Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
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& Gilbert, 2008). It should be noted, however, that much of the therapeu-
tic work is often focused on the fear of, resistance to, or inability to, feel
compassion for the self.
Conclusion
This chapter looked at a neurophysiological model of psychological sensi-
tivities and explored ways in which mindfulness and compassion-focused
therapies may impact on neurophysiological systems. Mindfulness oper-
ates through attentional training which facilitates different brain states and
enables people to gain new insights and management over distressing
thoughts, feelings and memories. Compassion-focused therapies utilise mind-
fulness but in the service of creating compassionate feelings and thoughts
within oneself. One of the reasons for doing this is because trying to gen-
erate compassionate feelings within oneself will stimulate a particular kind
of affect system which has soothing qualities. It was suggested that such a
system evolved with attachment and gives rise to attachment-type feelings of
calming, sense of connectedness and empathy for others.
Mindfulness teaches a non-judgemental observing of the arising and
emergence of thoughts and feelings onto the screen of our consciousness.
Compassionate mind training utilises this but also focuses on (re)directing
attention, with a focus on trying to generate feelings of warmth, gentleness
and kindness
(Gilbert, 2000;
Gilbert & Irons, 2005).
When people feel threatened and traumatised and have few emotional memories or schema of being
helped, loved or wanted, they may not be able to access their soothing and
reassurance affect system. Through processes that involve learning to nur-
ture compassionate attention, thinking, imagery, behaviour and feeling, peo-
ple can be trained to develop a self-compassion orientation to themselves
and difficulties. This orientation aims to shift focus from the threat system to
the soothing system and may be especially helpful in the face of high affect
and when engaging with painful emotional memories.
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7
The Use of Metaphor to Establish
Acceptance and Mindfulness
Alethea A. Varra, Claudia Drossel, and Steven C. Hayes
All instruction is but a finger pointing to the moon. He whose gaze is
fixed upon the pointer will never see beyond.
Buddhist Allegory
Figurative speech plays two distinct roles in clinical psychology: It serves as
a useful clinical tool and guides clinicians’ conceptualizations of presenting
problems and subsequent interventions (see
Leary, 1990,
for a discussion of metaphor in the history of psychology). Given its utility it is not surprising that metaphors, allegories, similes, analogies, adages, and maxims
are found across therapeutic interventions
(Blenkiron, 2005; Eynon, 2002;
Lyddon, Clay, & Sparks, 2001; Otto, 2000).
The current chapter focuses on the functions of figurative speech that are especially related to acceptance-and mindfulness-based approaches. We are emphasizing on acceptance and
commitment therapy (ACT, said as one word, not initials; Hayes, Strosahl,
& Wilson,
1999)
both because we know it well and because it seems to raise the key issues in this area that apply to mindfulness approaches more
generally.
ACT is a therapeutic approach that focuses on the creation of psycholog-
ical flexibility by undermining the overextended impact of literal, temporal,
and evaluative human language and cognition. The basic theory underlying
ACT views human verbal abilities as a two-edged sword, allowing us to solve