Holding a vision of a world that works for all..... "Let yourself be silently drawn by the stronger pull of what you really love." ~ Rumi
Sunday, August 30, 2020
Gabor Maté: Addictions, Alzheimer's, Vulnerabilty and Emotional Competence, and Knowing Oneself
WOW. This is what I have intuited for years now to be true — "that
Alzheimer’s is an autoimmune disease... It is probably
triggered by chronic stress acting on an aging immune system." There is so much here — whether related to my mom who had Alzheimer's, or to my alcoholism and the addictions that ran in our family, the unhealthy and harmful aspects of our culture and more — that reflects my life experience over the course of early and prolonged trauma, and then the many years since in which I have been healing, awakening, and transforming deep pain and loss into compassion and kindness, humility and wisdom, purpose and meaning, generosity and love. There is much wisdom here. Bless us all on our journeys. — Molly
Wisdom Quotes from Dr. Gabor Maté
Knowing oneself comes from attending with compassionate curiosity to what is happening within.
Emotional competence requires • the capacity to feel our emotions, so that we are aware when we are experiencing stress; • the ability to express our emotions effectively and thereby to assert our needs and to maintain the integrity of our emotional boundaries; • the facility to distinguish between psychological reactions that are pertinent to the present situation and those that represent residue from the past. What we want and demand from the world needs to conform to our present needs, not to unconscious, unsatisfied needs from childhood. If distinctions between past and present blur, we will perceive loss or the threat of loss where none exists; and • the awareness of those genuine needs that do require satisfaction, rather than their repression for the sake of gaining the acceptance or approval of others. Stress occurs in the absence of these criteria, and it leads to the disruption of homeostasis. Chronic disruption results in ill health.
Shame is the deepest of the “negative emotions,” a feeling we will do almost anything to avoid. Unfortunately, our abiding fear of shame impairs our ability to see reality.
The addict’s reliance on the drug to reawaken her dulled feelings is no adolescent caprice. The dullness is itself a consequence of an emotional malfunction not of her making: the internal shutdown of vulnerability. From the latin word vulnerare, ‘to wound’, vulnerability is our susceptibility to be wounded. This fragility is part of our nature and cannot be escaped. The best the brain can do is to shut down conscious awareness of it when pain becomes so vast or unbearable that it threatens to overwhelm our capacity to function. The automatic repression of painful emotions is a helpless child’s prime defence mechanism and can enable the child to endure trauma that would otherwise be catastrophic. The unfortunate consequence is a wholesale dulling of emotional awareness. ‘Everybody knows there is no fineness or accuracy of suppression,’ wrote the American novelist Saul Bellow in The Adventures of Augie March; ‘if you hold down one thing you hold down the adjoining.’
Intuitively we all know that it’s better to feel than not to feel. Beyond their energizing subjective change, emotions have crucial survival value. They orient us, interpret the world for us and offer us vital information. They tell us what is dangerous and what is benign, what threatens our existence and what will nurture our growth. Imagine how disabled we would be if we could not see or hear or taste or sense heat or cold or physical pain. Emotional shutdown is similar. Our emotions are an indispensable part of our sensory apparatus and an essential part of who we are. They make life worthwhile, exciting, challenging, beautiful and meaningful.
When we flee our vulnerability, we lose our full capacity for feeling emotion. We may even become emotional amnesiacs, not remembering ever having felt truly elated or truly sad. A nagging void opens, and we experience it as alienation, as profound as ennui, as the sense of deficient emptiness…
* * * * *
In the real world there is no nature vs. nurture argument, only an infinitely complex and moment-to-moment interaction between genetic and environmental effects.
Dr. Cai Song is an internationally known researcher at the University of British Columbia and co-author of a recent textbook, Fundamentals of Psychoneuroimmunology. “I am convinced that Alzheimer’s is an autoimmune disease,” says Dr. Song. “It is probably triggered by chronic stress acting on an aging immune system.
All of the diagnoses that you deal with - depression, anxiety, ADHD, bipolar illness, post traumatic stress disorder, even psychosis, are significantly rooted in trauma. They are manifestations of trauma. Therefore the diagnoses don't explain anything. The problem in the medical world is that we diagnose somebody and we think that is the explanation. He's behaving that way because he is psychotic. She's behaving that way because she has ADHD. Nobody has ADHD, nobody has psychosis - these are processes within the individual. It's not a thing that you have. This is a process that expresses your life experience. It has meaning in every single case.
Strong convictions do not necessarily signal a powerful sense of self: very often quite the opposite. Intensely held beliefs may be no more than a person’s unconscious effort to build a sense of self to fill what, underneath, is experienced as a vacuum.
* * * * *
Medical
thinking usually sees stress as highly disturbing but isolated events
such as, for example, sudden unemployment, a marriage breakup, or the
death of a loved one. These major events are potent sources of stress
for many, but there are chronic daily stresses in people's lives that
are more insidious and more harmful in their long-term biological
consequences. Internally generated stresses take their toll without in
any way seeming out of the ordinary.
A
hurt is at the center of all addictive behaviors. . . . The wound may
not be as deep and the ache not as excruciating, and it may even be
entirely hidden—but it’s there. As we’ll see, the effects of early
stress or adverse experiences directly shape both the psychology and the
neurobiology of addiction in the brain.
The
very same brain centers that interpret and feel physical pain also
become activated during experiences of emotional rejection. In brain
scans, they light up in response to social ostracism, just as they would
when triggered by physically harmful stimuli. When people speak of
feeling hurt or of having emotional pain, they are not being abstract or
poetic, but scientifically quite precise.
The
wondrous power of a drug is to offer the addict protection from pain
while at the same time enabling her to engage the world with excitement
and meaning. “It’s not that my senses are dulled—no, they open,
expanded,” explained a young woman whose substances of choice are
cocaine and marijuana. “But the anxiety is removed, and the nagging
guilt and—yeah!” The drug restores to the addict the childhood vivacity
she suppressed long ago.
Not why the addiction, but why the pain.
People jeopardize their lives for the sake of making the moment livable. Nothing sways them from the habit—not illness, not the sacrifice of love and relationship, not the loss of all earthly goods, not the crushing of their dignity, not the fear of dying. The drive is that relentless.
It
is impossible to understand addiction without asking what relief the
addict finds, or hopes to find, in the drug or the addictive behaviour.
The very essence of the opiate high was expressed by a twenty-seven-year-old sex-trade worker. She had HIV and has since died. “The first time I did heroin,” she said to me, “it felt like a warm, soft hug.” In that phrase she told her life story and summed up the psychological and chemical cravings of all substance-dependent addicts.
And
here is where I’m humbled. I’m humbled by my feebleness in helping this
person. Humbled that I had the arrogance to believe I’d seen and heard
it all. You can never see and hear it all because, for all their sordid
similarities, each story in the Downtown Eastside unfolded in the
particular existence of a unique human being. Each one needs to be
heard, witnessed, and acknowledged anew, every time it’s told. And I’m
especially humbled because I dared to imagine that Serena was less than
the complex and luminous person she is. Who am I to judge her for being
driven to the belief that only through drugs will she find respite from
her torments? Spiritual teachings of all traditions enjoin us to see the
divine in each other. Namaste, the Sanskrit holy greeting, means, “The
divine in me salutes the divine in you.” The divine? It’s so hard for us
even to see the human. What have I to offer this young Native woman
whose three decades of life bear the compressed torment of generations?
An antidepressant capsule every morning, to be dispensed with her
methadone, and half an hour of my time once or twice a month.
The difference between passion and addiction is that between a divine spark and a flame that incinerates.
Autonomy is impossible as long as one is driven by anything.
* * * * *
Physiological stress, then, is the link between personality traits and disease. Certain traits — otherwise known as coping styles — magnify the risk for illness by increasing the likelihood of chronic stress. Common to them all is a diminished capacity for emotional communication. Emotional experiences are translated into potentially damaging biological events when human beings are prevented from learning how to express their feelings effectively. That learning occurs — or fails to occur — during childhood. The way people grow up shapes their relationship with their own bodies and psyches. The emotional contexts of childhood interact with inborn temperament to give rise to personality traits. Much of what we call personality is not a fixed set of traits, only coping mechanisms a person acquired in childhood.
There is an important distinction between an inherent characteristic, rooted in an individual without regard to his environment, and a response to the environment, a pattern of behaviours developed to ensure survival. What we see as indelible traits may be no more than habitual defensive techniques, unconsciously adopted. People often identify with these habituated patterns, believing them to be an indispensable part of the self. They may even harbour self-loathing for certain traits — for example, when a person describes herself as “a control freak.” In reality, there is no innate human inclination to be controlling. What there is in a “controlling” personality is deep anxiety.
The infant and child who perceives that his needs are unmet may develop an obsessive coping style, anxious about each detail. When such a person fears that he is unable to control events, he experiences great stress. Unconsciously he believes that only by controlling every aspect of his life and environment will he be able to ensure the satisfaction of his needs. As he grows older, others will resent him and he will come to dislike himself for what was originally a desperate response to emotional deprivation. The drive to control is not an innate trait but a coping style. Emotional repression is also a coping style rather than a personality trait set in stone.
Not one of the many adults interviewed for this book could answer in the affirmative when asked the following: When, as a child, you felt sad, upset or angry, was there anyone you could talk to — even when he or she was the one who had triggered your negative emotions? In a quarter century of clinical practice, including a decade of palliative work, I have never heard anyone with cancer or with any chronic illness or condition say yes to that question. Many children are conditioned in this manner not because of any intended harm or abuse, but because the parents themselves are too threatened by the anxiety, anger or sadness they sense in their child — or are simply too busy or too harassed themselves to pay attention. “My mother or father needed me to be happy” is the simple formula that trained many a child — later a stressed and depressed or physically ill adult — into lifelong patterns of repression.
* * * * *
A
tone of voice or a look in another’s eyes can activate powerful
implicit memories. The person experiencing this type of memory may
believe that he is just reacting to something in the present, remaining
completely in the dark about what the rush of feelings that flood his
mind and body really represents. Implicit memory is responsible for much
of human behavior, its workings all the more influential because
unconscious.
Many of us live, if not alone, then in emotionally inadequate relationships that do not recognize or honour our deepest needs. Isolation and stress affect many who may believe their lives are quite satisfactory.
Couples
choose each other with an unerring instinct for finding the very person
who will exactly match their own level of unconscious anxieties and
mirror their own dysfunctions, and who will trigger for them all their
unresolved emotional pain.
The
salient stressors in the lives of most human beings today — at least in
the industrialized world — are emotional. Just like laboratory animals
unable to escape, people find themselves trapped in lifestyles and
emotional patterns inimical to their health. The higher the level of
economic development, it seems, the more anaesthetized we have become to
our emotional realities. We no longer sense what is happening in our
bodies and cannot therefore act in self-preserving ways. The physiology
of stress eats away at our bodies not because it has outlived its
usefulness but because we may no longer have the competence to recognize
its signals.
As children become increasingly less connected to adults, they rely more and more on each other; the whole natural order of things change. In the natural order of all mammalian cultures, animals or humans, the young stay under the wings of adults until they themselves reach adulthood. Immature creatures were never meant to bring one another to maturity. They were never meant to look to one another for primary nurturing, modelling, cue giving or mentoring. They are not equipped to give one another a sense of direction or values. As a result of today`s shift to this peer orientation, we are seeing the increasing immaturity, alienation, violence and precocious sexualization of North American Youth. The disruption of family life, rapid economic and social changes to human culture and relationships, and the erosion of stable communities are at the core of this shift.
It’s a subtle thing, freedom. It takes effort; it takes attention and focus to not act something like an automaton. Although we do have freedom, we exercise it only when we strive for awareness, when we are conscious not just of the content of the mind but also of the mind itself as a process.
We may say, then, that in the world of the psyche, freedom is a relative concept: the power to choose exists only when our automatic mechanisms are subject to those brain systems that are able to maintain conscious awareness. A person experiences greater or less freedom from one situation to the next, from one interaction to the next, from one moment to the next. Anyone whose automatic brain mechanisms habitually run in overdrive has diminished capacity for free decision making, especially if the parts of the brain that facilitate conscious choice are impaired or underdeveloped.
Settling for the view that illnesses, mental or physical, are primarily genetic allows us to avoid disturbing questions about the nature of the society in which we live. If “science” enables us to ignore poverty or man-made toxins or a frenetic and stressful social culture as contributors to disease, we can look only to simple answers: pharmacological and biological.
In the rare moments I permitted any stillness, I noted a small fluttering at the pit of my belly, a barely perceptible disturbance. The faint whisper of a word would sound in my head: writing. At first I could not say whether it was heartburn or inspiration. The more I listened, the louder the message became: I needed to write, to express myself through written language not only so that others might hear me but so that I could hear myself. The gods, we are taught, created humankind in their own image. Everyone has an urge to create. Its expression may flow through many channels: through writing, art, or music or through the inventiveness of work or in any number of ways unique to all of us, whether it be cooking, gardening, or the art of social discourse. The point is to honor the urge. To do so is healing for ourselves and for others; not to do so deadens our bodies and our spirits. When I did not write, I suffocated in silence.
One cannot get much more vulnerable than to expose oneself psychologically. To share oneself with another and then be misunderstood or rejected is, for many, a risk not worth taking. As a result, this is the rarest of intimacies and the reason so many of us are reluctant to share even with loved ones our deepest concerns and insecurities about ourselves. Yet there is no closeness that can surpass the sense of feeling known and still being liked, accepted, welcomed, invited to exist.
We
may not be responsible for the world that created our minds, but we can
take responsibility for the mind with which we create our world.
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