WillSpirit!


∞ Where Mental Skills Heal Mental Ills ∞

A former physician writes about mental health and recovery using insights from life, science, and spiritual practice.








  • Red_Exclamation_DotDisclaimer
    • Dear Visitors:
      Although I trained and practiced as a physician, my background does not include formal instruction in psychiatry beyond basic medical education. This journal presents ideas about treatment philosophy, but must not be considered therapeutic advice. Abrupt changes in one's psychiatric medications can trigger profound cognitive, emotional, and physical symptoms, including suicidal thoughts and actions. Consequently, pharmaceutical agents should not be increased or decreased without supervision by a mental health clinician.

    • ON THE OTHER HAND, your brain belongs to you, and your opinion counts. If you decide that changing your medication regimen will serve your best interest, then I believe your providers have an obligation to help you try to achieve your goals. I want everyone to be educated about their options, and do what will be most helpful for themselves. No one should feel pushed around by dogmatic and/or limited viewpoints, whether those of psychiatrists, anti-psychiatry advocates, or myself.


Knowledge: The Inner & Outer Paths

How do we know what we know?

There are two separate lines of inquiry: outer and inner. Observing and testing the external world leads to knowledge about material phenomena. Looking inward offers mystical insights.

The scientific-materialist bias of our age has emphasized the former and undermined the latter, but this is misguided at best and oppressive at worst. Both avenues toward knowledge yield fruit, but they each also have limits. If we neglect or suppress outer data, as we’ve seen religions attempt, we end up restricted to mythic world views that blind us to real phenomena. On the other hand, if we dismiss inner inquiry as idiosyncratic and imaginary, we close off progress toward the wordless wisdom that offers genuine salvation to the suffering mass of humanity.

The scientific revolution, which began in the Renaissance, has taught us the value of the empirical method. Sensory input from the environment, often enhanced by instrumentation, informs investigators as they develop hypotheses. Conceptual models of reality then guide further observation and/or experimentation. The results of these tests either support the evolving theory or require changes in it. Over time, models that succeed in predicting results survive while those that don’t get revised or scrapped. As explained in the last essay, scientific concepts are judged on their ability to predict outcomes; they should not be mistaken for ultimate truth.

Science needs no justification from me. It’s power is obvious. The value of nonstop technological advancement might be disputed, but not the intellectual triumphs of physics, chemistry, biology, and so on. Never before have humans known so much about the fine details of space, time, matter, and life.

Valid science must separate observation from theory. For instance, the fossil record exists and documents that life has changed through time. To deny this implication requires painfully contorted reasoning, such as the idea that God placed fossils in the earth to test our fidelity to biblical truth. Petrified organic remains are objectively real entities. Natural selection, on the other hand, is an explanatory concept proposed by Darwin. It posits that successfully reproducing life forms pass their traits onto future generations, while the traits of those that fail to reproduce die out, leading to changes in species over time. This is a powerful notion that can be used to understand not only biology but also cultural evolution, brain processes, and many other phenomena. It appears to be an actual mechanism of change, but the concept remains debatable, at least in principle. Possibly some more comprehensive explanation will emerge in the future, though if a better theory does arise, it will likely include natural selection as a limiting case. (Much like relativity theory reduces to Newtonian dynamics when velocities are in the range of everyday experience.) In any event, the verified fact that life forms evolve over geological time is separable from theories that explain how this happens. External observations and the concepts they fuel can be recognized as distinct from one another.

Inner exploration operates very differently. Deep states of meditative consciousness and sudden mystical intrusions occur commonly and stereotypically, but they neither support nor require elaborate conceptual theories. The consistent and recurring themes of such states guide generalizations but not specifics. As I’ve said in many previous posts, the main features include recognition of the profound unity of the cosmos, realization of its inherent rightness, and awareness of pervasive love emanating throughout. Secondary elements may also arise, such as insights about transience, insubstantiality, and causality. Words are inadequate to the explanatory task at hand; verbal descriptions are mere shadows of the actual experience. Because language is so inappropriate, conceptual formulation quickly obscures the heart of realization.

In essence, inner inquiry leads to knowledge that is simultaneously observation and explanation, both comprehended on a level that transcends words. This doesn’t prevent people from writing volumes about mystical insights, but such efforts are only pointers to an experience that provides immediate understanding.

Note how different this is from scientific work, where observations generally seem confusing until a theory is developed to show their coherence. Mystical realization obviates the need for theory, because it comes fully packaged as both observation and insight. When conceptual frameworks are constructed, they become susceptible to debate. They leave the spacious meadow of directly realized truth and enter a forest of controversy.

There is an area of overlap between science and mysticism. We see it most clearly when creative theorists ponder nature until an insight abruptly emerges in consciousness. The greatest thinkers, like Einstein, recognize the source of such inspiration to be mysterious and beyond deliberate control. In an echo of the mystical experience, deep contemplation leads to sudden recognition of an elegant order in the world.

Similarly, mathematicians work with purely mental objects, yet time and again their internally referent constructions have proven applicable to natural, external processes. Thus, mathematical formulations developed by Bernhard Reimann were crucial to Einstein’s development of general relativity theory. Pure, abstract reasoning (i.e., inner exploration) led to a framework that predicted astronomical observations never previously encountered by humans.

Inner inquiry and outer empiricism work differently but show areas of overlap. Both enrich human knowledge and understanding. For a blogger obsessed with mental wellness, what most distinguishes the two is that successful meditative and contemplative explorations lead directly to peace of mind. External observations are seldom so healing, except when they prompt inspiration that emerges from the depths of consciousness. When that happens, we feel warm satisfaction similar to what arises when we open to the beauty of pristine nature. The inner heart of awareness can be summoned from outside, but it germinates within. Looking inward is thus the surest path to fulfillment.

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Thought Is Not Truth

An essay in David Bohm’s Wholeness and the Implicate Order, has me rethinking my attitude toward thought. The piece is entitled “Reality and Knowledge Considered as Process.” As with much of Bohm’s work, the concepts challenge the mind. But although he sometimes loses me, I trust his interpretation, as he was a highly regarded physicist who pondered the philosophical implications of quantum theory. Since an earlier essay looked at one quantum principle in spiritual terms, it makes sense to explore Bohm’s discussion; it pursues similar goals through more sophisticated means.

Bohm insists that thought and the world at large are not two separate realms. There is no thinking that doesn’t arise from prior contact with reality, and our experience of reality is never completely divorced from thought. Furthermore, thought is just as much a product of the cosmos as anything else. It emerges in a flowing stream along with Creation itself. Thought is no different, in this sense, from mountains, clouds, sunlight, electricity, or anything else we might think about.

Bohm compares thought to poetry. There will never be an ultimate poem that will make all future poetry unnecessary. Similarly, there will never be a final theory about reality that will obviate the need for more theorizing. Each view of the Cosmos is a work of art, not an objective truth. Some models of the world work better in a predictive sense, but all are susceptible to ongoing change and refinement. All are subjective and conditioned by prior prejudice. Bohm considers it a mistake to equate concepts with reality-as-it-actually-exists.

Consider gravity. According to Newton, matter exerts an invisible force on other matter. A planet has a large mass and through action-at-a-distance pulls strongly on objects nearby. Hence, we don’t float off into space. Newton’s laws permit one to calculate orbits and trajectories. They work in a predictive sense, but that doesn’t mean gravitation acts through force fields like Newton thought. Einstein’s theory of General Relativity describes the same reality in terms of distortion to the fabric of space-time. Planets orbit stars because stars warp the matrix through which planets travel. There is no force that extends from the sun to the earth; there is merely a kind of well that traps the earth in orbit around the sun. Relativity theory is also predictive of orbits and trajectories. Yet although its scope is more comprehensive than Newtonian mechanics, it cannot be said to be more ‘correct;’ it is merely more broadly applicable.

Newton and Einstein devised very different descriptions of gravity and reality. Each created a highly sophisticated line of thought. But neither can be said to have described ultimate Truth. Theories work in a utilitarian fashion but never pin down reality in any literal sense.

Physicists have long sought a ‘Theory of Everything’ that would succinctly describe the universe in mathematical terms. All manifestation would then be clarified as unfolding according to fundamental equations. Stephen Hawking appears to have abandoned this quest, as he now talks of ‘Model-Dependent Realism,’ wherein there would not be a single theory but rather a system of overlapping models. Each formulation would work within a defined domain, but none could be said to capture the totality. Einstein’s equations work when calculating the dynamics of light and matter on cosmic scales. Quantum mechanics works for subatomic particles. The hope (not yet realized) would be to find a way to make the two descriptions fit together when conditions overlap, as during the formation of the universe. But Hawking appears to have abandoned the search for a single set of equations that could be applied in all situations.

Bohm would probably welcome this concession by Hawking. He would insist that thought is not capable of describing totality, mainly because thought is part of totality itself. There is no separate reality, outside the mind, that the mind can figure out. There is only a single cosmos that includes the mind and everything the mind comprehends. We do not view reality from outside, we watch it from within. We can describe what we see, but we cannot describe the totality because we do not exist outside of it. We can’t get a view on the cosmos similar to the Apollo photographs of planet Earth. Just as we cannot see the whole earth from its surface, and so our view of it remains limited, we cannot see the whole universe. Our concepts are necessarily restricted and incomplete.

Furthermore, thought and cosmos are ever changing, so there can be no final description of anything. What fits today’s world may not fit tomorrow’s. Tribal societies on the North American plains had no need of a theory of digital computation, anymore than we have need of one guiding nomadic encampment in pursuit of herds of bison. You could argue that both theories are latent in the cosmos, but what does a theory of logic gates describe if there are no computers? How consequential is knowledge of migratory patterns if the few remaining buffalo live in fenced enclosures? Each formulation is relevant to a particular time and place, and useless outside of it.

For a hunter-gatherer society, a view of the environment that depended on vital spirits would be competent to the situation. It would help the hunter follow his prey; it would help the gatherer predict where her favored plants could be found. It would be a valid model under the circumstances. For some people, a religion built around a single, caring deity works well. It provides meaning, guidance, and feelings of safety. For others, life is better served by insisting that no such God exists. To them, the universe feels more comfortable if it is believed rational and predictable, without any quirky intrusion by non-material influences. Each person lives by a model that works for his or her given temperament. But none can claim ultimate truth, because there is no such thing.

This is a very difficult position to adhere to, precisely because it lacks solidity. To quit conflating thought with truth means to recognize every insight as provisional, including this one. Any claim to objective understanding, permanent and free of contamination by prior prejudice, is false. But the mind resists admitting its own limits, and clings to beliefs even when it knows better.

Bohm provides an alternate (and more challenging) path to the conclusion that ended my earlier post: we should hold our views lightly. I’m not sure this essay does his argument justice, but I think he would have agreed with the advice.

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Uncertainty as a Measure of Spirituality

In physics, the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle sets limits on knowledge. As a scientific law, its effects are seen only on the minute scale of subatomic particles. But I suspect it contains a deeper meaning that might help us relate to life in general.

The Uncertainty Principle states we can never accurately determine both the position and motion of a particle. The more we can say about an electron’s location, the less we can say about its velocity, and vice versa. As an analogy, imagine we’re tracking a red Ferrari in San Francisco. The Uncertainty Principle, if it had relevance at this scale, would say that if we know the car is currently in the middle of the Post and Hyde intersection, we can’t say how fast it’s going. It might be stopped; it might be racing at 110 mph. Or if we know it’s traveling exactly 62 mph, it could be anywhere in the city.

In ordinary life this species of uncertainty is negligible; the police can document where and how fast the Ferrari was moving when they pulled it over. But at atomic scales, the Uncertainty Principle limits our knowledge. This isn’t merely a problem of measurement failure; it’s a cosmic restriction on achievable precision. We can’t know details beyond a certain level of approximation. The consensus view is that electrons don’t move in a way that permits exact description. Matter exhibits fuzziness and randomness that cannot be resolved no matter how sophisticated our instrumentation.

In a reply to Dave’s comment on the last post, I stated:

More and more it seems to me that the path to higher consciousness demands we let go of certainty. No fixed beliefs can pass the gate… Yet something in the human mind insists on answers. Whether it’s belief in a God who listens or in a universe that doesn’t, we gravitate toward conclusions and feel uneasy when we can’t find them. But I suspect true mental presence requires that we give up our quest for certainty. We must rest in the not-knowing.

Not-knowing is a venerable practice in Eastern traditions. Ancient mystics understood there are questions that can never be answered. In this scientific era we’ve become accustomed to expecting truth to emerge upon investigation. We assume that if a phenomenon looks mysterious, time and research will eventually clarify the situation in causal and mechanistic terms. The conventional scientist understands that we don’t know everything, but he or she believes that everything is in principle knowable.

The Uncertainty Principle suggests otherwise. Even though it comes out of observations in cloud chambers and particle accelerators, I suspect it’s telling us something about the nature of ultimate reality: it’s beyond our ken. Not just in practical terms, but in absolute ones. Precise answers are not just difficult to find, they’re prohibited.

We should keep this in mind when we try to pin down spiritual truths. Maybe the reason the universe can look both sacred and heartless is that there is built-in paradox and obscuration. The more we identify with the material world the less we see of universal consciousness; the deeper we delve into meditative states, the more illusory the physical world appears. But the elusiveness of cosmic awareness and the haziness of matter are ever-present; they confront us when we push concepts too far in our search for final answers.

The point is: a universe that enforces uncertainty is a universe that promotes humility. The moment we become too sure of ourselves is the moment we risk disillusionment. Many people battle doubt by attaching ever more rigidly to convictions. Although faith plays a role in spiritual life, it can be misapplied to demand unquestioning belief of unprovable concepts. A better approach is to hold our views loosely. Since we are prohibited from finding ultimate truth, we might conclude the cosmos invites us to embrace not-knowing as the path to grace.

Imagine the discord that would simply dissolve if we all admitted we just can’t know.

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A Burning Desire

Every journey starts somewhere. Although this blog was launched only three years ago, WillSpirit probably began way back in 2000, right after my brain exploded.

Well, my head did not literally blow up, but back then explosion seemed the only word sufficient to convey the eruptive onset of a visionary state of mind that far exceeded any previous meditative (or even psychedelic) experience. That psychiatrists pronounced it a manic psychosis did not in the least undermine my conviction about the profundity of what was happening.

Along with the visions came a burgeoning sense of being called to connect my education in physics, biology, and medicine with spiritual Truths that suddenly seemed self-evident. In a grandiose state of mind, I imagined myself one of God’s chosen prophets. The gravity of my new mission felt irresistible and overpowering.

But it weakened. Maybe the medications calmed me and helped me see my limitations and lack of realism; or maybe they derailed me from my proper path. All I know is that before long the idea of connecting my scientific training with my mystical experience seemed terribly impractical. I went to graduate school in bioinformatics instead.

That was the first of many aborted career plans that followed the end of my profession as a surgeon. Readers know my latest flop was the acupuncture business. Time and again I’ve compromised my true interests and passions while aiming for something more likely to lead to worldly success. I now recognize this as a doomed strategy.

During a recent dinner with good friends, I watched my inward sense of vitality and outward appearance of animation build as I spoke about connections between Science and Spirit. For the first time in quite awhile I recognized how powerfully these parallels attract me.

I never was a scientist in the truest sense of the word. Although a devoted student of scientific subjects, I always felt bored and limited when working in a lab or doing field study. My interest is in drawing analogies, making intuitive leaps, and painting a global picture of reality that is consistent with science but closer in tenor to poetry. My deepest heart wants others to open their eyes to the sweeping vista of reality as it appears to me.

In all honesty, allowing my passion free reign feels more important than writing this blog, though WillSpirit remains quite dear to my heart. I recognize that penning my uneven essays here helps me and helps others; it is a small but important project that must continue. But something grander is begging to be born from this cracked shell of a person. Most likely, the resulting neonate will appear lovable to me and me only. But it needs to burst forth into this world and cry out its Love of Life.

No longer will it suffice for me to harass my friends and family with my intricate ideas about the Cosmos. Nor is it enough for me to write boring philosophical posts about the Universe and Humanity’s place in it. I need to complete the vital task laid before me twelve years ago. And at last I understand the form my message needs to take.

It isn’t a question of proving that a realm exists beyond the Newtonian worldview accepted by conventional science. Any honest assessment of available studies will show that reality is richer than the desiccated landscape painted by technocrats. True, only a few anomalous phenomena have been convincingly demonstrated, and little is understood about the nature or limits of this strange arena in which people know about the world in ways that contradict customary reality. But scientific evidence is not what I feel drawn to provide.

Skeptics will never be persuaded, and most of us seeking deeper answers to life’s dilemma need no further proof of mystery. What I think is within my power to offer is a poetic distillation of the creation story as told by science, beginning with the moment of the universe’s first explosion into space, and ending with the present day. I can speak to those who feel lost and yet hopeful that Life makes sense. Many must yearn to square transcendent and intuitive experiences with a scientific worldview that has proven its utility but has yet to demonstrate its humanity.

So here at WillSpirit I’ll keep writing about my fluctuating moods, my changing fortunes, and my ongoing efforts to keep myself sane. But in the background, and probably linked to this site, I want to start a new project. A life’s work, if you will.

And by Life’s Work I mean to highlight my sense of calling but also to describe the project itself. I will work to bring my notion of the sacred to bear on my notion of Life. Not because physics and biology haven’t been written about from spiritual stances before; many quality tomes about such topics line bookstore shelves. Not because anything I say will be unique or especially inspiring. This drive to write something worthy of the countless hours I’ve spent thinking about these subjects is fueled by a deep-seated need. A yearning to describe biology and physics in spiritual and poetic terms has gripped my soul since the first shattering awakenings so many years ago. WillSpirit served well as an initial step, but the time has come to go further. And at last my goal isn’t success, it’s expression.

Only by doing something that feels momentous will I cease feeling pointless and defeated. Only by undertaking a truly impractical task can I free myself from the bonds of mediocrity and repeated failure. If I’m going to try once again to produce, then I want to at least be listening to my heart this time. Better to incinerate my dreams in one massive volcanic caldera than let them once again sputter out like wet fuses.

Only when I speak or write about Life in all its complex glory, and Spirit in all its confusing paradox, do I feel truly inspired. Perhaps this is yet another false start. Maybe I’m overestimating my reach or (heaven forbid) feeling grandiose. But I’m beginning to see that fulfillment can only be found by concentrating on what most fulfills me.

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Our Innate Hunger for Certainty

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Today’s post is just a (kind of) short addendum to yesterday’s treatise on conflict in mental health discussions. Mandy, my wife, pointed out another reason that people tend to cling tightly to narrowly defined solutions: fear of uncertainty. I agree with her that the discomfort we all have with ‘not knowing’ plays a role in the common scenario of debates about policy turning into heated arguments between adversaries who each are certain they have the right answer. Because uncertainty raises anxiety.

When quantum mechanics began to be elucidated early in the twentieth century, physicists started to see a fundamental role of chance in the structure and behavior of matter. The inescapability of uncertainty and randomness made Einstein uncomfortable. Even though his groundbreaking work on Brownian motion and the photoelectric effect helped usher in the quantum age, he still wrote (in a letter to Max Born) that he was “convinced that [God] does not throw dice”.

The idea of a non-deterministic universe strikes many as unsettling, to say the least. One of the objections to the theory of natural selection has always been that ‘believers’ insist that ‘God’ has orchestrated the creation of the universe, the earth, and life. Natural selection postulates that random mutations and probabilistic sorting of genes form the raw material of changes in life forms. If the mutations or gene combinations are advantageous, they get passed on to subsequent generations in larger numbers than if they cause the organism problems. With thousands and millions of iterations, these changes add up to dramatic alterations in living forms and ecologies. But the underlying engine of change, by that view, depends on haphazard events. This assaults the worldview of those who believe in a ‘hands-on’ God who directs events and answers prayers.

Some day I will write about how I believe how the universe may accommodate both probabilistic development, universal consciousness, and a certain kind of facilitated (rather than completely random) progression of history. My point right now is just that since the dawn of human self-awareness, people have had a strong need for predictability, and for a sense that they are not just adrift in a sea of chance. We prefer certainty over doubt, black and white over gray.

I heard an interview with a scientist who has written about why people need to be right. Despite a lot of internet searching I can find neither the scientist’s name nor the book, if it was a book, or I would reference them here. But the basic idea seemed to be that if you see a lion approaching, you need to ‘know’ without taking time to think, that the proper response is to flee. She who doubts hesitates, and she who hesitates is lost. Once decisions start being processed through cognitive and analytical channels, reactivity slows down, so that if an instant choice must be made one had better have a predetermined action pattern in place. There seems to be an innate demand for strong conviction.

So opening our minds to the possibility that our survival mechanism (whether medication, a specific kind of therapy, or a spiritual philosophy) might be fallible becomes quite difficult. We would rather hold tightly to the belief that our ‘answer’ is comprehensive, our world predictable, and our emotional safety assured.

So if I wrote yesterday’s post again, I would include our inherent uneasiness with uncertainty as another of the reasons why people become so bound to constricted views. A tightly defined, closed off ideology feels safer than one that is wide open, and leaves us aware of our vulnerability. We’d rather sit in a watertight box than risk feeling adrift in the random currents of fate.

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Respecting Different Paths to Mental Health Recovery

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The posts that prompt me to think the most often grow out of conversations with others. The reason I’ve not placed anything new in the main part of the blog for a couple of days is that I’ve been occupied in the ‘comments’ section discussing the pros and cons of diagnostic labels with Marian, who authors Different Thoughts. That interchange can be found in the comments thread following my last post: ‘A rose by any other name would smell as sweet’ (see comments numbered ten through eighteen). As you may recall, that previous essay arose out of my reading of two pieces written by Larry, the author of the Hopeworks Community blog. (One of his posts talked about diagnosis, and the other about semantics.) If one were to compile Larry’s work with my essay and the conversation between Marian and me, the result would be a pretty thorough coverage of the pluses and minuses of using a medical/diagnostic model to classify mental conditions.

If you read my responses to Marian, you’ll also see how I ended up regretting some of my words. While sleepless and fatigued at 3:00 am, I got caught up in my emotions, in my desire to protect others from being criticized for their choices, and in my sense that my viewpoints had been brushed off. I succumbed to the strong feelings and diametric divergence of opinions that plague so many discussions in behavioral health. My words conveyed an antagonism that left me feeling bad when I awoke after a few hours of sleep. My biggest concern in writing about mental health often centers on trying not to alienate people who disagree with me. I hope to convince others to broaden their perspectives, and coming down with too much hostility will never accomplish that. So I had to ask myself why my words had gone against my principles. They had become personal attacks rather than dissections of Marian’s analysis or challenges to what she considers factual statements.

I am human. I realize that getting angry and overreacting go hand-in-hand with belonging to this species. So rather than berating myself for violating my standards, it is more useful for me to explore why my defenses broke down. What prompted me to jump into the fray with the kind of vehemence I object to in those who only hammer their opinion into others, and barely listen to the reasoned views of people with whom they disagree? Why did I back away from my belief that words should be used to promote mutual understanding and bring people to common ground, rather than widening divisions and increasing ill-will?

When I first became (peripherally and recently) involved in the activist side of the mental health world, the sharp and frequent contention surprised me. That I walked into this cause without expecting huge controversy must seem silly to others. But I had a utopian picture, coming from my limited and one-sided experience of psychological services in an institution where all the clinicians and clients accepted the same treatment model. In that milieu, everyone worked together to figure out how to help the clients feel better. I had not agreed with everything that organization did, but I respected the practitioners, and found the entire effort admirable. Good people working as a team to accomplish a worthwhile goal satisfies my hopes for human potential. I knew disagreements about treatment approaches existed, and had actually left a previous psychiatrist because I concluded she was harming me. Since my heart boiled with fury about awful and permanent side effects, and years lost with my mind poisoned by too much medication, I should have known that outside of my protected enclave I would find others who harbored similar anger and frustration. And that they would not all agree. It did not take long to catch on to the reality that feelings run very high, agreement is rare, and all sides bring a burden of resentment to the table. The conflict heightens further in the face of the power possessed by doctors, police, and social workers to strip us of our civil rights with only nominal proof of necessity. The fact that lives can be saved or ruined in short order further amplifies the rancor and controversy.

The most pernicious tendency leading to ill-will between people who desire the same end (improved mental health care) is how easily we get locked into believing that ‘our way is the only way’, and that those who disagree with us have nothing valid to offer. Why do we get caught in the trap of imagining we have the one and only answer to mental health issues? Why is it so hard to accept that others may have equally constructive suggestions? Even when two proposed ‘solutions’ are not mutually exclusive, it still can be tough to relax our grip on the cognitive framework we’ve built to guide our recovery. The temptation remains strong to undermine the other person’s ideas in favor of our own. Why do we have such a hard time tolerating alternatives to our approach?

For one thing, we are people who have suffered. If we are fortunate and persistent enough to transcend our distress, chaos and despair, then we feel tremendous gratitude toward the people or methods that escorted us out of hell. We put the process we followed on a pedestal, and feel almost worshipful in our attitude toward it. Our approach, whether it involved taking medication, mindfulness meditation, doing cognitive exercises, or working on our spirituality, feels so important to us that we cannot help but think it almost miraculous, perhaps even divinely inspired. This entity, whatever it is, has saved us from misery, confusion, and destruction. Like a beneficent god, our savior has earned our faith and devotion.

We also cling to our rescuer (whether person, institution, or philosophy), out of fear that we will fall back into the pit if we relax our embrace. We begin to think in nearly magical terms about the engine of our recovery. If we don’t do things just right our punishment might be a one-way bus ride back to the innermost circle of the underworld. Because so much of our well-being seems to depend on fidelity to this fount of salvation, it becomes easy to feel threatened when someone suggests that our cherished path to recovery has bumps and gaps. How could our road be flawed when it has led us away from enslavement by psychic demons? We fear that we might stumble if we allow others to question our route to mental equilibrium, and the road to wellness will then be closed to us. Sometimes, we even react negatively if somebody acknowledges that we have a good answer, but not the total answer. Worst of all is when another person is equally committed to a conflicting view about how to maintain equanimity. So two people end up screaming at each other, each clenching their lifeline with blood-drained knuckles, when they might just as well reach hands out to each other and share their supports.

At the same time as we defend our ‘answer’ against challengers, we feel called to spread the word about the salvation we have been granted. Like people who enter a spiritual tradition that brings them out of darkness and into life, we become evangelical, and want others to benefit from what worked for us. This response is both natural and laudable. Problems arise, however, when two people feel equally strongly about (seemingly) opposite philosophies. Neither wants anything to do with the other’s ‘theology’. Each feels the other is not only wrong, but possibly evil as well. Psychiatrists become demonized. Or people who advocate against medications are accused of endangering lives and families. The two camps quit listening or even talking to each other, and are content to just preach to those who already agree. One does not need to look far in our modern world to see the dangers when people cling with aggression to conflicting creeds. And it is not really a stretch to liken psychological therapies of all kinds to religious devotion and practice. Both church and mental health practices offer ‘answers’ in the midst of confusion. Both provide community and human contact. Both rescue people from despair. Both depend, to a large extent, on blind faith (read, placebo effect).

The demands of unquestioning devotion, and the resulting obstruction of reason, underly the swath of destruction that religious conflicts draw across our society. If people ‘believe’ without wondering whether there is any objective factual foundation for their ideologies, then there is no hope of communication between opposing camps. How can you persuade someone who doesn’t care about facts or logic and orders opinions on the basis of deep-seated emotional attachments? It is like two young boys arguing about who has the better mom. Empiricism and analysis have no role; each kid just ‘knows’ he has the best mother in the world. That may work for children in the school yard, where the worst consequence might be a bloody nose. But in the wider, adult world if people determine who to approve or reject, what to believe or disbelieve, and how to act or treat others by referring to nothing more than powerful sentiments, then we end up with terrorist attacks or high-tech bombardment of civilian populations.

Bringing the analogy back to the world of mental health: in the absence of careful research and good studies it is far too enticing to base one’s opinions on one’s own personal experience. That would be acceptable, perhaps, if every person could be counted on to respond the same way. However, my point from the start has been that we are all unique. We each have different tastes in people, places, and activities. We look at the world from different perspectives, and have different value structures. What seems perfect to one person may be abhorrent to another. If I conclude that my answer must be good for everyone only because it is good for me, I will soon find that most people have little inclination to believe me or even listen. A charismatic person (which I am not) can succeed in attracting a following. But as far as one person convincing the entire community that there is a single answer for all mental health problems, especially if the evidence supporting the ‘cure-all’ is based mainly on his or her individual experience, that is no more likely than having the world’s population agree on one religious faith. Different people need different solutions.

We also face the problem that people change and go through stages. What works for someone at one time may cease to work later on. In my most objective moments, and as much as I regret starting antidepressants in 1995, I have to admit that medications helped me in my thirties. Now, however, after many years of hard work, I have reconciled with past traumas. I adopted a philosophical and spiritual stance that allows me to tolerate thoughts and feelings that would have once been overwhelming. So I don’t feel the need to take mood-elevators anymore. But for me to turn around and tell a twenty-year-old to just live with their imploding emotions might be worse than forgetful or insensitive; it might even lead the person to self-destruct. And yet I have seen myself say just that kind of thing. It is all-too-easy to blind ourselves to how much we differ from those around us, or even from who we used to be or might be tomorrow.

Rancor arises when people become afraid to even consider that their ‘solution’ may have limitations. It seems to threaten us to entertain the notion that the answers we rely upon might let another person down. I believe the reason for this fear may be that if we acknowledge the possibility of our path to salvation failing someone else, then we admit the possibility that it could some day fail us too. When a path becomes so important to us (whether it’s a religion, a treatment philosophy, or just a point of view) that we think our survival depends on it, then we will naturally defend it against all attackers. Even those who mean well, truly want to help, and have well worked out ideas become enemies. Before long everyone who disagrees becomes an adversary rather than a fellow seeker. That is how good people end up screaming at each other, figuratively or in actuality.

That kind of back and forth helps no one. It drives people to become even more rigid in their views, causes hostile attitudes, and completely blocks communication and exchange of ideas. If any progress is to be made, we have to accept that other people are just as smart, just as creative, and just as capable of solving problems as we are. We have to recognize that writing off other people’s ideas as dumb or deluded amounts to tossing out a valuable resource.

There is really no reason for people to discount each other’s ideas about how to promote well-being. In my opinion, if there is a wrong way to solve the problem of troublesome mind conditions, it is to fall into the trap of thinking there is only one solution. If we can accept that more than one effective path may exist, or go even further and realize that using more than one method at a time may be a viable possibility, then we will be more inclined to listen to the ideas of our fellow travelers on the road to recovery.

In fact, it appears to me that most people benefit from using more than one approach. My progression was to start with therapy, and spend years confronting and understanding the effects of the severe trauma in my upbringing. From there I progressed to medications, which showed me how it felt to not be depressed, and proved to me that I did not endure despair simply because I somehow liked to be miserable. I learned that I was perfectly happy to be happy. After some dead-ends, detours, and misdirections, I learned how to use CBT and meditation to modulate my thoughts and feelings. Most recently, I’ve taken up treatment under the ACT model, and have begun to allow my mind freer rein. Along the way I explored AA, Alanon, support groups for adult children of alcoholics, and many other recovery programs. I studied a great deal about brain science and neurophysiology, psychiatry, and numerous self-help strategies. I spent long periods devoted to a couple of different spiritual traditions. My personal experience tells me that all these different methods have value. However, no single one of them worked as a total solution. So there is at least one person on this planet (me) who was not completely ‘cured’ by any of these methods. They all had benefits, but they all had limitations, too. And yet each approach has adherents convinced that they have found the one and only solution.

Not long ago I met (in a workshop) someone who teaches and does therapy in CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy). He is convinced that CBT will solve all mood problems. If I try to tell him that was not my experience, he responds that I just did not do it right. But if a ‘miracle’ treatment is so dependent on being done ‘just right’, how miraculous is it?

Spiritual solutions are the same. If I don’t get the all-encompassing comfort that others get from ‘God’ then the response is that I don’t have enough faith. Or don’t pray enough. Or don’t go to enough services. If I object that I reach profound states of contentment and understanding with spiritual practice, but that I need more, all-too-often I encounter an annoying condescension. The implication is that my desire for additional support shows that I obviously have not reached the spiritual heights inhabited by people who are ‘serious’ about their sacred practice.

Hard-line atheists will say that even if faith helps, it’s only because of placebo effects, or delusion, or some other material explanation. They imply that I am naive if I think there is a supernatural realm in play. I am being non-scientific, and I am quite possibly not too smart. In one view, belief in God is a weakness of the human brain that evolved to help us deal with mortality. When someone tells you that an important part of your mental health regimen is merely a defect in the human genome, it tends to close off further discussion.

For a psychiatrist, if drugs don’t work, the problem is that the proper chemical agents have not yet been found. We just need to keep trying until we stumble upon the right cocktail. There is little acknowledgement that maybe in some cases there is no drug at all that will adequately eliminate the ‘symptom’. My previous psychiatrist had exactly zero knowledge about something as well established as CBT. She felt no need to refer me on for other approaches. She doggedly pursued the holy grail of the right medication cocktail, even as I descended ever further into emotional bankruptcy.

It never stops amazing me how people blind themselves to alternative explanations and methods. It may be because I am so skeptical of ‘truth’ that I have a hard time understanding how somebody can be so wedded to just one way of seeing things. Frankly, I am not sure a single ‘true’ explanation exists in most settings. The complexity of the world is such that one dimensional answers seldom apply. Matter is both wave and particle. That means that an electron, for instance, is both confined to one very small place, and spread over a broad region simultaneously. The situation is analogous to saying that if you look through one window of my house I appear to be seated in a chair, but if you look through a different window, my body is spread like a cloud throughout the entire neighborhood. That was the first paradox I learned in physics.

Another physical paradox is that you cannot know both exactly where an object is and how fast it is moving at the same time. There is an unbreakable material limit to the precision with which we can pin down ‘the facts’. It is like saying you can know I am in a tiny town called Greeley Hill, but have no idea whether I am standing on the street or driving a race car at 200 miles per hour. Or you determine that I am driving exactly 55 miles per hour, but can only say that I am somewhere in the North America. And it is not just that you can’t figure out the answer; in a fundamental way, precise answers simply do not exist.

Think about it: every object is two completely different things at one time, and absolute precision is unreachable. Although I have stated them simplistically, that is nevertheless a pair of facts that lie at the basis of our entire universe. If we live in such an uncertain and ill-defined universe, then should we really be insulting each other because our companion’s paradigm for complicated and poorly understood mental conditions is not the same as ours?

Of course, I have to close by pointing out that all this is just my opinion (except for the statements about fundamental physical reality, which are over-simplified but correct). Maybe I am wrong to accept every person as equally capable of figuring out their own minds. Maybe some people are actually so misguided that I should just ignore what they say. Maybe that would do more to protect others from harm than trying to engage all comers.

And maybe a single solution will be found some day. Everyone will read the same book, practice the same method, and find peace. If that happens, then that ‘answer’ will not only end the mental health dilemma, but will probably also collapse the power of religions to determine how people think. doveFor if a validated solution to human angst were to be found, the majority of people would likely drift away from institutions that offer an outdated dogmatism. This would go a long way toward stopping war and strife. People will no longer need to argue about mental health techniques, or a lot of other things, because the answer to their pain will be in hand. To me, that kind of panacea does not sound likely. But I would be thrilled to be proven wrong.

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