Having the space to deeply observe within
the client/therapist relationship requires an understanding of our own
process, an acknowledgement of our own historical and current triggers. Having a sense of what
evokes our own conditioning, knowing just what makes us react and what is
our relationship to that reaction is our "reaction". How we then respond
to what arises within the encounter; our response to this is a major
player within the therapeutic relationship. It is not a question of
getting rid of these feelings, but to know they are there without getting
carried away by them.
So in order to be with suffering
without becoming it we need to find the space to see clearly. To see
clearly, we need to have cleared away, (or perhaps acknowledged) and put
aside expectation, judgement, grasping, wishful thinking, self serving and
desire. This to a large extent involves finding inner stillness, for me
this comes back to the core. Meditation provides the opportunity to be
physically still, quiet, and thereby know what is present within “I” (and
when it goes well, a stillness, receptiveness, and an energetic opening to what is
really present)
However difficult it sometimes
seems, we are not always within the realm of suffering, either what we may
consider as our own, or that of others. The antelope suffers at the hands
of the lion, but the lion would suffer without the antelope. All is part
of the cycle or wheel of life.
Beneath all that pervades all of our
experience lies our inner still point or Core, that part of our human
experience that knows what suffering is and indeed what joy and freedom
are. This Core is the element within each of us which witnesses when we
are happy, sad, or moving from state to state. Not as a judgement but
simply put as an observation.
The Core or witness self is that
part which is able to observe, the part which sees without judgement,
conditioning or desire. The unconditioned mind or wise mind which has the
innate and boundless capacity to show compassion. Perhaps it is not
excessive to call this the enlightened mind.
To some extent that this
“enlightened mind” offers absolute clarity, compassion and spaciousness,
yet it resides within our conditioned selves and this is why it is so
important to acknowledge our conditioned self as part of the therapeutic
encounter.
It is a question of nurturing this
part of our experience that we can come to truly be with our experience
without becoming it. It is within this Core that true compassion arrises,
the natural human depth that calls to each of us to feel the love of our
experience and indeed our existence.
Perhaps a psychotherapist is with a
client and is only present with their own conditioned mind, perhaps busy
dwelling on what happened yesterday or what’s supposed to happen tomorrow
they may be blocking both their own and the field of relationship from
coming into view. They would not in effect be truly present. They would be
out of touch with wise mind. They may offer a narrow and perhaps self
absorbed, un-spacious, or un-clear. Any compassion may well be replaced
with a mechanical sympathetic tone or attitude. A client who is present
with difficulty, will, even if subconsciously, notice this absence and may
well withdraw or feel abandoned. This would especially be the case in
client work within Borderline States or the analytical
Passive Aggressive –
Schizoid personality
Feeling or rather “thinking” sorry
for self or other is not compassion; sympathy is in many circumstances
born of ego. It does not come from an open space; rather it comes directly
from the conditioned narrow self or I.
Of course to some extent this is a
play on words, yet compassion arises from a deeper more universal
awareness, a shared rather than separate place.
The phrase to encompass the three
constituents of clarity, spaciousness, and compassion which expresses this
innate human depth is Brilliant Sanity as written about extensively by
Karen Kissel Wegela.
Brilliant Sanity touches on or
perhaps into Nirvana – A place of absolute clarity, peace, compassion, and
spaciousness.
It is by connecting with (our own)
Brilliant Sanity that we can clearly see what is present without
attachment or expectation, in the moment as it arises. It is not simply
wisdom, for wisdom comes from knowledge and experience, yet Brilliant
Sanity includes wise mind. This can also bring a desire to attach to this
core of clarity but as said this may be a healthy attachment.
It is perhaps not so much a question
of “this or that” and more of a “this and that” It is by spending time in
contemplation and reflection that universal “truth” arises. Thinking alone
can provide many answers but these truths are not the stuff of true human
experience. – They are conditioned responses, 2+2= a conditioned response
rather than a deep awareness.
Brilliant Sanity is our innate
ability to accept and be with our experience without attachment, desire
or judgement. Yet in saying this a question also arises in relation to
attachment – are we attached to nirvana, to wise mind, to enlightenment. –
Yes!, but in saying this there is somewhere within this desire, an
acceptance that it may come and go, it is not for most of us a permanent
state of being. It is like the ebb and flow of the tide. Or the coming of
night and day. It is perhaps the work of Magya, finding and following the
path to the cessation of suffering. Within Buddhist teaching this is
achieved in part by following the eight fold path of right action, right
mind etc.
This path does not preclude our
cognitive skills and past conditioning from being present within the
therapeutic relationship. But it is perhaps our ability to recognise and
to move beyond this conditioning that brings an awareness which offers the
holding and presence necessary within the therapeutic encounter without
exhausting the therapist. It is this that allows client and
psychotherapist to truly meet, to provide the hearing and compassion which
will help the client to heal themselves, to offer the space, compassion
and clarity which may well be much of what a client needs in order to find
peace and understanding within their own process.
For the psychotherapist to be with
what is arising within the therapeutic encounter also requires a number of
cognitive skills, for instance, a mental recognition of transference and
counter transference within the therapeutic encounter. Within this there
is the acceptance of inner and outer process – What is mine, what is
clients and what arises within the relational field. This understanding
can come in a number of ways but perhaps most deeply and importantly it’s
growth comes from building space within the Psychotherapists own being
which has come from and leads to a deeper self awareness. To build this
understanding requires time for contemplation, meditation and self
reflection, which can with care lead to a degree of both self knowing and
a broader awareness and acceptance of “how it is” rather that how it
should be or how it might be. This could be Brilliant Sanity, not
enlightenment or even Nirvana, but an ability to be with, and bare witness
in a non judgmental way. Being with what arises without attachment,
rejection or desire. It is a balance between cognitive judgement coupled
with acceptance of what is present.
Brilliant Sanity is an acceptance of
all that arises coupled with an ability to feel what comes at a cellular
level, to be with and witness what is invoked from conditioning, to then
bring this feeling to cognition. To find and offer the space and
compassion for what is present within the field of relationship and
perhaps share it with the client, thereby offering something more that
pure cognitive knowledge or judgement.
Never the less, with all this said,
it remains difficult to clearly define how the process of meditation and
the acceptance of the four noble truths, the eight fold path, the skandas,
and other Buddhist teachings can help within the psychotherapeutic
relationship in isolation. This is perhaps a question of the dualistic
nature of our existence and our desire to pin things down that creates
questions – the desire for “Ah! that’s how it works”. Returning to the
2+2 example, a simple cognitive calculation. But what about 2 +2 / (9210
x E2) or whatever, suddenly more thought is required (and a
calculator!).
In relationship we do not have an
external calculator, yet we do have a sense of how it is, a deep yet
extremely complex understanding and connection which is for the most part
beyond calculation, beyond words, it simply is. Of course much of this can
be attributed to body language, vocal tone, gesture etc. But there is
more, a great deal more to communication; this is the interconnected
nature of the universe. Something far beyond mental formations and
something that does not require mental calculation.
There is a need to accept the basic
human condition and also move beyond this to a place of accepting these
natural states by letting go of them and making use of them at the same
time…a dualistic human holding and letting go.
Here it lies before the
meditators feet – like the serpents worn out skin – a lifeless heap of
thin and wrinkled thought tissue. Once it had seemed to be so full of
alluring beauty – this proud and deceptive idea of “I” and “Mine”
Nyanaponika
It is this balance of letting go and
“being with” that presents the dualistic dilemma within the
psychotherapeutic relationship, yet it is born, purely born from “I”
purely from ego.
It is of course also a balance between what is “my
stuff”, what is the clients “stuff” and what arises within the field,
much of what arises will be influenced by personality, conditioning etc.
However, to bring an awareness of Brilliant Sanity to the
therapeutic relationship enhances the following three qualities and relieves
the mirror side of each.
Greedlessness
Hatelessness
Undeludidness
It is in effect to really be with
all that is present and to bring universal reality into awareness,
together with our conditioned self, with
compassion, clarity, and spaciousness. To really do this within the therapeutic encounter. These qualities offer understanding
without condition or expectation that will enable healing to arise.
Useful Links
Core Process Psychotherapy
The Eight fold path
The Four Noble Truths