In Service of the Self: A Psychosomatic Paradigm
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By: Ursula Stehle, Ph.D.
Earlier this year I spent several weeks in Germany to be with my family but also to see how Europeans address psychological healing, and how it has evolved since I left twenty years ago. I visited the Filder Clinic in Stuttgart, and two psychosoÂmatic clinics in Freiburg: the Friedrich Grodeck Clinic, and the Psychosomatic University Clinic. The Filder Clinic is a private general hospital that offers medical and therapeutic services exÂtended to include anthroposophical treatments. What was striking to me, when I compared the three hospitals, was not their differÂences but their similarities. All three used art and movement theraÂpies to support the healing process. In my conversations with practitioners I learned that both psychological and medical treatÂments have come to incorporate expressive therapies in their canon of offerings. All three hospitals have embraced an understanding of disease as rooted in body and soul, and all three hospitals consider their treatment psychosomatic. In Europe, the term 'psychosoÂmatic' means originating in both psyche and body. In the US, the same term generally implies that one's physical symptoms are generÂated in the mind and therefore made up, and not real. However, the term currently is undergoing redefinition as practitioners and scientists reevaluate and re-vision healing.
Over the past five to ten years, neurologists have discovÂered that body and mind are not separate, finding that emoÂtional experiences affect every organ and tissue in our body. Our proverbial "gut feeling," or "broken heart" are no longer metaphors alone but have a physiological basis. Emotions maniÂfest not only in our mind but in our organs, intestine, limbs, and skin. With this research science affirms what we have alÂways intuitively known, that the human being is a totality of body and mind. Chronic physical symptoms and illnesses, alÂways have deep roots in emotional experience, and psychologiÂcal/psychiatric problems are not strictly the domain of the mind but always also manifest as bodily symptoms.
How do psychotherapy, art, movement, and meditation support mind/body integration? In meditation, we observe feelÂing responses without changing, judging, or attaching to them; in movement therapy we pay attention to movement and conÂscious gesture, expressing inner experience in time and space; and therapeutic art directly works with our senses and feeling responses. Aside from its diagnostic function, therapeutic arts bring unconscious feelings to consciousness. Feelings locked in the body without conscious voice may have become expressed through symptoms.
In psychotherapy, through genuine relationship and the metaÂphoric use of language, we again become aligned with the central organizing force within us, our Self or Ego. The capital letters here refer to an inner organizing principle that allows us to remain conÂnected to our individual destinies, not to the short-term gratificaÂtions of self. When we become aligned again with our Self/Ego, we free our feeling life from the blockage of judgment, and emotional expression again can function as a riverbed that connects and comÂmunicates between body and mind.
Mainstream psychiatric, and to a lesser degree psychologiÂcal therapies have increasingly embraced a "broken brain" paraÂdigm, with the result that emotional problems have been primarily seen as chemical imbalances and dysfunction. Our minds and souls have been reduced to bodily functions, and became mired in matter. Substances in the form of Prozac, Lithium, Xanax, and others are given to fix these imbalances. However, not only is the response to these drugs limited, they also carry significant risks that need to be carefully weighed, before a perÂson embarks on interfering with the complicated and interconÂnected biochemical balance in our brains and bodies.
In my psychological practice, therapists are generally comÂmitted to taking a path of least intrusion in their efforts to bring understanding and health to the individual. The path of least intrusion suggests that we first approach a condition or probÂlem by attempting to understand what may have caused the symptomatic reaction. It further explores, how the specific sympÂtom expression can be understood in the context of a unique and important life that is striving toward becoming more healthy and whole. The therapeutic process of expansion, meaning acÂtive exploration and making conscious that which has lived deeply hidden within ourselves, is complemented by dynamic contraction, which includes holding, valuing, and observation of emotional content.
Both movement and art deepen the processes initiated by the psychotherapist by making previously unconscious material accessible to our senses. just as we have given up our own creÂative talents, in the face of the perfection that media images and movie stars offer us, so have we often given up our own individual and subjective experiences to culturally desirable ones. As we struggle to express ourselves through an artistic medium, we use our senses in a new and fresh way. In this way we are all artists.
Ursula Stehle, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist in Fair Oaks, CaliforÂnia. She is committed to supporting the body through natural medicines, the soul through artistic and psychotherapeutic offerings, and the human spirit through the quality of the therapeutic environment. Dr. Stehle holds diplomats in psychopharmacology, and severe mental illness, and is Assistant Professor at the Professional School of Psychology in Sacramento. She can be reached with questions and comments at her e-mail address: stehle@prodigy.net
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