Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
Tags: #Science, #Physics, #Crystallography, #Chemistry, #Inorganic
Williams, J. M. G., Teasdale, J. D., Segal, Z. V., & Soulsby, J. (2000). Mindfulness-
based cognitive therapy reduces overgeneral autobiographical memory in formerly
depressed patients.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 109
, 150–155.
Williams, J. M. G., Van der Does, A. J. W., Barnhofer, T., Crane, C., & Segal, Z. V.
(in press). Cognitive reactivity, suicidal ideation and future fluency: preliminary
investigation of a differential activation theory of hopelessness/suicidality.
Cogni-
tive Therapy and Research
.
13
Mindfulness and Borderline
Personality Disorder
Shireen L. Rizvi, Stacy Shaw Welch, and Sona Dimidjian
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a severe personality disorder
characterized by prominent and pervasive dysregulation of emotion, behav-
ior, and cognition. Current diagnostic criteria for BPD include difficulties
with interpersonal relationships, affective instability, problems with anger,
destructive impulsive behaviors, frantic efforts to avoid abandonment, prob-
lems with self-identity, chronic feelings of emptiness, transient dissociative
symptoms and/or paranoid ideation, and suicidal behaviors (American Psy-
chiatric Association,
2000).
In order for a diagnosis to be made, at least five of these nine criteria must be present beginning in early adulthood and lasting for several years.
Of all psychiatric disorders, BPD represents one of the more challenging
to manage and treat within the mental health system for several reasons.
First, individuals with BPD utilize mental health treatment at highly dispro-
portionate rates. Although prevalence rates indicate that 1–2% of the general
population meet criteria for BPD, it is estimated that between 9 and 40% of
high inpatient services utilizers have a diagnosis of BPD
(Surber et al., 1987;
Swigar, Astrachan, Levine, Mayfield, & Radovich, 1991).
Second, a diagnosis of BPD is associated with a number of “therapy interfering behaviors” which
makes administration of consistent treatment difficult. High dropout rates
of up to 60% are not uncommon in treatment studies for BPD and usually
occur within the first three to six months of treatment regardless of actual
planned treatment length
(Kelly et al., 1992; Skodol, Buckley, & Charles,
1983; Waldinger and Gunderson, 1984).
Other behaviors that interfere with therapy and may lead to therapist burn-out are storming out of sessions early
or not leaving when the session is over, throwing objects, not showing up for
appointments or showing up extremely late, not paying for therapy, or not
doing assigned tasks
(Linehan, 1993a; Stone, 2000).
Third, individuals with BPD often carry diagnoses for several disorders at the same time. Mood disorders, especially major depression, are most commonly observed, but rates
of other Axis I disorders, including eating disorders, substance use disorders,
and PTSD are also quite high
(Lieb, Schmahl, Linehan, & Bohus, 2004;
Skodol et al.,
2002).
Finally, BPD is associated with high risk of lethality. BPD is the only DSM-IV diagnosis for which chronic attempts to harm or kill oneself is
a criterion and studies have demonstrated up to 8% of individuals with BPD
ultimately commit suicide
(Linehan, Rizvi, Shaw Welch, & Page, 2000).
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Shireen L. Rizvi, Stacy Shaw Welch, and Sona Dimidjian
Fortunately, recent advances in the field have led to promising treatments
for BPD. Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), originally developed by Line-
han for suicidal individuals with BPD (Linehan, 1993a, b), has received the
most empirical support thus far, with nine randomized clinical trials demon-
strating its efficacy (see
Linehan & Dexter-Mazza, 2007,
for a review). DBT is also one of the first psychosocial treatments for any disorder to incorporate
mindfulness as a core component.
Overview of DBT for BPD
DBT is a cognitive-behavioral therapy infused with acceptance strategies.
The central “dialectic” in DBT exists in the tension between accepting the
client exactly as he/she is in that moment and simultaneously pushing toward
change and creating a life worth living. Change is achieved through standard
cognitive-behavioral strategies, such as functional analyses, contingency man-
agement, cognitive restructuring, exposure, and skills training. Acceptance
is an active process, demonstrated through the use of validation strategies
In its standard form, four components comprise the treatment: weekly
individual psychotherapy, weekly group skills training sessions, as-needed
telephone consultation, and weekly consultation team meetings involving all
DBT therapists. Guidelines for conducting individual sessions specify that
treatment should address clearly prioritized targets. These targets include, in
order of priority: life threatening behaviors including suicidal/self-harm and
homicidal urges and actions, behaviors that interfere with or threaten ther-
apy, severe Axis I disorders, and patterns that preclude a reasonable quality
of life. In addition, sessions are structured to begin with a review of the diary
card, which is a monitoring form that the client completes daily to record
urges, behavior, skills use, and emotional experiences that arose in week
since the preceding session. Skills training sessions function similar to a class
and follow a particular agenda each week designed to enhance skills capa-
bilities in four domains: mindfulness, interpersonal effectiveness, emotion
regulation, and distress tolerance
(Linehan, 1993b).
Biosocial Theory and the Development and Maintenance
of BPD Symptomatology
Linehan’s biosocial theory of BPD posits that the disorder is primarily a dys-
function of the emotion regulation system. From this perspective, BPD crite-
rion behaviors can be seen as either attempts to regulate negative emotions
or inexorable consequences of dysregulated emotions. Furthermore, the
theory states that this emotion regulation dysfunction develops over time.
The theory posits that there is a transaction between a biological tendency
toward intense emotionality and an “invalidating environment” (see
Linehan,
1993a),
which often punishes, corrects, or ignores behavior independent of its actual validity. Through interactions with this environment, the individual
learns to discount the validity of their own emotional responses and often
looks to external cues for information on how to respond. In addition, the
individual learns to form unrealistic goals and expectations for themselves
Chapter 13 Mindfulness and Borderline Personality Disorder
247
and others. As a consequence of this learning over time, a person with BPD
tends to oscillate between emotional inhibition (shutting down emotional
responses) and extreme emotional styles. Furthermore, Linehan theorized
that a central problem in individuals with BPD is that their experience of
emotions is different than individuals without BPD in three specific domains.
First, individuals with BPD have lower thresholds to emotional cues. Second,
BPD individuals have higher reactivity to emotional cues, meaning that their
responses are more extreme more quickly than other individuals. Third, in
BPD, a slower return to baseline following an emotion episode is theorized
to be evident. These three characteristics are a result of both the biological
deficit and the invalidating environment, proposed in the biosocial theory,
and inevitably lead to a life filled with intense emotions, interpersonal diffi-
culties, coping problems, and dysfunctional behaviors, which often function
(no matter how short-lived) to ease the pain and suffering of such intolerable
emotional states.
Addressing Emotion Dysregulation Through
Mindfulness in DBT
The core mindfulness skills in DBT are designed to help individuals focus
more on the present moment, letting go of memories of the past and worry
about the future. The seven concrete skills also target the difficulties that are
inevitable consequences of the pervasive emotion dysregulation described
above. These difficulties include problems that occur under highly aroused
states with processing new information vital to learning, longstanding pat-
terns of self-invalidation, and impulsive behavior that occurs in the context
of emotional arousal and that functions to decrease emotional suffering in
the short-term. Mindfulness skills, described below, are taught routinely in
group skills training.
In addition to the teaching of mindfulness in skills groups, the individual
therapist also frequently incorporates mindfulness into individual therapy.
Therapy is an opportunity (though often an unwelcome one!) during which
individuals with BPD are put into direct contact with emotional cues that
they generally try to avoid. Being asked to describe a recent negative inter-
action with a partner or recount their latest self-injurious act about which
they feel intense shame can cause highly dysregulated states. A goal of DBT
is to have the individual learn to be skillful in all relevant contexts, including
during times of difficulty. Mindfulness skills are used within sessions, then,
to help the individual begin to regulate his or her emotions in an effective
manner. Mindfulness practice helps a client with BPD in four overlapping
ways: (1) increasing attentional control, (2) increasing awareness of private
experience, (3) decreasing impulsive action, and (4) increasing self-validation
(Lynch, Chapman, Rosenthal, Kuo, & Linehan, 2006).
Increased attentional control occurs through an emphasis on full partici-
pation in each moment. This focus on the current moment initially requires
constant effort as most individuals report that they very infrequently do this.
Clients in distress might be asked to focus on their breath as it comes in and
out of their nostrils as a way of drawing awareness to this one moment. This
focus of attention also allows for a client to begin to practice experiencing
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Shireen L. Rizvi, Stacy Shaw Welch, and Sona Dimidjian
and attending to their own states (emotions/urges/thoughts) without doing
anything to eliminate them. By doing so, clients become more aware of their
private experience and can begin to label a thought as a thought, a feeling
as a feeling without judgment. An added benefit of these skills is an increase
in insight of possible precipitants and consequences of maladaptive behav-
ior (e.g., “I realize that the thought ‘I’m a horrible person’ went through
my mind before I had the urge to harm myself” or “I noticed a decrease in
anger immediately after I injured myself”). This insight helps in contributing
to comprehensive behavioral assessment of maladaptive behavior, which is
the foundation of all cognitive-behavioral treatment.
Furthermore, this greater awareness also leads to more effective solutions
in that the individual learns to “ride out” impulsive urges. By just noticing
physiological sensations or thoughts without doing anything to try to overtly
change them, individuals learn to accept and tolerate them through mind-
fulness. The behavioral conceptualization of destructive behaviors charac-
teristic of BPD (e.g., substance use, suicidal behavior) specifies that such
behaviors are frequently negatively reinforced due to the immediate reduc-
tion in emotional distress that follows such behavior. Because individuals
have learned to engage in such behaviors over time, they have typically
not
learned that emotional distress will dissipate on its own.
Finally, mindfulness targets the self-invalidating behavior so common to
clients with BPD. According to the biosocial theory, individuals with BPD
have often grown up in environments that consistently modeled invalidation.
Thus, many have learned to self-invalidate over time. Such self-invalidation
typically presents in treatment through the often repeated words of “I can’t”
and “I shouldn’t” as they apply to what clients think, what they feel, and who
they are. The ubiquity of self-invalidation among clients with BPD is particu-
larly troubling given the research on the effects of thought suppression and
avoidance. These studies demonstrate a clear pattern in which thought sup-
pression and avoidance have the paradoxical consequence of
increasing
the
very thoughts and feelings one attempts to decrease
(Gross & John, 2003;
Wegner, 1994).
One of the functions of mindfulness interventions in DBT
is to target explicitly self-invalidation among clients with BPD. Mindfulness
teaches clients to approach experience with a nonjudgmental and accepting
stance. Through practice, clients learn to apply these skills to thoughts and
feelings that they may have learned through past experience to invalidate
automatically. In these ways, mindfulness strategies can help to interrupt the
cycle of intense emotion and the paradoxical effects of invalidation.