructed not to act. Once they are right up to the point of acting, then they are asked to notice how they experience an "urge" or "craving". They are instructed to locate the sensation in the body, emotionally, if there are tastes or smells, and in the thinking. The idea is to notice how the urge/craving rises, peaks, and then falls away (like a wave) without the client having to do anything. From a psychological perspective, the theory is that the intensity of the urge will be extinguished with repeated exposure to the cues. So, this approach is somewhat like Shikantaza in that clients are instructed to just observe, but very much unlike it in that there are some intentional, directed visualizations which are undertaken.

    As for CBT and the cognitive therapies, these deal more with focusing on the content of thought v. the process of thought. Whereas in Shikantaza, we are watching thoughts as if they are clouds in the sky -- passing by without evaluating or judging -- in CBT the individual attempts to alter the shape of the cloud to effect a different emotional/behavioral outcome. This is very unlike Shikantaza in that there is a high degree of control which the client attempts to exercise over the content of thoughts. With that being said, clients are instructed to pay close attention to when they are evaluating or judging and to endeavor to drop that line of thinking. Similarly, in Shikantaza, we attempt to just observe thinking without the additional post-it notes. Again, however, CBT is very much concerned with content of thought v. process of thought. It seems to me that while Shikantaza involves both, it is mostly concerned with the latter.

    Finally, the last school deals with issues of insight in many respects. However, one of the ways that this school most closely resembles Shikantaza could be traced back to early Freudian disciples like Carl Jung who embraced Buddhist notions of not-self. In fact, Jung believed that true psychological healing could only come once there occurs an ego-collapse. His theories of archetypes are also very closely related to Buddhist conceptions of karma.

    There are likely many holes and more questions than answers in my post here. Just some of my thoughts I wanted to offer given my background and work in the area.

    Gassho,
    Jim
    #sattoday

  26. #26
    Yes. This statement by Voyager reflects my reservations about CBT--

    "Whereas in Shikantaza, we are watching thoughts as if they are clouds in the sky -- passing by without evaluating or judging -- in CBT the individual attempts to alter the shape of the cloud to effect a different emotional/behavioral outcome. This is very unlike Shikantaza in that there is a high degree of control which the client attempts to exercise over the content of thoughts."

    Watching for, and talking oneself out of, negative thoughts seems to require a lot of judging and dualism--negative thoughts, positive thoughts.

    Thank you all for an interesting discussion.

    _/\_

    L.

    sat2day

  27. #27

    Questions for our Mental Health Professionals: Dark Thoughts

    Hi,

    I find that although some mental health professionals profess to stick to a particular school of thought, this is just BS. Something to put down on paper to justify billing. What really happens is called eclectic therapy. You do what works.

    Gassho, Jishin, _/st\_
    Last edited by Jishin; 06-19-2015 at 12:20 AM.

  28. #28
    Quote Originally Posted by Voyager View Post
    As for CBT and the cognitive therapies, these deal more with focusing on the content of thought v. the process of thought. Whereas in Shikantaza, we are watching thoughts as if they are clouds in the sky -- passing by without evaluating or judging -- in CBT the individual attempts to alter the shape of the cloud to effect a different emotional/behavioral outcome. This is very unlike Shikantaza in that there is a high degree of control which the client attempts to exercise over the content of thoughts. With that being said, clients are instructed to pay close attention to when they are evaluating or judging and to endeavor to drop that line of thinking. Similarly, in Shikantaza, we attempt to just observe thinking without the additional post-it notes. Again, however, CBT is very much concerned with content of thought v. process of thought. It seems to me that while Shikantaza involves both, it is mostly concerned with the latter.
    Hi Jim,

    I see your point with regard to Shikantaza, but perhaps CBT bears close relationship to another skill running throughout Buddhism: The ability to develop recognition of harmful thoughts/words/acts (based on, for example, greed, anger, divisive thinking and all included within that) and to replace those with the positive, helpful or harmless (generosity, peace, acceptance etc.). Please have a look, for example, at our recommended "Nurturing Seeds" Practice ...

    http://www.treeleaf.org/forums/showt...Seeds-PRACTICE

    The following is based on teachings by Thich Nhat Hahn as well as many others. It's roots stretch back to the very origins of Buddhism. It is a simple and common sense approach to changing how we think and feel ... realizing that our experience of life is always shaped through the various thoughts and emotions that we impose upon life within our little heads, like a bit of mental theatre the script for which we are constantly writing for ourselves. This technique is an instantaneous means to replace harmful, negative, destructive thoughts and emotions with constructive, positive, wholesome thoughts and emotions.

    Of course, this practice is not meant as a substitute for "Zazen", our core activity. Far from it! All is hand-in-hand. Yet, just as with our other "Recommended Daily Practice", the recitation of Metta (Loving Kindness) ...
    Also, this thread on "vipassana" even within Zen Practice may be helpful ...

    Buddhist Practice is usually described as flying upon the twin wings of Samatha (calming thoughts and emotions, illuminating and dropping body-mind) and awareness and understanding of vipassana (insight and awareness primarily into the nature and workings of 'self' and mental functions). That is true in Zen practice no less than most other forms of Buddhist practice.

    In a nutshell, Vipassana might be described as insights and awareness, based on Buddhist psychology, as to how the mind works and plays it games. It is an understanding of the Skandhas (form, sensation, perception, mental formation, consciousness ... those words always sung in the Heart Sutra), how our thoughts and emotional reactions arise, how we label and divide the world. We should also understand the Buddha's ideas about how suffering arises within us, which is intimately tied to all that.

    However, unlike some schools of Buddhism, in Shikantaza we do not pursue any particular practices --during-- Zazen itself in order to cultivate such vipassana insight ... and much insight naturally arises from Zazen as "Zazen does its thing". Perhaps we might say that, just in "just sitting" Shikantaza ... dropping thoughts of this and that, thus quieting the mind's "mind games" ... we develop a natural sensitivity and understanding of the mind's "mind games" (much like one first comes to really appreciate what "urban noise" is when one first drives out of the city to the middle of the desert or some other truly quiet place).
    more here ...

    http://www.treeleaf.org/forums/showt...l=1#post131686

    Gassho, J

    SatToday (tried later to avoid some harmful thoughts today)
    Last edited by Jundo; 06-19-2015 at 02:16 AM.
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

  29. #29
    "Perhaps we might say that, just in "just sitting" Shikantaza ... dropping thoughts of this and that, thus quieting the mind's "mind games" ... we develop a natural sensitivity and understanding of the mind's "mind games" (much like one first comes to really appreciate what "urban noise" is when one first drives out of the city to the middle of the desert or some other truly quiet place)."

    Yes, this is what I imagine, and hope for.

    _/\_

    L.

    sat2day

  30. #30
    Quote Originally Posted by Jishin View Post
    Hi,

    I find that although some mental health professionals profess to stick to a particular school of thought, this is just BS. Something to put down on paper to justify billing. What really happens is called eclectic therapy. You do what works.

    Gassho, Jishin, _/st\_
    yes

    gassho
    meishin
    sat today

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