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So, I'm a sucker for hearing about the news with the DSM-V, and the NYT just had an article on it: 's'here .

I guess it's my whole skeptical-critic coming out, but I like knowing that they're debating the very existence of some of the things I'm using to define myself.

Fills you with confidence, no? :P

It's sort-of right up there with this one: 50% of YA w/ PsychDisorders Like, when 50% of your population is 'disorderd,' doesn't the disorder become..."Being Human"?
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Thanks for the articles Wynne. This is a hot topic.

But here's my rant.

I'm not a fan of the DSM nor are many folks who study neurosceince.

The DSM wouldn't have the weight it does without the insurance companies using it as a rule book to qualify claimants for reimbursement. Furthermore, the pharmaceutical companies use it to exploit the psychiatric community and keep the bucks rolling in.( Questioning Meds)

And as the mental health establishment continues to "pathologize" problems in living, it tends to distort our self-perceptions ("I am OCD" vs. "I have OCD").

I suggest that the system might work much better if folks were able to self use their health insurance entitlements for psychotherapy without a medical referral. This is how the Canadian system works; unfortunately most plans provide less than average U.S.-level compensation. (However, you often need a diagnosis for a disability plan i.e. where the insurance covers your salary if you're off work.)

It is incorrect to view the DSM as the final word because new research means it's constantly evolving. The problem is that this research can be driven by third party interests. In my view, we need a whole new paradigm, a complete revamping of our approach to mental disorders, one that is genuinely holistic.

Shrinklady
Many thanks for the correction and rant, Shrinklady. It's true that "defining myself" by the things on the DSM is probably a very bad idea.

I suppose that right now I'm going back and forth in much the same way insurance companies might: if there's a problem, it's a problem, let's name it. If it's not a problem, why go? Pathologizing at least acknowledges the "problem" part of the equation, though I'll admit with pathologizing comes stigma walkin' arm in arm.

...I mean this in the best way. Whatever that way might be. Smiler

Could you also explain when you've the time what a "holistic" approach would look like?
Hi Wynne, yeah, many of us fall prey to defining ourselves by outside sources. It doesn't help when the medical establishment inadvertently encourages it by silent acceptance.

Increasingly, problems in living are being defined as disorders. This stems in part from people's need to get their help covered by their insurance (e.g. couples counseling). But the drawback is, as you mentioned, we are slowing becoming a nation (here and in the USA, UK etc.) of "the disordered".

I understand the dilema. It gets dicey trying to identify when a problem should be called pathologcial. For instance, if I have trouble speaking in front of groups, can that usefully be called pathological? Well yes it can, when it becomes debilitating. But then where do we draw the line? That's a totally subject experience. I guess this is what the DSM tries to do, quantify subjective experiences.

It seems to me that if the client says it's a problem, then it's a problem. When a client is describing symptoms to a therapist they're being subjective in any case and that's often all we have to go on when making an diagnostic assessment.

In the present system I do see the point in naming it especially for folks who blame or question themselves. I know I felt much better knowing I was suffing from "dysthymia" when I got that diagnosis years ago. I got a break from the crazy-making that was going on in my head.

Yet, if I was to really look at it, the root of my problem was that I didn't feel justified in getting help period i.e. without a diagnosis. That was a more important aspect of the main problem. If we had a system that recognized a person's right to get help on their word alone, then I wouldn't have needed that diagnosis. I mean, who would go to therapy if they didn't need something? I remember trying to get help for years previous to that diagnosis but I didn't really have the words to describe why I felt I needed help. (Now fortunately neuroscience can help explain this.)

Today I go to therapy without a diagnosis (I was self-referred) and I still get to claim it on my insurance (for a whopping four sessions!).

As for the question of "why go", well, that's kinda why I created this site i.e. to help folks understand that therapy's a way to achieve balance in mind, body, spirit...and along the way my allergies get better, I've seen little sign of the IBS that I suffered for years, and I seem less prone to migraine headaches. In other words my overall health improved, which hopefully should interest insurance companies.

Sorry Wynne if this post seems tangential. I think I get a little lost trying to get my ideas down on paper these days.

I haven't answered your question about the "holistic" approach. It's a very good question. I may need a bit more time to get that one together.

Shrinklady
quote:
It seems to me that if the client says it's a problem, then it's a problem. When a client is describing symptoms to a therapist they're being subjective in any case and that's often all we have to go on when making an diagnostic assessment.

In the present system I do see the point in naming it especially for folks who blame or question themselves.


I really appreciate your response, ShrinkLady, and I don't mean to be difficult. It's just that... self-reporting self-doubters, like me, get all worried (not that I wasn't already!) when folks are like, "well, don't pathologize, it's not really a -problem-." I'm like, "...it's not?" Well, then I shouldn't be here! Half the time I wanna say "I'm fine! no problems here!" to begin with, so I seem to look at the pathology/non-pathology argument from a slightly different angle.

I do hear the balance argument, and I imagine that has to do with the 'holistic approach' you're talking about. I'd like very much to hear more. Smiler Thanks again!
Oh I'm not finding what you're saying difficult Wynne. I'm actually not always sure what you mean so I'm may be digressing a bit. It's nice to chat about this stuff anyway. It's also a little hard to talk about these concepts without defining them so I'm not sure we're talking about the same thing. Some folks have written entire books on these subjects so I'm not doing justice to them in the least.

When I say that a client will say, it's a problem, I really mean it. Most people know they have a problem. There's something not right and they sense that. That should be sufficient reason for obtaining health care. We'd all benefit if that were the case.

But there's no blood test to show pathology like a bacterial infection. There's no clear cut way of telling when a problem becomes pathological. Hence we depend on health professionals using the DSM to state it or to label it. Unfortuantely due to the way the system is organized, only then does it become real to some folks. It becomes something apart from them much as a virus is an invasion in the body. But if they were properly supported they'd see it was real for them anyway and that there is no shame in having it, that the brain adapted that way in response to dire circumstances.

You asked about the holistic approach that I subscribe to. Well, it's an evolving theory and it's based on what neuroscience is telling us. I can't describe it fully as it would take a book.

When I started to do body psychotherapy it became increasingly clear that the brain is very adaptable. It will change--and not always in the best way for the future--in a way to permit optimal survival for the moment. These adaptations take place in the womb, in the early years and through trauma. Problem is, these adaptations don't turn off when the environment changes so the individual is stuck with these patterns unless life events or therapy help the individual to rewire the brain. However, the patterns aren't always useful for a more congenial environment. In other words, if the circumstances were such that the brain needed to make large adaptations then the individual is gonna have a harder time getting rid of these old patterns and or laying down new ones that are more useful for the long run.

The best way I can understand many psychological problems is through the ( human nervous system and regulation. The brain might need to calm down (as with anxieties and some forms of addictions) or it might need to be stimulated (as in ADHD and some forms of depression and/or some addictions). We see this with brain imaging studies.

Many of our problems in living and pathologies are related to these patterns in the brain. The brain doesn't have a cut off point when a problem in living becomes a pathology so you can imagine how hard it is for us to determine it.

There's a lot more to this especially how physical illness and the mind body connection fits in and even more so energy and spirituality.

Shrinklady
quote:
It will change--and not always in the best way for the future--in a way to permit optimal survival for the moment. These adaptations take place in the womb, in the early years and through trauma. Problem is, these adaptations don't turn off when the environment changes so the individual is stuck with these patterns unless life events or therapy help the individual to rewire the brain. However, the patterns aren't always useful for a more congenial environment.


Shrinklady, I felt like screaming "that's it" when I read this. One of the real keys to my healing has been my therapist's showing me that far from something being "wrong" with me that needed to be fixed, it was "development gone awry." That I reacted exactly how I needed to then to survive, but that those reactions don't function as well now. They need to be changed to live more fully in the present. That shift in thinking just brought the whole possibility of healing so much closer. I hadn't done anything wrong, but I do need to learn now to do something different.

AG
quote:
One of the real keys to my healing has been my therapist's showing me that far from something being "wrong" with me that needed to be fixed, it was "development gone awry." That I reacted exactly how I needed to then to survive, but that those reactions don't function as well now. They need to be changed to live more fully in the present.


AG - How long did it take for that to sink into your head? My T tells me this, but I haven't been able to wrap my head around it. I'm still in the stage where I have to "blame" someone. It may be me at fault or a caregiver, but I just haven't bought into the realization that it just "is." And, that I can do something to change it.

ShrinkLady

Thanks so much for your explanations. The whole idea of being able to rewire the brain after so many years of repeating the same patterns is just so incredible to me. It not only makes me think that changing my thought patterns will help me, but that changing my patterns will also help how I parent my own children. The more I learn about the influences of the parenting I received, the more guilty I feel about my parenting of my children. I can now see that it is never too late to change that and therefore help them change.

PL
PL,
Quite some time if I remember correctly. Smiler One of my T's virtues is his ability to repeat the same facts more times than a human being should possibly be willing to. Smiler

What really helped me with this though is a lot of the reading that I did on Attachment theory. (I don't know if I ever mentioned this but one of the ways I avoided my emotions was to overcompensate with my intellect. Show me a new problem, I find a book on it. Keep the left brain happy, so the right can do what it needs to, that's what I say!) When my T realized that I had an attachment problem, I knew very little about it and I asked him to recommend a book about it. Took him a little while, but he recommended Parenting from the Inside Out which discussed attachment research from the perspective of how to parent. There was a lot of neurobiology tucked into the book (such that it was easy to skip if you wanted to). It was really fascinating that the neurobiological research about how we develop and just what the attachment mechanism is and how it affects us, explained so much of my behavior. But one thing the author was really clear about and hit again and again, was the possibility of change, that the plasticity of the brain was such that you could change, even long implanted, deep behaviors. It really gave me a lot of hope.

The more I learned about attachment and development the more sense it made to me. I would also highly recommend A General Theory of Love. This book was written by three psychiatrists and brought together the findings of neurobiology and their experience in therapy and what worked. And really well written, its a good read. It resonated so deeply with me and my experience that I recommended it to the my T, who really loved it. There's a very dog-eared, note-stuffed copy of the book on his desk now. It so resonated with our work together that we discussed it on and off for around six sessions and it still occasionally comes up. Reading that was what reconciled me to my need to be dependent on my T for awhile. But that was because I needed to go back and get something I really needed which reinforced the "development gone awry" theme.

I will tell you that it was a long hard struggle and on the way it felt like I was NEVER going to believe this or sometimes even understand it. It could be confusing or chaotic beyond belief. If you read some of my older posts, you'll see that I regulary threatened to quit therapy. But it crept in little by little until one day without realizing how you got there, you find yourself in a different place, a large grassy meadow with many beckoning hills. Smiler

AG
Incognito,
I highly recommend it, the author gave a lot of advice about how to give your children a secure attachment even if you didn't have one. I remember reading it and consistently thinking I wish I had read it when my kids were younger.

But to encourage both of you, attachment research has proved that your ability to reflect on yourself is a much stronger indicator of how you'll do as an attachment figure. The fact that you're both in therapy indicates a good and/or developing capacity for that. So you're doing a better job than you think you are. But I understand the fear, I've wrestled with it for a long time. And my children are old enough that I've had to deal with some things that I know I'm at least partially responsible for. But you cope, and that teaches you and your children that you can face whatever it is.

AG
quote:
And my children are old enough that I've had to deal with some things that I know I'm at least partially responsible for. But you cope, and that teaches you and your children that you can face whatever it is.


AG

This is where I am right now. Well, at least one of my problems. And, this is part of what drove me to therapy. The thought that I had to do something for me, so that I could help him. It will be a long road for him too, but I hope he is seeing and experiencing the changes in me and realizing that we really are strong enough to face the hard times. We just need to ask for help. (Wow, my T would be amazed to hear me say that!)

I have also thought of quitting therapy when things get rough. I told her recently that I wanted to quit. Quit the thoughts, quit the pain, stop it all. Deep inside though, I know I can't quit now. It would be even more painful for me to not see her anymore. So that's probably a good thing, it keeps me coming back for more.

At the moment I'm reading Perfect Women. Interesting information about performance and acceptance and the relationship between mothers and daughters. When I'm done, I will look into your recommendations. I have done some research about attachment. It is really interesting to me and makes me think about the effect adoption has had on my life. Thanks for all your great advice.

PL
PL,
We can't change the past, but we can change the future. You're doing everything within your power to make it better for your child. When we were dealing with some of the problems, our T really encouraged my husband and I that we were doing something really important for our daughter. We were facing the problem and doing everything we could to make it better. He keeps telling me, life will test you so the best thing to do is learn to deal with those tests, not try to make it so nothing happens. That isn't possible.

And I've never read the book, but it sounds interesting. I'll have to track it down.

You mentioned the effect adoption has had on your life. If you don't mind my asking, are you adopted? Or was your child?

AG
My T also recommended "Parenting from the Inside Out" I am now a few chapters in. Guess we'll have to do another book discussion thread soon.

My daughter is 5 and I started therapy with this T when she was 2 1/2 and I had already felt guilty since I had suffered from so much depression that it was very hard for me to keep up with her. She is a very high energy child who may or may not have ADHD. We don't really know yet since she doesn't present any ADHD behavior at school - or as far as I can tell from what her teachers say she doesn't. She is a completely different kid at home though. But working on yourself, my T assures me, will bring my parenting eons ahead of my parents so it is very unlikely that I will repeat their mistakes. Just acknowledging to your child that your struggles are yours and not theirs and not because of them can be a huge burden lifted off their shoulders. Plus I find myself trying to do for my daughter what my T does for me like trying to make her feel safe, being consistent and trustworthy, being able to contain her emotions (which are very intense) and identify and empathize with her rather than trying to automatically fix things. Can't say for sure yet if it is all working but it has to be a hell of a lot better than how my parents raised me. Besides, my T reminds me often that "no one escapes unscathed from childhood." There is only so much I will be able to do.
quote:
You mentioned the effect adoption has had on your life. If you don't mind my asking, are you adopted? Or was your child?


AG - I don't mind the question at all. I was adopted and have known it all my life. I was always told how happy my parents were about it, and I felt as if I was special because I was "chosen." I never questioned it and now I can see that I suppressed those thoughts because I did not want to hurt my adoptive parents' (mother's) feelings. Maybe I even thought that if I wasn't the good little girl, I would be "unchosen." Abandonment is a huge issue for me right now. Now that they have both passed away, I have questions galore. I knew that I was 2 1/2 months old when they got me, but it never occurred to me that I existed somewhere else for 10 weeks. Now that REALLY bothers me. There is a huge whole in my life that I know absolutely nothing about. Now that I am older, and seeing Dr.s more often, it bothers me to have no family history. I have to leave that whole section blank when filling out the paperwork for a new Dr. I think about how I "mothered" my own children when they were newborns, and I wonder if anyone "mothered" me.

I could go on and on with all the questions I have. I have read a lot of books about this. The one that was most helpful was "Primal Wound," and I was even able to email the author and discuss many things with her. I have requested information about my birth mother and have received minimal, non-identifying information. I am actually waiting for a more in-depth search to begin. That doesn't mean that I really want the answers though. I go back and forth with wanting to know and not wanting to know. It is all just one more piece to the puzzle as to why I do the things I do.

Thanks for asking.

PL
PL,
I can see where 10 missing weeks would feel weird. I have an adopted nephew, that frankly, I always forget was adopted, but my brother-in-law and sister-in-law actually brought him straight home from the hospital just days after he was born, so they effectively parented him from the very beginning. And they've stayed in touch with the birth mother so he has all the medical info.

I never thought of the fact that telling a child they're chosen, might convey that they can be un-chosen. Nothing's ever simple where it comes to families, is it?

I am impressed at how hard you're working at you're healing and how important it is to you to be a good parent. And the really good news is, that even if something was missing in the first 10 weeks, it can be fixed. And you're doing what you need to do to fix it.

Thanks for sharing all that.

AG
Thanks AG
At this point, I don't see that there is anything else I CAN do, because the pain is too great to walk away now. I have to do something to resolve these feelings and make my life better. It is just so hard sometimes. Hearing your stories really gives me hope that I will someday find some peace from all of this. My T is really helping me to head in that direction. I just need to really believe that she is always there for me. She tells me this over, and over, and over, I just need to let it sink into my thick skull.

PL
PL.. it's interesting to read your slant on the adoption issue. My son is adopted from Eastern Europe. We brought him home at 7 months. In his case he knows that his first 7 months were spent in a "baby home" where they took care of him until we were able to go and take him home. He was given up at birth. I have very little info on his birth mother and no medical history. Because of the adoption I read a lot about attachment. It never dawned on me that I was the one with the attachment problems and I was not adopted. I think he is more securely attached to me than I was to my bio mother. I never use the words chosen with him. I explain that we were meant to be together but it just took a little longer for us to find each other. He is still young and does not ask about the birth mother. We are very open about everything and always have been. We have video and a lot of pictures of the baby home and the nurses who cared for him there. I hope this helps him at some point.

I am much more aware now though about attachment styles and theory. I worry because people with disorganized attachment tend to raise children who become unsecurely attached at well... except the books do say that if the mother has the capacity to be reflective then it is quite possible to raise securely attached children even if the mother is unsecurely attached. So this is what I hold onto. I also hold onto the idea of the plasticity of our brains and the hope that I will oneday overcome my own unsecure attachment.

If I can answer any questions from the adoptive mother's point of view please don't hesitate to ask.

TN
PL,
You don't have a thick skull, you just have some very deeply embedded beliefs to overcome. It really makes sense that you have to hear it over and over. I remember my T once explaining this whole thing to my husband once who said he didn't understand, did I get it? And I answered, kind of, but T has explained it about 8 times already. To which my T said, eight out of 8008 probably. I really didn't realize he was serious. Big Grin

TN,
And when you do form a secure attachment, you'll provide an amazing model for your son that problems can be handled, shortcomings overcome and life made better. I can't imagine anything better to hand on to your child. Smiler'

AG
TN
I think that is great that you have videos to share with your son. At some point in time, he may wonder about where he came from, or maybe he won't. As I said before, these questions did not seem important to me until my mother died. When she died, I became aware of my abandonment issues. That snowballed into my feeling of abandonment from my birth mother. It's not that I want a cozy relationship with my birth mother, just some answers to my questions.

At the time I was adopted, everything was very secretive. The birth mother had all the rights, no birth father was considered. All information was sealed and I can't find out anything unless she agrees to it. And, who knows if she is even still living. Also at that time, no one ever even entertained the idea that an adoptive person would ever have any questions. It was also believed that newborns had no sight, no feelings, no thoughts. It has been proven now that that is just not true. My T says that one thing that makes this so difficult for me is that my issues happened before I was verbal. Therefore, I have no words to explain or remember what happened, or how I felt. My adoptive mother was very attuned to my needs, but attachment theory was not anything that anyone knew or understood. I was also a child who felt she could do everything herself and wanted no help. My independence was praised and so I grew up thinking that I shouldn't ask anyone for anything I needed.

Well, I really could go on and on, but I think I'd better stop here. I think your son is so lucky that you are doing this hard work and creating a better life for yourself and for him.

AG
Yeah, I have asked her to keep repeating it. I believe it more than I did before, but sometimes I backslide and let my mind go into a deep hole. She always has a way of pulling me out though.

PL

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