Psychiatry & Psychology
Spirituality and Mental Health, Part IV of IV: Health-Centric Spirituality in Psychotherapy
Consider the spiritual elements that I pointed out from research on spirituality and health in the previous parts of this series. They were: meaning, gratitude, peace, confidence, sense of identity, and acceptance.
The somatic (body mind) approaches to psychotherapy, including EMDR, tend to “unlock” these experiences in ways that are very personal to the individual. Generally, people refer to this sensation of de-stressing and expanding awareness as a spiritual experience. They feel that their greater ease in expressing their higher values is a spiritual achievement. The subjective sense of energy work that can be used in creating the positive “state shift” that I mentioned in the last article can also feel very spiritual.
But, if faith and God are optional for these, then why call them spiritual? For many people, they are a part of religious experience and connection with God. Some non-believers call these experiences spiritual because, well, they feel really spiritual. Do I need a better explanation? So what if my spiritual experiences are because I had a temporal lobe, delta predominant micro-seizure. At least it was mine! But that’s a subject for another article.
You can’t expect me to be too serious when I’m thinking spiritually now, can you? If that won’t do, you may have to resort to philosophy. Philosophy is very serious, and sounds very smart, makes unaccountable generalizations, takes volumes to make its point, and gets outcomes that we are wired to desire, like tenure, sex, money, sex, grandiosity, and sex. You can find it all over the place. Come to think of it, I just did it (made a broad, unaccountable generalization). I wonder what my reward will be?
Okay, back to business. What about the less spiritual-sounding factors of internal locus of control (seeing oneself as able to influence one’s own fate), education/knowledge, social support, and self-expression? Healers can promote these elements by adding systems work, family therapy, and psychosocial education to their therapeutic approaches to boost these more behavioral factors.
Therapists who like to confine their thinking within the walls of their office or hospital may have trouble with this one. But they’re what we call cherry pickers, or complacent. I could tell you stories!
Take a few moments to review the factors:
Meaning, gratitude, peace, confidence, sense of identity, and acceptance.
And the more behavioral ones:
Internal locus of control (seeing oneself as able to influence one’s own fate), education/knowledge, social support, and self-expression.
Imagine yourself experiencing all of them at once! That could be pretty therapeutic. You might want to do that along with some deep relaxation sometime, visualization another time, brainstorming another, and journaling another time.
You may never be the same again!
The Arrow of Causality
These factors all influence each other. There is no single arrow of causality. Healers, whether primarily in physical or mental domains, must accumulate tools throughout their careers that make them more effective at enhancing all these aspects. And they must be adept at referring and motivating their patients to take advantage of resources that will help them in this regard. Part of this is the art of integration, that is, putting the tools together to achieve a synergy; an even higher level of effectiveness.
I know this series has only scratched the surface, but the point is to help readers new to this integrative thinking do some perspective-gathering, so I hope you feel it serves as a good launch pad.
References
Curlin, F. A., Odell, S. V., Lawrence, R. E., Chin, M. H., Lantos, J.D., Meador, K. G., Koenig, H. G. (2007) The relationship between psychiatry and religion among U.S. physicians. Psychiatr Serv. Sep;58(9):1193-8.
Higdon, J. V., Frei, B. (2006) Coffee and health: a review of recent human research.
Critical reviews in food science and nutrition. 46(2):101-23.
Holt, C. L., Clark, E. M., Klem, P. R. (2007) Expansion and validation of the spiritual health locus of control scale: factorial analysis and predictive validity. J Health Psychol. Jul;12(4):597-612.
Kawachi, I., Willett, W. C., Colditz, G. A., Stampfer, M. J., Speizer, F. E. (1996) A prospective study of coffee drinking and suicide in women. Archives of Internal Medicine. Mar 11;156(5):521-5.
Keyes, C. L., Reitzes, D. C. (2007) The role of religious identity in the mental health of older working and retired adults. Aging and mental health. Jul;11(4):434-43.
Krause, N. (2007) Self-Expression and Depressive Symptoms in Late Life. Research on Aging, Vol. 29, No. 3, 187-206
Mofidi, M., DeVellis, R. F., DeVellis, B. M., Blazer, D. G., Panter, A. T., Jordan, J. M. (2007) Journal of Nervous and Mental Disorders. Aug;195(8):681-8.
Rosenbloom, S. K., Victorson, D. E., Hahn, E. A., Peterman, A. H., Cella, D. (2007) Assessment is not enough: a randomized controlled trial of the effects of HRQL assessment on quality of life and satisfaction in oncology clinical practice. Psycho-Oncology. Published Online: 7 Mar
Shariff, A. F., Norenzayan A. (2007) God is watching you: priming God concepts increases prosocial behavior in an anonymous economic game. Psychol Sci. Sep;18(9):803-9.
Tsuang, M. T., Simpson, J. C., Koenen, K. C., Kremen, W. S., Lyons, M.J. (2007) Spiritual well-being and health. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2007 Aug;195(8):673-80.
Ventura, J. L., et. al. (2007) Functional well-being is positively correlated with spiritual well-being in women who have spontaneous premature ovarian failure. Fertility and Sterility, Volume 87, Issue 3, March, Pages 584-590.
Related Articles
4 Comments
Lin
Spirituality is more about seeing everything as a whole, as opposed to a clinician’s tendency to label and isolate. The article is a good start!
seven rays
I think it does not really matter what terminology people use in describing their inner experiences. We often have prejudices about certain terms, but what counts is the reality and the benefit of the phenomena.
Trackbacks
- Dec 18, 2007 | Encephalon #38 « Not Exactly Rocket Science
Leave a Reply
Thursday, October 16, 2008
- The Anti-Psychiatry Movement
- Should Doctors Have Guns?
- Vaccines - A Two-Edged Sword
- Extremist Muslim Doctors Do More Than Heal
- Woman Comparable to Men in Domestic Violence: Stereotypes and their Consequences
- God And Religion: Is It All In Our Heads?
- The Bipolar Trend
- Anti-Smoking Campaign Doesn't Mess Around
- The Implications of Implanted Chips
- Are You Vegetarian? How Do You Get Enough Protein?
- The Science of Brain Freeze
- The Biopsychosocial Model of Health & Illness
- Is War A Psychosis?
- Unhinging from Theory: Autism and Opinions
- Mind-Body: We Want Evidence, Don't We?
- Encephalon, Thirty-Third Edition
- Meditation for Troubled Minds: Can the Mind Heal the Mind?
- Acknowledging Vaccination Concerns
- Usually It's Cheaper to Pay Than to Go To Court
- Integrating Schizophrenia Management
- The Gift of Life - Part 3
- Hope for Huntington’s Disease - Xenazine for Chorea
- ADHD - A Very Incomplete Puzzle
- Stop Talking, You Might Get Cancer
- Health Care and Politics II - The Democrats
- Health Care and Politics I - The Republicans
- Brain Blogging, Fortieth Edition
- China’s Tainted Reputation
- The Silent Epidemic of Health Illiteracy
- Managed Care Kills a Provider’s Reputation
- Writing Away Your Worries
- Sleep Deprivation, Behavior, and the Young
- Preventative Care in Medicine
- Cheating Husbands - What His Genes Tell Us
- Reduced Empathy Following Traumatic Brain Injury
- Craniosacral Therapy – Healing Through Touch
- Brain Blogging, Thirty-Ninth Edition
- Are Doctors Super Human?
- Taking Care of Those Who Take Care of Us
- Water - How Much is Too Much?
- I was a lacto/ovo vegetarian for over 20 years until I started suffering extreme...
- I, for one, don't have a problem with the Democratic healthcare plan. I would s...
- I don't have an issue with people being vegetarian, it is a personal choice and ...
- It scares me to think that I could be seen by a doctor who is at the end of a lo...
- Thanks a million for adding us to the blog as well!!!!...
- We've been non meat eaters now for over 10 years. I use the term advisedly, as ...
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WnY7utiMwG0
Please see the about YouTube where...
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WnY7utiMwG0
Please see the about YouTube where...
- Electro Convulsive Therapy - or as many mentally ill patients refer to as LRT - ...
- It depends on situation like, a doctor with lots of money and patient from wide ...
- Your health is a commodity...
Police, fire-safety, roads, education (rudimentar...
- Kathleen,
found the info,
thanks,...
- thanks for the feedback Kathleen.
I looked on your website but did not find s...
- I want the government to stop being everyone’s father. Grow up, get a job, and b...
- We need to set up a healthcare system and in that a government that has the publ...
- tran, how old are you, 12?...
- Actually, our organization, CodeBlueNow! has been asking the public what they wa...
- ..."Most Americans are willing to pay higher taxes to make health care reform po...
- I am one of the minority who is _not_ willing to pay higher taxes to make health...
- Deregulation, thats McCains plan. Well heck, it worked so well for the financia...
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
Neuroscience & Neurology
September 12, 2008 | 2 Comments | By Jared Tanner, MS
Physiological Effects of Alcohol Consumption
More In Neuroscience & Neurology
- A Baby’s Smile - Mom’s Natural High
- When “Alternative” Isn’t Anymore - The Ketogenic Diet in Epilepsy
- Stroke’s Little Known Complication - Pain
- Can Drug Therapy Prevent Parkinson’s Disease?
- Is Seeing Into the Future More Than an Optical Illusion?
Neuroscience & Neurology
Opinion
October 15, 2008 | 0 Comments | By Sajid Surve, DO
The Gift of Life - Part 3
More In Opinion
- China’s Tainted Reputation
- HIPAA Doesn’t Exist For Doctors
- Some Funny Stories From the Trenches
- Are You Vegetarian? How Do You Get Enough Protein?
- The Gift of Life - Part 2
Opinion
Psychiatry & Psychology
October 13, 2008 | 0 Comments | By J. R. White
ADHD - A Very Incomplete Puzzle
More In Psychiatry & Psychology
- Sleep Deprivation, Behavior, and the Young
- Cheating Husbands - What His Genes Tell Us
- Reduced Empathy Following Traumatic Brain Injury
- What Does Your iPod Say About You?
- Antipsychotics May Decrease the Risk of Suicide



to mental health, bipolar disorder in young adults. I have a 25 year old daughter who has been suffered from the same for the last 6 years, still without much improvement. Many drugs have been tried, psychotherapy and the like, to no avail. she has lost jobs, dropped out of college 3 times, and is lost, truly lost. she has run up awful debt, has terrible credit, wrote bad checks, been on drugs, gone to jail, sexually premissive. We love her so much, but, society has no use for her, they do not understand that what she does IS the disease, and it truly is a disease. It is not her. She, on the other hand is a loving, caring person, who loves animals, children, wanted to be a nurse, wanted to help people, someone who saw a homeless man on the street and gave him $20, of which left her broke. I know the person she is, but, others cannot see through her illness because it does not show. she is a beautfiul girl, but she knows what people will think of her when they are around her long. she doesn’t expect anything anymore. She always wanted children but now knows she probably never will. I am frustrated with the psych profession, and the drugs. where is the research? 3% if the entire world has this awful disorder. I fear for her future, once my husband and I are no longer here. Will she end up a homeless person, living under a bridge? or end of in jail off and on, with nobody really caring why she does what she does. I could just scream, I cry everyday. this affects the entire family, no one is the same, ever again.