If mindfulness is the sharpening of one’s ability to notice,
then perhaps this noticing can be applied to the subtle changes in thoughts,
behavior, and emotions that precede or come concurrently with the onset of a
mood change or a psychotic episode. One
changes as one enters any psychiatric episode.
Noticing these changes can enable the individual to take whatever steps
are necessary, and effective, to head off a debilitating psychiatric break.
The first step is to have a plan. Supports are necessary to help as one enters
an episode. If these supports are
effective, the severity and frequency of episodes can be reduced or even
eliminated. What to do when the mind begins
to slip, or when an affective disorder becomes assertive, should be worked out
in advance with psychiatrists, therapists, family members, and friends. While noticing changes and acting on them
remain the individual’s responsibility, help from others is going to be
necessary to fully deal with the consequences of increasing distress.
The second step is to learn how to notice the changes that
lead to distress. Things deteriorate
quickly, and the affected individual can lose perspective and judgment early on
in an episode. So picking-up the subtle
signals that tip off changes in personality or affect is key.
Daily meditation is a method others and I use to notice when
things are slipping and help is needed.
In mindfulness meditation one simply notices what arises in
the mind and in the body. While many
maintain this should be done without judgment, scanning for trouble with a
mental illness leads to a pretty big judgment call – get help or not. Also, traditional mindfulness instruction
encourages the practitioner to release thoughts as they arise. Note them and let them go. In combating mental illness a more thorough
inventory of the thoughts that come up is required.
One sits, stands, lies down, or walks and puts down the
plans, worries, and fantasies that distract.
Focus, possibly on the breath, follows.
Then the individual just begins to notice. The quality of the breath, sounds, and sensations
in the body are all to be noted. But, as
anyone who has tried to meditate will tell you, thoughts will quickly and
completely pull us away from whatever we are using as a focus of attention. It’s important not to chase these thoughts or
begin a conversation with yourself. No
need or benefit in rumination. But the
thoughts that arise should be noted.
Labeling them can help.
Categories like judging, regretting, joy, anger, planning, or just
wishing to be somewhere else are a few examples.
This time spent meditating can also be used to objectively inventory
recent actions. Have you been acting in
any ways that may raise a red flag or cause concern? I’ll note that when my thoughts are often
about wishing I was doing something different with my life and a review of my
day leads me to note that I’m spending a lot of time on web shopping sites or watching
financial news, mania could be budding.
We all have patterns. Regular
meditation can help us notice when troubling patterns emerge.
Sensations in the body are also important to note. Often, the thoughts that signal mania may be
ascending in me are often accompanied by a tingling sensation similar to what I feel after I have taken too much caffeine, or by distress in my GI system. Just being still, and noticing, can reveal
much that the mind and body have to tell us about how assertive our illness is
at any point in time.
Of course, if what we learn in our meditation session
implies oncoming difficulty, we can put into play the plan we have made to head
off an episode of significance. Mania,
depression, anxiety, and psychosis all have precursors and triggers. Noticing them early on gives us control of a
situation that, had we not noticed, could have easily spun out of control. This opportunity to have control over our
illness can be a great help in becoming well and productive. It can also lessen the burden we place on
others, since we will be sick less often and with less severity.
Training yourself to notice this well takes time, but
patterns that signal trouble often emerge very early in practice. So be still, note what you’re thinking about
and feeling, and act, if necessary. I
even take notes about my meditation sessions.
Mood journals were very revealing in honing in on patterns early in my
treatment. Journaling thoughts and
feelings exposed during meditation can lead to similar insights. Critics will assert that this is not true
mindfulness meditation. For it is
meditating with a purpose instead of just being in our awareness without
judgment. But I’ll shoot for being well rather
than being enlightened.
Lost in much of the modern mindfulness movement, with its
focus on awareness, acceptance, and non-judgment, is the idea of intention. I intend to be and stay well. Meditation is simply one tool I can use to
help me get there. So I spend some time
thinking about what I’m thinking. I
spend some time noticing, and noting, what comes up. I use that information as feedback on the
state of my mind. Then I act. Self-knowledge and self-awareness are
possible, and necessary, if one is to live successfully with a mental illness. Meditating daily, with purpose, can help you
get there.
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