TREATMENT APPROACHES The following excerpt is from John Nelson's book, Healing the Split: Integrating Spirit into our Understanding of the Mentally Ill (1994). Nelson is a psychiatrist who has integrated traditional and nontraditional approaches. Our students rave about his book, so you might want to take a look at it. In the piece below, Nelson discusses how to assess and how to work with altered states of consciousness (ASC) which have become psychotic.
ASSESSING AN ACUTE PSYCHOTIC ASC With the exception of people in the early stages of mania, most individuals who enter a psychotic ASC for the first time are frightened and confused about their shift in consciousness, and many seek professional help. At that point, there is no way of knowing if the ASC will take a malignant or benign turn. The way a healer responds is crucial in determining how patients view themselves, their ASC, and future helpers. If their caretakers are kind and empathic and their treatment is tailored to the specific characteristics of their ASC, there is an excellent chance that regression can be arrested and spiritual growth resumed. This is true no matter what the source of the shift in consciousness or the level of regression. Like the antipsychiatrists of the 1960s, some transpersonal therapists reject the very idea of diagnosis, believing that it restricts their ability to relate to a patient as a whole person. They instead prefer a "wellness" orientation that may lead them to misapply "consciousness raising" techniques to everyone who walks through the consulting-room door. This is little different from those orthodox psychiatrists who believe that all psychotic ASCs can be quickly treated with the same class of medicines. Because spiritual growth cannot be hastened by short-circuiting the ego, the potential for harm in the name of treatment can be as great on the transpersonal side as it is on the orthodox side. An artful healer is alert to nuance as he tries to distinguish malignant from benign regressions. Although he regards his intuition as equal to objective signs and symptoms as he makes a diagnosis, he also collects the following information about any acute ASC: • • • • • • •
the person's current level of regression the duration of the regressive process whether the ASC began insidiously or abruptly the level at which the patient operated before regressing what, if any, events precipitated the change what meaning the individual assigns to those events what previous experience the person has had with ASCs, psychotic or