Mind Power in Physical And Mental Therapies
Monkeys controlling robotics make the headlines (again) and the new, old practice of meditation gets some focus.
Back in January I wrote about monkeys who had used their minds to make robots walk on a treadmill. The article pointed out that the scientists involved had had monkeys control robotic limbs with their minds back in 2003. Along the same lines, in what The NY Times calls “the most striking demonstration to date of brain-machine interface technology” Nature has published results of experiments in which monkeys controlled prosthetic limbs to feed themselves. (Their own arms were gently restrained.) The results hold great promise for a new generation of advanced prosthetics. (Unfortunately, I can imagine that the Pentagon will be interested, too.)
And in the world of mind over melancholy the Times reports on the growing trend in using mindfulness meditation to help people combat such things as anxiety, depression, and substance abuse. Generally an optimistic report, citing considerable enthusiasm and some degree of success, it also points out, a little ruefully, that some in the field don’t share this enthusiasm and question the success, even warning that for some the mindfulness meditation seems to make things worse. The concept: In a calm, peaceful, centered state, the subject allows himself to experience the emotions that underlie his symptoms, learning to explore them and diffusing their power.
He didn’t call it mindfulness meditation (he didn’t call it anything) but this sounds a lot like much of the work I did with my life coach / therapist over the course of the last few years. So, from personal experience, I’d add that the skills of the therapist would be critical to determining success. Anyone can play the piano, but only a pianist can make the instrument produce reliably pleasant sounds. Or, perhaps a more apt analogy, you wouldn’t trust a podiatrist with your by-pass surgery.
Serge, in my experience, was an incredibly skilled and sophisticated practitioner, and with him I achieved regular breakthroughs that have stayed with me and changed my life. But I can easily imagine that the same techniques applied without supreme care, patience and respect could well make matters worse. The therapy subject places his or her most delicate feelings in the hands of the therapist, and the interaction between them is critical. (As a case in point, the article talks about therapies that last eight weeks, clearly not enough time for the therapist to win the trust of his or her patient.)
All of which brings me to thinking, curiously, about Scott McClellan, the ousted Bush press secretary, who casts various aspersions on the current administration’s delusions, deceptions and duplicity in his new book. Not surprisingly, the White House “responds negatively” as the Times puts it. And Bush, true to form, says he won’t read it — he’s too busy deciding what to meddle in next.
In the book, McClellan describes Bush as a president who could convince himself of anything (hmmm), claims that both he and Bush were duped about the Plame leak, and describes Bush in tears as he sympathizes with his old friend just after he’s given him the boot. As I think about this it summons up a mental image of Rove and Cheney controlling Bush as deftly as a pair of monkeys reaching for grapes with prosthetic limbs, simultaneous with an image of Bush engaging in some kind of distorted mindfulness therapy with his old buddy McClellan, wallowing in memories of the good old days as the tears roll down his cheeks. Well the therapy clearly didn’t leave McClellan feeling warm and fuzzy, I wonder what it did for Bush…
Tags: brain-power, carl-rove, george-bush, life-coach, mindfulness-meditation, prosthetic-limb, science, scooter-libby, scott-mcclellan, therapy, valerie-plame, white-house

May 29th, 2008 at 11:46 am
By my account, one of your most humorous conclusions to-date! Always enjoy reading…and now, taking in the new visuals…
May 29th, 2008 at 4:40 pm
Hi, Martin.
As somebody who is a psychotherapist, and who teaches mindfulness meditation, I can say that what I have had to do is have potential participants whom I don’t know, complete a questionnaire before their registration for a course is accepted. I also request that they have some outside support, if they don’t want to see me, in case their feelings become too intense for them.
Somebody who is unskilled at teaching this technique, may not know how to deal with this rare occurrence, and that can be a great detriment.
May 29th, 2008 at 10:21 pm
Thanks, Susan.
Very good to hear!!
Martin
May 29th, 2008 at 10:23 pm
Hello, Valerie.
Thanks for this. Good to have a practitioner’s first hand thoughts.
Do you find mindfulness meditation useful in the way that the Times article describes?
Martin
May 30th, 2008 at 10:15 am
Good morning, Martin.
The feedback I have received from individuals is that their anxiety has been greatly reduced or eliminated.
The demographic of individuals taking the course is usually those people in the “helping” professions - nurses, doctors, social workers, and lawyers (some may not deem the last group helpful). To my surprise, beginning a couple of years ago, I’ve had a large influx of psychiatrists. Inquiries to them about their interest, revealed that a journal of psychiatry has published papers showing that mindfulness meditation is the only “cure” that the medical profession has been able to find. Pharmaceuticals are a bandaid; mindfulness meditation heals. They said it is the first time they have been able to use the word “heal” in relation to clinical depression.
I still wouldn’t use the word “heal”, but will quote the psychiatrists.
I’ve seen it work for normal anxiety and substance abuse. Though, often substance abuse is a way of self-medicating for undiagnosed depression.