Mindfulness: Meditation Vs. Skill Set  October 7, 2010By 4u Articles
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As a long term yogic and vipassana meditator, and a mindfulness-based
psychotherapist who regularly teaches meditation practices to my
patients, I find the growth of mindfulness as a clinical intervention
very timely. Last year, I attended two conferences focused on the use of
mindfulness as a clinical intervention: Meditation and Psychotherapy at
Harvard Medical School and Mindfulness and Psychotherapy at UCLA.

Interestingly, the conference at Harvard featured a greater percentage
of presenters who do not use meditation as an intervention in their
clinical work. For them, mindfulness is a teachable skill set,
extrapolated from a way of viewing life gained from sustained Buddhist
meditation practices.

These presenters included: Steven Hayes, founder of ACT, Lizbeth Roemer,
U Mass GAD researcher and clinician, Tal Ben-Shahar, Harvard Lecturer on
Positive Psychology, and Jayme Shorin, LICSW, sensorimotor trainer. The
fact that the organizers of the Harvard conference felt it necessary to
devote over half of the presentation time to methodologies that do not
include meditation was, for me, significant.

Though this might be expected at a Mindfulness and Psychotherapy
conference, in fact the UCLA conference featured more presenters
discussing the use of meditation and compassion practices as a clinical
intervention.

These presenters included: Thich Nhat Hahn, Vietnamese Buddhist monk and
meditation teacher, Jack Kornfield, Tara Brach, Harriett Kimble Wrye,
and Trudy Goodman, all psychologists and meditation teachers, and Dr.
Daniel Siegel & Harvard neuroscientist Sara Lazar presenting the
neurobiology of meditation.

Due to the continuing trend in mental health toward brief, CBT
[Cognitive Behavior Therapy] methods and away from depth-oriented,
psychodynamic therapies, one can easily see how a reduction of
mindfulness to an easily deliverable skill set would be a natural
outcome of the environment in which it is delivered.

But is the doing away with meditation practice psychotherapeutically
wrong or ineffective? Not necessarily.

Even in the East, Karma Yoga is an example of a path to liberation which
eschews formal meditation practice in favor of a commitment to the work
one does in the world as spiritual practice.

Also, with neuroscience showing significant brain changes from long-term
mindfulness meditation, one can easily see how a researcher like Steven
Hayes could create mental exercises that simulate, through active
questioning of the validity of language, the realization of the
contextual nature of the self., i.e., Am I really these thoughts and
beliefs that my mind continually comes up with?

Years of meditation cultivates a natural non-reactivity to experience.
But why wait years, when simple instructions for distress tolerance,
like those featured in DBT can be dispensed to patients suffering from
emotion dysregulation? Following in the footsteps of ACT is
Acceptance-based psychotherapy which focuses on delivering skills for
realizing and accepting here and now experience with compassion;
something vipassana meditation and metta practices are well documented
at cultivating in long-term practitioners. Yet again, why practice
meditation at all when mindfulness skills can be learned and behaviors
changed?

Additionally, it must be acknowledged that most psychotherapists will
not want to learn and commit to a daily mindfulness meditation practice,
or be trained to teach mindfulness meditation. Therefore, it may be more
desirable and practical in clinical settings to deliver a CBT-like
mindfulness skill set rather than teach meditation



In light of all these benefits, what do we lose in clinical practice
when we allow instruction of vipassana/mindfulness meditation to fall
into disfavor or become outmoded? The following list is my best guess at
an answer to this question:

1.The long and short term stress-reducing physical effects of meditation

2.The plethora of profoundly, positive neural changes evidenced in the
brains of long term vipassana/Tibetan Buddhist meditators

3.The deep emotional healing that comes from
metta/forgiveness/compassion meditation practices

4.The benefits of setting aside time in our busy lives for silence,
meditation and contemplation

5.The cultivation of peacefulness

6.The deepening of connection with and respect for our planet and all
living things upon it, which naturally arise from sustained meditation
practice

7.The shared joy of a community of meditators; whether traditional
sanghas or 8-week mindfulness-based groups like Mindfulness-Based Stress
Reduction (MBSR), Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Depression
Relapse Prevention (MBCT), or Mindfulness-Based Relapse Prevention for
addiction recovery (MBRP).

I have seen patients experience radical change from incorporating
mindfulness meditation and mindfulness skills into their daily lives and
I am excited to offer MBRP, a mindfulness-based intervention for
addiction relapse prevention in San Jose, CA in March 2008. Please
contact me for more information.

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