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Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
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8
Mindfulness and Feelings
of Emptiness
Fabrizio Didonna and Yolanda Rosillo Gonzalez
“Nothing is as unbearable for man as to be completely at rest, without
passion, without business, without distraction, without application to
something.”
In such a state of rest man becomes aware of “his nothingness, his
foresakenness, his insufficiency, his dependence, his impotence, his
emptiness.”
Incontinently there springs from the depth of his soul “the ennui, the
blackness, the tristesse, the chagrin, the spite, the despair.”
Blaise Pascal
Introduction
The feeling of emptiness is a common symptom or phenomenological
experience found in clinical practice with several kinds of disorders. What is,
however, more difficult is finding two patients who describe this experience
in the same way. Patients report different experiences: “I feel an emptiness
inside,” “everything seems empty,” “I feel like I’m falling into a great empti-
ness,” “nothing makes sense because of the emptiness,” and many others.
Though at first sight they may appear to be very similar, some specific and
distinctive characteristics surface on closer observation. The diagnoses that
comprise these manifestations can be multiple and are recurrent in relation
to a series of disorders: from common depressive episodes to personality
disorders, even in comorbidity with other pathologies.
This phenomenon seems to be a universal human experience and might
not always seem directly linked to a pathology. All of us, at some moment in
our lives, can experience a “feeling of emptiness,” without suffering from
a mental disorder. Like many other nonspecific symptoms, the feeling of
emptiness is neither a necessary nor a sufficient reason for a frank diagnosis
although it has become one of the inclusion/exclusion nosological criteria of
borderline personality disorder (BPD) in the Diagnostic and Statistical Man-
ual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV, American Psychiatric Association, 2000).
The experience of emptiness has aroused the interest of well-known schol-
ars and has become the main subject of their writings. Unfortunately, few
thorough or rigorous studies have focused specifically on emptiness. This
may be because of the many methodological problems involved in this type
of study. For example, what do we mean by experience of emptiness? Does
this feeling of emptiness always present itself in the same way? Does it vary
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Fabrizio Didonna and Yolanda Rosillo Gonzalez
according to the disorder diagnosed? Although we will try to answer these
questions, at least in part, in this chapter, the main aim is to take the reader
through a theoretical reflection on the possible clinical use of mindfulness,
to alleviate, reduce, or eliminate the suffering caused by the experience of
emptiness as a pathological symptom.
Psychology and Emptiness
He who has a why to live, can bear almost any how
Nietzsche
The experience of emptiness has not been studied only by psychologists.
Various categories of scholars, including philosophers and theologists, have
been and still are interested in this phenomenon of human experience.
However, if we focus specifically on psychology, we can highlight some
epistemological approaches that, more than others, have tried to explain
this psychological experience. Cognitive-behavioral theory
(Linehan, 1993;
Young, 1987),
existential psychology
(Frankl, 1975, 1963;
May, 1950, 1953),
and psychoanalysis
(Kernberg, 1975; Kohut, 1971, 1977)
are some of the
theoretical perspectives that have provided important contributions to the
understanding of the experience of emptiness. These contributions will be
discussed in detail below.
Cognitive-Behavioral Theory and Feelings of Emptiness
Several cognitive-behavioral authors have suggested that the experience of
emptiness can be a sort of dysfunctional avoidance strategy in a situation of
deep subjective suffering
(Beck, Freeman et al., 1990;
Linehan, 1993;
Young,
1987).
Linehan (1993)
bases her therapeutic model on the idea that the inability to regulate and modulate painful emotions is an essential element
in explaining the behavioral difficulties of patients with BPD. These patients
present a sort of intolerance to negative emotions: “Many borderline patients
try to control their emotions simply by forcing themselves
not to feel
what
they are experiencing”
(Linehan, 1993).
Other researchers, such as Fiore and Semerari
(2003),
speak of a state of
emotional anesthesia
to avoid any suffering by which patients detach themselves from everything and everyone.
Young, Klosko, and Weishaar
(2003)
have identified various
modes
, meaning the specific emotions, cognitions, and behavior active in a person in the
here and now. Among these, the
detached protector mode
aims at isolating
the person from his needs and feelings, creating a sort of detachment with
a protection purpose. The main symptoms of this mode include depersonal-
ization, self-harm, boredom, and feelings of emptiness. These theories can be
associated with Hayes, Wilson, Gifford, Follette, and Strosahl’s (1996) asser-
tions on
experiential avoidance
.
Experiential avoidance is a putative pathological process recognized by a
wide number of theoretical orientations. Experiential avoidance is the phe-
nomenon that occurs when a person is unwilling to remain in contact with
particular private experiences (e.g., bodily sensations, emotions, thoughts,
memories, and behavioral predispositions) and takes steps to alter the form
or frequency of these events and the contexts that occasion them. We occa-
sionally use terms such as
emotional avoidance
or
cognitive avoidance
Chapter 8 Mindfulness and Feelings of Emptiness
127
rather than the more generic
experiential avoidance
when it is clear that
these are the relevant aspects of experience that the person seeks to escape,
avoid, or modify. We recognize that thoughts, memories, and emotions are
richly intermingled and do not mean to imply any necessary rigid distinc-
tion among them (although distinctions might be drawn by some theoretical
perspectives without threat to the underlying principle of experiential avoid-
The question, then, is what can a patient do if, as has been hypothesized by
the aforementioned authors, the feared stimulus is one’s own emotions? How
can a person avoid something that is not outside, but part of his or her natural
and theoretically adaptive response to the outside world? Certainly, a possi-
bility is to try
not to feel
, as was said above. Experiencing this “emptiness”
creates a detachment leading to actions aimed at distancing the subject from
the stimulus situation, that is, the negative emotions, replacing them with
physical pain (self-harm), numbness (alcohol or substance abuse), euphoria
(acting out dangerous behaviors), or physical gratification (sexual promiscu-
ity, bulimic crises), all manageable situations from the subject’s point of view.
Referring to the BPD,
Linehan (1993)
claims that exposure to an invalidating environment, where inadequate and unforeseeable answers follow the
manifestation of a person’s inner experiences, leads to the
non-recognition
or
inhibition
of negative emotions. This continuous inhibition of negative
emotions leads to emotional avoidance. The paradigm, the author claims,
is similar to learning flight behavior to avoid painful stimuli. In this case,
the emotions, meaning the complex response of the body (activation of the
central nervous system accompanied on a neurovegetative, behavioral, and
cognitive level by specific modifications), seem to be conditioned. This con-
ditioning may have been caused by a repeated process of adversive asso-
ciation stimuli such as those previously described by Linehan regarding an
invalidating environment. If we add this to specific circumstances, increases
in fear not caused by events experienced by the subject but rather by the
simple repeated presentation of discriminative and conditioned stimuli, con-
nected to such events
(Sanavio, 1991),
we find that even simple physical sensations, previously associated with a negative emotion, can produce a
phenomenon known as
incubation of fear
. The sense of emptiness could
be triggered by the simple arising of one of these discriminative stimuli, pre-
ceding the activation of the negative emotions, which the subject avoids and
sometimes fails to recognize.
Existential Psychology
Viktor Frankl coined the term “existential vacuum” (1963; 1973), and aspects
of the meaning of this term come close in meaning to the term “emptiness”
as described in this chapter. Frankl posits that humans have a “will to mean-
ing,” which is as basic to them as the will to power or the will to pleasure.
The frustration of the will to meaning results, in Frankl’s estimation, in a
“noogenic neurosis” – an abyss experience
(Hazell, 2003).
If meaning is what you desire, then meaninglessness is a hole, an emptiness, in our lives. Whenever you have a vacuum, of course, things rush in to fill it.
Frankl (1963)
suggests that one of the most conspicuous signs of existential vacuum in
our society is boredom. He points out how often people, when they finally
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Fabrizio Didonna and Yolanda Rosillo Gonzalez
have the time to do what they want, don’t seem to want to do anything,
for example, people go into a tailspin when they retire, students get drunk
every weekend, and people submerge themselves in passive entertainment
every evening. He calls this the “Sunday neurosis” and defines it as “that
kind of depression which afflicts those who become aware of the lack of
content in their lives when the rush of the busy week is over and the void
within themselves becomes manifest”
(Frankl, 1963,
p. 169). The result of this is an attempt to fill our existential vacuums with “stuff” that, because
it provides some satisfaction, we hope will provide ultimate satisfaction as
well; for example, we might try to fill our lives with pleasure, eating beyond
all necessity, having promiscuous sex, living “the high life;” we might seek
power, especially the power represented by monetary success; we might fill
our lives with “busyness,” conformity, and conventionality; or we might fill