Articles on Primal Therapy, psychogenesis, causes of psychological traumas, brain development, psychotherapies, neuropsychology, neuropsychotherapy. Discussions about causes of anxiety, depression, psychosis, consequences of the birth trauma and life before birth.
Friday, August 19, 2016
On the Difference Between Abreaction and Feeling (Part 9/15)
The idea is to remain in the feeling zone, the only zone where connection can take place. Outside of the Primal Zone, no integration is possible. This is why it helps for the therapist to have at least a modicum of brain science at his disposal. In some cases, for example, we know that the use of tranquilizers can help get the patient into the zone for a time. This is not in lieu of therapy but as an aid to it.
Now why is the wrong feeling addressed? Because when a therapist has unresolved feelings of her own she will tend to drive the patient where she needs to go.(2) Or worse, she will avoid feelings of the patient that she is not ready for. As for example, anger. If the therapist is terrified of hostility, she will shut it down in the patient.
She won’t let the patient go near it, and the feeling will remain unresolved. If the therapist cannot be criticized, she will dodge any blame and try to make any error the patient’s fault instead of hers. This is the most widespread of problems with therapists. Above all, we want to avoid confining the patient to his ideational cortex to the neglect of feeling. In other words, we want to avoid precisely the predominant therapeutic approach in contemporary psychotherapy, which is Cognitive Behavioral. The cognitivists really do believe it’s all in your head, that changing thoughts can change behavior. To me, Ideas signify something “disembodied.” When a therapist lives in the world of ideas there won’t be much feeling there; one reason is that feelings seem secondary to them. Ideas, they agree, are paramount and have value.
By contrast, a full, feeling experience in the Primal sense means that that we are not confined to the neocortical level where ideas and intellect live. What we are after is to hook up the primitive, lower levels of the brain with higher levels so that there is a proper connection. This means that the historical need/feeling/pain has been fully experienced with all of our being.
And how do we know when a real feeling has taken place? We can verify it, physiologically. Before and after every session, we systematically measure vital signs of each patient. During a real Primal, we expect to the vital signs move pretty much together – up at the start and back down towards the end of a session. Over months there is a constant normalization of vital signs so that the blood pressure, heart rate and body temp get reset to the normal range after some months of therapy. Over time, there is also a significant drop in cortisol levels and enhanced natural killer cells. (See my book “Primal Healing” for further discussion.) Measurable metabolic changes also include a permanent one-degree lowering of body temperature; since body temperature is a key factor in our longevity and the work of our bodies, it is an important index. In addition, our research found that after one year of our therapy there were systematic changes in brain function toward a more harmonized cerebral system. It all means that we are getting to the pain and undoing repression.
That is not the case with abreaction. In a feeling without context, which is an abreaction, there is never this kind of organized, coordinated movement of vital functions. Instead, a random discharge of energy from the feeling/pain will produce a sporadic, disorganized movement of vital signs. There is no harmony to the system. Thus, when vital signs do not reflect integration, we can be sure that connection never took place. By these measures, “thinking” that we feel and actually having a real feeling are neurologic worlds apart.
2 Excuse me for jumping between the masculine and feminine pronouns, using “him and he” interchangeable with “her and she.” I get very tired of trying to balance he and she, so be aware that my heart and mind are in the right place.
"Excuse me for jumping between the masculine and feminine pronouns, using “him and he” interchangeable with “her and she.” I get very tired of trying to balance he and she, so be aware that my heart and mind are in the right place"
ReplyDeletewhy not just use 'they', or 'the patient'? I have to say I find it one of the very few things about your writing I don't like; it's confusing jumping one to the other all the time.
I have a different view of the he/she balance, Raindog. It is refreshing to me to feel included in the discussion with a she/her pronoun. For so many years all I have read was: 'he this, he that' to describe someone. On the other hand I don't want the males to feel left out, nor that only females have emotional issues, so I think he/him should be included. And I think if 'patient' or 'they' were used it would sound distant and impersonal. I'm for 'affirmative action' and think it helps.
DeleteSheri, As you wish Madam. art
DeleteTo experience is not to think about the experience!
ReplyDeleteThe need in our therapy is so important to find because the memories of madness is so catastrophic. Our critical window just swishes past... but can we catch it at the time when it is most important for our need to be discovered then we have gained a lot. Finding our needs is often found in our everyday lives but then we tie it up to someone "if we dare" who has nothing to do with it. If we do not dare... so we react with anxiety. So... anxiety is almost at par with our needs as it is to being threatened to have it... a tricky moment.
I do not know... but I think Art works a lot with just finding the need and not just helping out in anxiety and depression although that is what we mostly seek help for. It can be a sophisticated order to turn the wheel of anxiety to capture the need for what anxiety is an symtom. I think this is important for us not to get caught up in JUST anxiety.
This blog is in many ways my mentor... I write what I think and experience... and I see the responses I get. Thanks to you all! Yes... your silence is also an answer?
Your Frank.
Art
ReplyDeleteYou've done a lot of good to man kind.
Thanks Piotr. art
DeleteHello Piotr Urbaskin!
DeleteThe inability to perceive science... it to be proven... can not be proven until inability has been seen its day!
Congratulations to Art:s greatness for what he showed humanity must probably wait for his time as primal therapy seems to be far from being established as being the only way to handle anxiety and depression etc.
But it does not take away Art:s greatness. He is there... where science tells us about the truth impossible to deny... it if we can manage to see it. A science to be proven as can't not be seen because of its place in our brain. A fucking science to be proven!
Your Frank
Frank, Well thanks so much for all your kind letters love art
DeleteDear Art!
DeleteMy thanks to you!
Your thanks opened my critical window for a while and my tears flowed for what my need was showed. Scared and uncertain I didn't say anything at all... I felt like a trembling leaf that fell without knowing where to land.
Your Frank
Art, from Merriam-Webster Dictionary:
ReplyDelete-------------------
They, their, them, themselves: English lacks a common-gender third person singular pronoun that can be used to refer to indefinite pronouns (as everyone, anyone, someone). Writers and speakers have supplied this lack by using the plural pronouns
"and every one to rest themselves betake" — Shakespeare.
"I would have everybody marry if they can do it properly — Jane Austen.
"it is too hideous for anyone in their senses to buy" — W. H. Auden.
The plural pronouns have also been put to use as pronouns of indefinite number to refer to singular nouns that stand for many persons,
"'tis meet that some more audience than a mother, since nature makes them partial, should o'erhear the speech" — Shakespeare.
"a person can't help their birth — W. M. Thackeray.
"no man goes to battle to be killed. — But they do get killed" — G. B. Shaw.
The use of they, their, them, and themselves as pronouns of indefinite gender and indefinite number is well established in speech and writing, even in literary and formal contexts. This gives you the option of using the plural pronouns where you think they sound best, and of using the singular pronouns (as he, she, he or she, and their inflected forms) where you think they sound best.
------------------------------
This is meant to help. A patient won't usually tell you this kind of thing. They may just assume you have some agenda, whereas in fact you are just trying to neutralize a male bias.
Methinks you have been speaking French too much! Imagine, a language where every noun (and pronoun) has gender. OMG.
I just found an excellent article on this issue: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_neutrality_in_languages_with_grammatical_gender
There I learned that Spanish is just like French and German. Arrrgh!!!
I thought you said Costa Rica is sane.
Grahame
Grahame, oyeh for the literati among us. I did say Costa Rica and France are sane countries. You are watching my syntax. art
DeleteI totally agree that we need something more in the language to help with these situations. My point remains that when reading several paragraphs covering some patient's experiences or reactions etc., it's mentally jarring to jump between he and she. Several times I have thought you must have changed to discussing someone new.
DeleteI understand the issue about male bias, but I just don't think we should let political correctness get in the way of sense.
And I don't really care if you switch to using she all the time. Its continuity and clarity I care about.
Grahame... to start somewhere!?
DeleteIf I should carry with me all the grammar you talk about... so I'd feel my self lost in the sentences without meaning to its importance! I mean... I would not be able to get out of the sentence for what words meaningless insulates me without its significance... its companion... the limbic systemt... my self... my need. How can I possibly learn it for what it takes?
Your Frank
Frank, I must use words. I picked up on Art's footnote about switching from he to she because I was aware that there was a way around that in English. It's simple and didn't require that long quote from the Dictionary. Sorry. I can get carried away with words but when feelings are close words lead me in like a whirlpool.
DeleteOther times I get frustrated with words because they can not convey what is important to me, and they can lead me on a wild goose chase, and they can not help me guide someone else to resolving their pain.
But words are all I have to get the necessary documents and take the necessary steps to get me where I want to be in this broken world. So I try to have fun with it while avoiding the traps that Banks and other businesses lay for me.
Thanks to Art's therapy and this blog, including your efforts, I have far fewer bouts of giving up and sinking into depression. I have found a good Bank believe it or not and a good telephone service. I can sense when someone is genuinely trying to help me as opposed to trying to please their boss and get paid. There are a few businesses among the big ones here in Brisbane, Australia, that seem to know how to pick good people and how to train them to do the right thing by the customer. I am also getting better at expressing my needs without beating around the bush. This makes a huge difference to how things are coming out for me.
All this has happened since I moved to Brisbane searching for a better environment and social connections. It is all happening some 30 years after I was at the Primal Institute as they tried as best they knew at that time to work with someone who had been pushed into abreaction of 1st line pain (about 2 weeks of age and younger) with the use of drugs and Reichian style bodywork.
Now I don't push or reach for feelings. Sometimes I feel like it's all too hard and I lay down and that's when deep feelings can surface. Other times I may be walking or on a bus or ferry and tears will flow and some insights follow.
I don't mean for anyone to follow me in what I do with words or how I approach therapy or do anything else.
With that post on grammar, I just started out to say thank you. Funny isn't it?
Grahame
What it is we are holding up against is catastrophic memories... as are in a electrochemical process in our limbick system... flooded of its kind. A disaster if it flood our neocortex. It can be likened to what happens the people in US which now are affected by floods and forest fires which devastates the possibility of survival if you do not flee!
ReplyDeleteWe suffer disastrous if we are flooded... where ever in ours brain... and what we are flooded by burning like fire in the smallest gene as becomes sentences on its way in trying to tell us about what is happening. Hopefully we can hold it and let as much in as we possibly can manage... it to not drown in what we were as kids... it when we so eagerly wanted to say something we never said... something that the critical window tells us about today if we could only perceive the mood and the language we spoke at the time. The mood we had is now only in an adult body in attempts to deny it... something we just need to accept!
What now hurts is to be the child we were when we were exposed to pain... a pain we now suffer from and is so hard to overcome... but so close in all of our nervous and anxiety attacks.
Frank
happy birthday arthur, nice to have been born on the same day as yours. your work has been life changing.
ReplyDeleteblessings!!!
shunyo
Well Thank you Shunyo, I am honored for the same day! art
DeleteDear Art,
ReplyDeleteWishing you a very happy birthday and many more to come.
Thank you for all the good that you have brought into the world.
Jean
Well Jean, it is always so good to hear from you. I wish you a good life too. art
DeleteHappy Birthday.
ReplyDeleteYou made my life better.
Please keep writing.
I will try as long as I can. Thanks for the encouragement art
DeleteWhat more can anyone hear than “You made my life better.” art
DeleteWell, you saved mine, that's for sure. I even bought a t-shirt that says "Art Saves Lives"; says it all for me...
DeleteI need a Tshirt like that since I discovered a therapy that a saved my life too. art
DeleteHi Art,
ReplyDeletehappy birthday to you. By the way, your books and essays make sense of my suffering and therefore make my suffering bearable. There is nothing worse than pain that has no explanation; a perfect recipe for acting in and abreaction that would be. . .
Paul G.