Title: Continuity and Discontinuity: cognitive science and psychotherapeutic perspectives'
1 Continuity and Discontinuity cognitive science
and psychotherapeutic perspectives.
-
- Isabel Clarke
- Consultant Clinical Psychologist.
2 What I hope to cover
- Outline the discontinuity hypothesis
- Ground this in cognitive theory
- Implications for therapy
- Third Wave Cognitive therapy
- my additions to CBT for psychosis
- Wider Vision of the person
3Instead of psychosis and spirituality, I propose
two ways of operating in the world
- The everyday
- The transliminal
- Both of these are available to all human beings.
- THE DISCONTINUITY exists between these two
states.
4The Everyday TheTransliminal
- Ordinary
- Clear limits
- Access to full memory and learning
- Precise meanings available
- Separation between people
- Clear sense of self
- Emotions moderated and grounded
- Numinous
- Unbounded
- Access to ordinary knowledge/memory is patchy
- Connections abound - or all is meaningless
- Self lost in the whole or supremely important
- Emotions swing between extremes or absent
5Looking at this cognitively
- Two complementary approaches
- Kellys Personal Construct Theory
- Interacting Cognitive Subsystems (Teasdale and
Barnard).
6Constructs
- Are based on past experience/memory
- New experience is filtered through our constructs
- They colour and help to define our world
- Each persons construct system is unique to them.
7Transliminal Experience operating Beyond the
Construct System
- No means of anticipating or discriminating
- A state without boundaries
- Both/and - two contradictory things can be
simultaneously valid
8Beyond Constructs and Boundaries
- Liberating ecstatic one with the universe
- BUT
- Mind is no longer private
- Open to any influence or insertion
- Loss of the construct safe/dangerous - danger
can come from anywhere. - The boundary between inner and outer is lost.
9 Interacting Cognitive Subsystems Teasdale
Barnard 1993.
- An information processing model of cognition,
developed through extensive research into memory
and limitations on processing. - 9 subsystems, each with its own type of coding.
- Some deal with sensory perception - auditory and
visual - Some deal with language processing
- There are two higher order systems the
propositional and the implicational.
10 Interacting Cognitive Subsystems Teasdale
Barnard 1993.
- An information processing model of cognition,
developed through extensive research into memory
and limitations on processing. - 9 subsystems, each with its own type of coding.
- Some deal with sensory perception - auditory and
visual - Some deal with language processing
- There are two higher order systems the
propositional and the implicational.
11Interacting Cognitive Subsystems.
Body State subsystem
Implicational subsystem
Auditory ss.
Implicational Memory
Visual ss.
Verbal ss.
Propositional subsystem
Propositional Memory
12Important Features of this model
- Our subjective experience is the result of two
higher order processing systems interacting
neither is in overall control. - Each has a different character, corresponding to
hot and cool cognition. - The IMPLICATIONAL Subsystem manages emotion and
therefore relationship. - Presumabley, the verbal, logical, PROPOSITIONAL
ss. gives us our sense of individual self.
13Two Ways of Knowing
- Good everyday functioning good communication
between implicational/relational and
propositional - At high and at low arousal, the relational ss
becomes dominant - This gives us a different quality of experience
one that is both sought and shunned. - Managing that good communication is key
Teasdale was a pioneer in introducing Mindfulness
to CBT.
14I suggest
- Both ways of encountering reality are equally
valid - Both are intrinsically incomplete
- Human beings have always honoured the
transliminal - Made space for the sacred.
15Advantages of this model
- It clarifies the characteristics of the
transliminal - both/and, not either/or
- paradox
- numinosity
- It brings psychosis into the realm of universal
human experience - It helps to explain common psychotic experiences,
such as - thought insertion
- distortions in the sense of self
- It raises interesting questions around scientific
enquiry into the transpersonal.
16Third Wave Cognitive Therapies
- Developments in CBT as it tackles personality
disorder, psychosis etc. - Therapeutic relationship important
- Past history is significant
- Change lies not so much in altering thought to
alter feeling, but in altering the persons
relationship to both thought and feeling - Mindfulness is a key component.
- Role of mindfulness in managing the threshold
between the two ways of knowing.
17Third Wave term coined by Hayes (Acceptance
Commitment Therapy)
- Kabat-Zinn. Applied mindfulness to stress and
pain. - Segal, Teasdale Williams. Mindfulness Based
Cognitive Therapy (relapse in depression.) - Linehan. Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (BPD)
- Chadwick. Mindfulness groups for voices.
- Hayes
18Parallel Developments in other modalities
- Bateman and Fonagy Mentalisation. Promotes
theory of mind,collaboratively and through skills
training. - Developments in Cognitive Analytic Therapy for
severe personality disorders.
19 DIALECTICAL BEHAVIOUR THERAPY Linehans STATES
OF MIND
REASONABLE MIND
WISE MIND
IN THE PRESENT IN CONTROL
20Working with Psychosis using the Discontinuity
Model
- Managing arousal the transliminal is accessible
at both high and low arousal - Validate the experience
- Validate the feeling
- Persuasion to join shared reality
- Sensitivity normalisation based on Claridges
work on schizotypy.
21The Relational Mind
- Developmentally, we make sense of ourselves only
in relation to others. - We grow, and are moulded, through relationship
all relationship. - The self sufficient, atomistic, mind is an
illusion - Our verbal, propositional ss. sets a limit on
what we can know precisely - We can reach out in relationship beyond that
limit.
22Web of Relationships
In Rel. with earth non humans etc.
In Rel. with wider group etc.
primary care-giver
Self as experienced in relationship with
primary caregiver
Sense of value comes from rel. with the spiritual
23- Spiritual Crisis Network.
- www.spiritualcrisisnetwork.org.uk
- My website (publications)
- www.scispirit.com/Psychosis_Spirituality/
- Chris Clarke Ed.2005. Ways of Knowing science
and mysticism today. Exeter Imprint Academic.
- Clarke, I. Ed. (2001) Psychosis and Spirituality
exploring the new frontier. London Whurr.