Dr. B's Blog

Group 05/13/2011

Today in group we discussed the core mindfulness skills. We went over the pros and cons of each state of mind - Reason mind, Emotion mind, Body mind - and how they can be used to help make Wise Mind choices. The premise is simple: make sure you're attending to each of these states of mind, stop, synthesize and make a choice that balances each of these factors as appropriate to the situation. During the discussion of Wise Mind, we reviewed times each of us has been in a wise mind place and how it physically feels to be make a wise mind decision. For many people, wise mind lives in your diaphragm. It "feels right" in your body, particularly settled, in that place.

Homework: Making a wise mind choice. (Homework handouts)

Depression isn't forever, but like an unwelcome houseguest, it finds its way back. Be ready.

As I was digging through the articles I've collected to read and post about, I came across this one with some research conducted by some local mental health professionals, amongst others. The study described in the article was a large multi-site data analysis in which adolescents with a Major Depressive Episode were followed-up over the course of several years after treatment. The researchers found that:

  • recovery rates were good, with 96.4% of participants recovering during the follow-up period, with over two-thirds recovering during the first year of treatment.
  • treatment modality was unrelated to recovery.[1]
  • nearly half of those who recovered had a recurrence of symptoms within 5 years.

We've long known that a past major depressive episode predicts a future one. As a result, this finding is not surprising. What is interesting about the research here is that there is a predictive factor of both gender and co-occuring anxiety disorder.

As far as clinical implications go, this finding highlights the importance of skills acquistion for self-recovery after the completion of therapy by a trained professional. In addition, the should focus not just on the management of the depression symptoms but also of the anxiety features present. I'd like to see more follow-up on specific types of therapy and the longevity of their effects, but longitudinal study is hard and expensive, so we may never get to see that clinical application of these findings.

Depression isn't forever, but like an unwelcome houseguest, it finds its way back. Be ready.


Footnotes: [1] This was not a study looking at the efficacy of various types of treatment, just a look at the efficacy of all treatments. The treatment options for participants in this study received either Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, fluoxetine (prozac), a combination or a placebo.

The science of anger

Self-restraint can be hard to effectively manage. There's been an ongoing debate about the notion of catharthis and whether it works to help us relieve emotions or not, for example. A recent article in Wired.com discusses the issue a bit more:

My favorite experiment involved movies. Two hundred and thirty nine subjects were given a choice between a virtuous apple and a hedonistic chocolate bar. (A slim majority chose the apple.) Then, they were offered a selection of movies to watch, from Anger Management (an anger themed film) to Billy Madison (a non-anger themed film.) Interestingly, students were significantly more likely to choose the angry films if they’d first chosen the apple. And it wasn’t just films: another experiment found that people who exercised financial restraint – they chose a gift certificate for groceries over one for spa services – were more interested in looking at angry faces.

But just because practicing self-restraint can lead to some anger-related experiences, it doesn't mean that we should forgo self-restraint entirely. Over time, not succumbing to urges will weaken the power of those urges. The implication is that if we can practice self-restraint consistently, we'll be reducing how often we feel angry and/or seek out anger-related stimuli.

Guilt and pain

"When reminded of an immoral deed, people are motivated to experience physical pain."

This is the opening line of the discussion section in a recent article published in Psychological Science. The hook is alluring, isn’t it? Thinking about times that you were “bad” makes you want to punish yourself. I was attracted to this article for review because of my interest in working with self-injurious patients. There are two predominant reasons people engage in self-injurious behavior (SIB):

  1. He/She wants to regulate his/her emotions through distraction or
  2. He/She wants to punish him/herself for some perceived wrong or defect.

As a starting point in understanding SIB, these two perspectives are helpful. They give us a framework to begin to explain possible motivations and the function of that particular SIB. In other words, how do we get those needs met without having to engage in SIB?

The Article

Getting back to the article, the authors engaged in a simple experimental manipulation in which participants were assigned to either the recall of “immoral”[1] interpersonal behavior or more generic interpersonal behavior. Participants rated their affect using the PANAS[2] and then engaged in the pain part of the study. Following the painful/non-painful experience, their level of “guilt” was measured by completing the PANAS again.[3]

The researchers found that participants in the guilt inducing/pain condition expressed lower levels of guilty feelings after the manipulation, leading them to conclude that the painful experience caused a drop in guilt ratings.[4]

The participants in the guilt/pain condition also perceived more physical pain during the manipulation than those in the non-guilt/pain condition.[5]

Reading the Tea Leaves

The authors go on to claim that the motivation for causing pain is to reduce guilt. I believe they’ve got their conclusions backwards. Guilt is reduced because of the pain, not the other way around. Getting into divining motivation is a specious area at best. Unfortunately, I don’t see how the results of their study supports that explanation. This reading of the data is basically saying that the second of my two reasons for SIB listed above is the reason for engaging in the behavior. However, I believe that emotion regulation aspect of painful experience is not to be understated.

Pain as Emotion Regulation

The explanation of this article is a long way around to talk about my favorite therapeutic technique — mindfulness. Specifically, using mindfulness as a way to stop thinking about particular experiences can help reduce the intensity of those thoughts and the subsequent emotion. Rumination on particular misdeeds fires off a host of strong emotions and breaking into that ruminative cycle prevents continued emotional experience. In this particular case, the ice was an unavoidable mental focus and we can see support for this supposition in the subjective experience of the pain.

To further draw out the supposition, without too much of a stretch, we can say that people actively avoid thinking about times they did something “wrong”. When the participants were presented with a mental “out”, they took it. Ice is painful and it’s relatively easy to focus on pain. Focus on the physical pain increases the subjective experience of the pain. Two conclusions can be drawn from this:

*For those who were suffering from emotional pain as a result of the manipulation — those in the “guilt” condition — this physical pain was deemed to be less intense, so they focused on the ice.

For those in the non-guilt — those without emotional pain — the physical pain was more uncomfortable to they focused *away from it, leading to subjectively less pain.

Mindfulness as Emotion Regulation

The revealing thing about this article is that a mindful experience can be emotionally regulating. In DBT, we talk about using ice as a distress tolerance skill. This research, coming from a non-DBT perspective, corroborates that belief. I don’t believe that you necessarily need to subject yourself to physical pain to get the same sense of relief — you don’t need to punish yourself to feel better, at least all the time — you just need to be able to mindfully turn away from your rumination.

The process isn’t as easy as it sounds since being able to turn away from your ruminative thoughts is work. Our minds have a tendency to stick to things that we least like them to stick to. Cultivating mental control through regular practice and developing a sense of forgiveness and genuine caring for yourself can help. You should not let yourself violate your values if you can avoid it, but if you have, make up for it and then move on.

Footnotes

[1] The authors defined “immoral” behavior as ostracizing someone. I’d buy that as a particularly embarrassing experience.

[2] The PANAS is a well-validated measure of affect. I’m not sure how well it measures guilt, but since this is a peer-reviewed article, I’m going to give the authors the benefit of the doubt.

[3]This type of within subject/repeated measure design is common in psychological research. It’s designed to measure change across time or via experimental manipulation and has much theoretical support. It’s an especially powerful design because each subject is his/her own control.

[4]Given that this was an experimental design, causal conclusions are warranted.

[5]This finding, I believe, is particularly salient.

DBT again shown to be effective

The American Psychological Association highlights some key findings regarding the treatment of personality disorders. Help for personality disorders:

In a study comparing dialectical behavior therapy and traditional psychotherapy, women who underwent dialectical behavior therapy were more successful at reducing suicide attempts, self-mutilating and such self-damaging behaviors as gambling and substance abuse.

As we've known for a long time, DBT helps immensely when used to treat personality disorders. I'm always happy to see more research supporting its use. We, at Durham DBT, take pride in our training and our use of a comprehensive DBT model to help those with personality disorders, Borderline Personality Disorder, specifically, and people who are struggling with emotion generally. Treatment works.

Thinking faster

Training the brain through mindfulness practice is an essential part of Dialectical Behavior Therapy. We work on developing a way of sorting out what is important to attend to and what needs to be left out of awareness. It’s not ignoring information, but making quick decisions about where mental energy needs to be focused.

A recent study, described in the New York Times, highlights some of the differences between athletes and non-athletes in a decision making exercise:

They didn’t move faster,’ said Art Kramer, the director of the Beckman Institute and a leader in the study of exercise and cognition, who oversaw the research. “But it looks like they thought faster.”

The author, correctly, goes on to emphasize that athletes may not be better at making quick decisions because of their athletic participation but it could be that their participation in sports and their ability to make quick decisions are related to a 3rd factor. It may also be that there is a virtuous cycle between that unnamed 3rd factor and athletics:

Of course, it’s also possible that sports didn’t make the athletes better at information processing. Instead, they may have been blessed with naturally fine processing abilities and, as a result, became accomplished athletes. “I’d guess,” Dr. Kramer said, “that to some degree it’s both.” But, he added, the athletes handled the crossings better than the nonathletes, regardless of whether their sport required exquisite timing and tactical thinking — which strongly suggests, he said, that physical training does reshape the brain.

The take-home message for all of us non-athletes is that working on mental acuity exercises and being mindful while doing activities can help improve your ability to be mindful and effective in making decisions.

Talk is cheap (and effective)

MSNBC reports on suicide in the Native American Community:

"Let's say that all your emotions are in a glass of water. When somebody bullies you, dump out a little bit. When somebody offers you drugs and you take those drugs, and then somebody tears you down because you used drugs, pour out a little bit. Eventually that glass of water is going to be empty and that's kind of like your self-esteem. You're going to be empty, so you're going to try to commit suicide," said A.J. Hollom, a 14-year-old student.

The thing that's so sad about adolescents killing themselves is that it's so readily preventable. Teens experience the entire range of emotion but don't have the entire repertoire of coping skills needed to handle them. There are very effective treatments for suicidal adolescents and my method chosen method of treatment, Dialectical Behavior Therapy, is one of them.

For parents, therapists or concerned others, I recommend Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Suicidal Adolescents. I have spoken to the authors and listened to them give lectures and it's a great resource. The book is targeted at clinicians, but it's important for caregivers to be informed, too. If you've got other suggestions for books or resources, please mention them in the comments!

"You will be FAT if you eat today. Just put it off one more day." (Don't do this.)

This says it all:

”You will be FAT if you eat today. Just put it off one more day.”

This is the #1 reason on many lists on sites that promote anorexia and it's really startling. I hope by putting that as the title of my post, a Google search for it will come up with something that's not promoting an eating disorder. Right now, if you do a search for that phrase, you'll get list after list of why not to eat. As a mental health provider, I've seen these reasons echoed in the thoughts of some of my most stricken patients. It's scary to see them in writing.

If you're struggling with an eating disorder, please visit NEDA's site, at least. 

A Vogue editor is trying to stamp out “pro-ana” sites. I was shocked to learn of the existence of these sites while I worked at Carolina House. They promote the lifestyle of an eating disorder as if it were a valid choice. I don’t agree, necessarily, with the need for regulation of sites that promote eating disorders, but I do wholeheartedly agree that they need to be labeled as dangerous, unhealthy and have a very bright light cast on their existence.

When I work with patients suffering from an eating disorder, I often describe the way an eating disorder works like roaches: they both thrive in the dark. Put light on your disorder and let people who care about you know about your struggles so they can help. That's really one of the best ways to be sure you can maintain your recovery.

Sleep and health

When a client first gets started in therapy, we often try to “go back to basics.” That is, recalibrating those things that tend to get off center when things get hard:

  • sleep
  • exercise
  • eating
  • medication use

Specifically referred to as the “ABC Please” skills in DBT, we try to do what we can to reduce negative emotion[1], we try to re-implement those things that don’t take a lot time to do and provide a great deal of benefit over the near term. Sleep is one of those:

There’s a syndrome called sleep inertia which is the cognitive impairment, disorientation, and groggy feeling we experience when we first awake from sleep. Sleep inertia can negatively impact the brain’s ability to think clearly and our ability to function effectively in performing tasks right after we wake up (Donatelle, 2009). Just think about the challenge it takes to brush your teeth when you wake up after only four or five hours of sleep.

I’ve never heard of “sleep inertia” but I’m not a sleep guy. I just know that it’s important. The term makes conceptual sense, even if it’s just a fancy name for begin groggy.

The stages of sleep include: wakefulness, drowsiness, light sleep, and deeper sleep. It is in the deeper sleep phase where rapid eye movement (REM) sleep occurs. REM sleep is absolutely essential. In fact, missing REM sleep is responsible for our feeling groggy and sleep deprived (Donatelle, 2009).

I recommend that my patients get through at least 2 REM cycles of sleep/night in order to feel well rested. At the very least, make sure you get through at least one REM cycle. For most people, that’s about 4 hours or so.

There are so many little things that you can do to adjust your life to make it a bit better. None of them may be earth-shattering changes, but taken together, they can make a big difference.

Footnotes:

[1]: This is the "ABC Please" skill in the emotion regulation module. In the currently published manual (Linehan, 1993), the skill is referred to as "PLEASE MASTER" but it's going to be changed in the next version.

Stimulating Happiness

Paul Krugman, a nobel laureate, knows what he’s talking about when it comes to economic theory. There’s very little doubt that he’s a well-respected expert on economics and has a very specific stance with respect to government’s role in the economy. He recently discussed the impact of jobs on happiness:

So are Americans happier? Of course not — in 1999 or 2000 everyone could easily find a job, right now everyone — even the highly educated — faces the prospect of very long-term unemployment if anything goes wrong.

He makes an accurate connection between employment status and jobs and discounts the importance of income as a factor in happiness. On the surface, we may believe that mo’ money, mo’ happiness, but we know that’s not true.

Mo’ money, Mo’ problems

I wish he had backed up his assertion that people are unhappier now than they were during the end of the last decade. Our general sense is that there is some emotional malaise throughout the country, if not the world, but I’ve not seen any specific data to support that assumption. Be that as it may, working is clearly important to one’s well-being. But you don’t need to get paid to get the benefit. If you’re having trouble finding a job or meaning in your work, think about volunteering. Volunteer Match is a fantastic resource for volunteer opportunities. Type in your zip code and it’ll give you a number of options.