scholarly journals Changing the Sense of Self Through Ritual: Psycheritual as a Psychotherapeutic Intervention

2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. 68
Author(s):  
ROMANA KRESS ◽  
MARGARET KERR

This paper will show the results of a study into the experience of using ritual in contemporary psychotherapy*. Dr. Kress and Kerr have named this experience psycheritual as it is relevant for psychotherapy work and is a form of transition ritual which has transformative properties. Psycheritual can be defined as: an intentional act of communication between the conscious and the unconscious, where symbolic objects or actions are used to represent and/or to affect the psychic world, and where a close connection between the body and the mind is required. In this qualitative study we will illustrate how the ancient art of ritual can be successfully imple-mented in the modern discipline of psychotherapy, particularly in the process of changing the sense of self; and that indeed, psychotherapy itself already contains many elements that are generally associated with ritual. Our theoretical background is based in Transpersonal Psychotherapy, and we will also refer to an-cient and indigenous understandings that have been drawn together into the practice of contempo-rary Shamanism. To put the results of this study in context, we will start our exploration with a brief review of the Transpersonal and Shamanic worldviews, and then proceed to examine how ritual already plays a part in both these traditions. KEY WORDS Psychoyherapy, rituals, Self

2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 41-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alok Kumar Asthana ◽  
Monika Asthana Monika ◽  
Renu Sahu

In Ayurveda, the span of life is described to be determined on the basis of nature of the physique, type of constitution. The utility of Ayurveda is to help maintain the health of a healthy individual and cure of disease of a patient. In our ancient text, the pathogenic factor in the body are Vayu, Pitta and Kapha, while those in the mind are Rajas and Tamas. Out of three. qualities (Gunas) of mind viz., Sattva, Rajas, Tamas, it is only the latter two that cause vitiation of the mind, the former one being non-pathogenic.In other words, Vayu, pitta and Kapha are, somatic Doshas and Rajas and Tamas are the psychic ones. These three Doshas when vitiated harmful to our Dhatu (tissue) and donate life in an unvitiated state, which means helping in the acquisition of health.so for the healthy life equilibrium of Doshas is mandatory. KEY WORDS: Vata, moksha, pitta, kapha, shleshma.  


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (10) ◽  
pp. 1402-1415 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Virdun ◽  
Tim Luckett ◽  
Karl Lorenz ◽  
Patricia M Davidson ◽  
Jane Phillips

Background: The majority of expected deaths in high income countries occur in hospital where optimal palliative care cannot be assured. In addition, a large number of patients with palliative care needs receive inpatient care in their last year of life. International research has identified domains of inpatient care that patients and carers perceive to be important, but concrete examples of how these might be operationalised are scarce, and few studies conducted in the southern hemisphere. Aim: To seek the perspectives of Australian patients living with palliative care needs about their recent hospitalisation experiences to determine the relevance of domains noted internationally to be important for optimal inpatient palliative care and how these can be operationalised. Design: An exploratory qualitative study using semi-structured interviews. Setting/participants: Participants were recruited through five hospitals in New South Wales, Australia. Results: Twenty-one participants took part. Results confirmed and added depth of understanding to domains previously identified as important for optimal hospital palliative care, including: Effective communication and shared decision making; Expert care; Adequate environment for care; Family involvement in care provision; Financial affairs; Maintenance of sense of self/identity; Minimising burden; Respectful and compassionate care; Trust and confidence in clinicians and Maintenance of patient safety. Two additional domains were noted to be important: Nutritional needs; and Access to medical and nursing specialists. Conclusions: Taking a person-centred focus has provided a deeper understanding of how to strengthen inpatient palliative care practices. Future work is needed to translate the body of evidence on patient priorities into policy reforms and practice points.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-71
Author(s):  
Shahd Alshammari

This paper seeks to analyse the notion of exile as one of paradox, of being both within and without, as a disconnect between the mind and body. Edward Said has noted that exile is “strangely compelling to think about but terrible to experience”. Said’s suggestion of a mind/body split gives us room to consider the sense of self as already in-between, as the exiled ‘I’ attempts to find a home within a new land and a new body. Exile from one’s own homeland is also exile from one’s body in Arab-American author’s Randa Jarrar’s latest novel Him, Me, and Muhamad Ali (2016). The collection of stories moves away from reclamatory approaches to ethnic identity and examines the characters’ trajectories of selfhood through a gendered, racialized, and embodied image. Disability features as a site of tension, a site of interrogation of Zelwa’s (the protagonist) sense of self. It is a peculiar coming-of-age narrative in the sense that it is an anti-Bildungsroman, a probe into bodies that fail to be integrated, assimilated, or acclimated to American culture, while also failing to maintain their association with an Arab collective identity. Jarrar’s text underscores and redefines the “I” of the Arab immigrant exploring transgenerational trauma and reclaiming her identity through celebrating the body.


1920 ◽  
Vol 66 (274) ◽  
pp. 307-308
Author(s):  
C. W. Forsyth

The author considers that pain and its analogues, malaise, discomfort, ill-being, etc., whether of functional or organic origin, being forms of sensation, are essentially mental phenomena arising in the brain, and can be removed by psychotherapy. That the mind can act upon the body and influence every function is a well-established fact. It is possible, too, that certain organic changes, vascular disease, heart disease, etc., may be traced to certain mental processes—anxiety—causing, excessive secretion by the adrenals. In every case of illness some of the symptoms are due to suggestion either from within or from without. This was seen in many of the “slow recoveries” in the war due to auto-suggestion. In organic disease psychotherapy cannot effect a cure, but in every case it can assist and give relief to suffering, e. g. pain in cancer. In earlier days suggestion was employed unconsciously in the use of charms, amulets, religious relics, etc., in later days in mind-cures and Christian Science. The relief of symptoms shows that faith alone is a potent curative agent, and that the majority of the ordinary symptoms are mental in nature and removable. The methods employed in psychotherapy are suggestion under hypnosis, suggestion in the waking state, persuasion and re-education, and psycho-analysis. In “superficial” cases immediate results often follow suggestion, but in the more chronic cases the removal of a symptom by suggestion is often followed by relapses, a new symptom taking the place of the rejected one, as the underlying condition of morbid suggestibility has not been removed. To overcome this condition Dubois introduced the method of persuasion. He thinks that an appeal should be made to the intellect by talks with the patient on the subject of his nervous symptoms. Persuasion is to some extent a form of suggestion, as in all degrees of belief feeling as well as the intellect is involved. Upon re-education largely rests the completeness of the cure; the connection between the mental antecedents and the symptoms are explained to the patient; when these are understood and acted upon his mal-adaptation ceases. Freud has shown that the patient may be most profoundly influenced by feelings and ideas of which he is quite unconscious. No persuasion avails until the unconscious motive of his mental or nervous symptoms has been uncovered. The process by which this can be done is known as psycho-analysis. Three methods of probing the unconscious mind are mentioned—the word-association test, the free association of ideas, and the analysis of dreams. Psycho-analysis has its limitations. It is not usually successful in curing persons above middle age; even when successful the treatment may take months. Robertson thinks that in many cases it is unnecessary. No successful physician who has not given attention to this subject has the faintest idea of the extent to which he employs psychotherapy unconsciously. Every practitioner and student of medicine must be taught the part the mind plays in the chief symptoms of disease, and he must consciously use psychotherapy in the treatment of these. His success will depend on the depth of his convictions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-56
Author(s):  
Rod Sandle

Spirit has often been separated from body and mind and treated as not amenable to scientific study. A big influence in this regard was Ludwig Wittgenstein who, in 1922, came to the conclusion that the language of science was not able to talk about the mystical, saying, “There is indeed the inexpressible. This shows itself; it is the mystical” (p. 90). With the development of the science of the human mind and human relationships, spirit is perhaps becoming more amenable again to study. Alexander Lowen (1988) brought the concept of “spirit” under scientific and therapeutic observation through the concept of bio-energy, working with the body as well as the mind. Donald Winnicott (1953, 1960), through the idea of transitional phenomena, placed the language of the mystical in a psychodynamic and scientific context. Alan Schore (2012) has provided a neurophysiological way of talking about how the unconscious process contributes to human development through relationship. Patanjali’s Yogasutra, compiled 2,000 years ago, covers similar ground in a way which remains useful and relevant and which helps in understanding the distinction between mind and body and spirit. Waitara Tēnā ia anei i te nuinga o te wā wehea ai te wairua mai i te tinana me te hinengaro, ā, meatia ai kāre e whaiwāhi hai kuapapa mātai hinengaro. I te tau 1922, ka puta te whakataunga a Ludwig Wittgenstein kāre e taea e te reo pūtaiao te kōrero mō te tūāhu, arā, ko tāna, ‘Āe ra hoki! Kāre he kupu hai whakaahua. Koianei tōna tohu atua’ (w. 90). Kua whaneke ake nei te taiao o te hinengaro me te whakawhanaungatanga, kua rata haere pea te wā wānanga wairua. Nā Alexander Lowen (1998) i mau te ariā ‘wairua’ ki raro i te tirohanga mātai hinengaro mātai haumanu mā te ariā pūngao koiora, mahiatahitia nei te tinana me te hinengaro. Nā Donald Winnicott (1953, 1960), i whakauru te reo ā-wairua ki roto i te horopaki mātauranga pūtaiao, whakahihiko hinengaro. Kua homai e Alan Schore he ara kōrerohanga mātai whaiaroaro mō te hatepenga mauri moe ki te whanaketanga o te tangata puta mai i te whakawhanaungatanga. He rite tonu te papa pōtaea e tā Patanjali Yogasutra, i whakaemihia rua mano tau ki muri, ā, e hāngai tonu ana e whai hua tonu ana hoki me te āwhina i te mātauranga whai haere i te rangatiratanga o te hinengaro te tinana me te wairua.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mrs. Jamuna P.P ◽  
Dr. Darshan Sohi

ABSTRACT The yoga is a combination of physical and mental practice of our ancient Indian philosophy. The various styles of yoga are physical postures, breathing practices and relaxation techniques. World Health Organisation (WHO) declared Complementary and Alternative Medicine of yoga to be a beneficial for increasing the immunity promote control over the mind, flexibility to the body and enhance well-being of the individuals. Key words: Yoga, stretching, stressing.


2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Traunmüller ◽  
Kerstin Gaisbachgrabner ◽  
Helmut Karl Lackner ◽  
Andreas R. Schwerdtfeger

Abstract. In the present paper we investigate whether patients with a clinical diagnosis of burnout show physiological signs of burden across multiple physiological systems referred to as allostatic load (AL). Measures of the sympathetic-adrenergic-medullary (SAM) axis and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis were assessed. We examined patients who had been diagnosed with burnout by their physicians (n = 32) and were also identified as burnout patients based on their score in the Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey (MBI-GS) and compared them with a nonclinical control group (n = 19) with regard to indicators of allostatic load (i.e., ambulatory ECG, nocturnal urinary catecholamines, salivary morning cortisol secretion, blood pressure, and waist-to-hip ratio [WHR]). Contrary to expectations, a higher AL index suggesting elevated load in several of the parameters of the HPA and SAM axes was found in the control group but not in the burnout group. The control group showed higher norepinephrine values, higher blood pressure, higher WHR, higher sympathovagal balance, and lower percentage of cortisol increase within the first hour after awakening as compared to the patient group. Burnout was not associated with AL. Results seem to indicate a discrepancy between self-reported burnout symptoms and psychobiological load.


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