Self-Help Article
The Use of Mindfulness in the Treatment of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
(OCD)
by Dr. Jeffrey Schwartz
There are very effective treatments available for treating
obsessive compulsive disorder, and the suffering from the symptoms can be very
profound--even to the point where people seriously contemplate ending their
lives through suicide in an attempt to escape them.
There are now ways to treat this disorder effectively,
combining both the use of medication as well as things you can learn to do with
your mind itself. Mental training can be really effective in helping people with
obsessive compulsive disorder change not only their functioning and the
pragmatic clinical course of the disorder, but also as we're going to see change
the brain itself.
This brings us to the second aspect, perhaps as important as
the first: the profound implications of medical science demonstrating that what
people do with their mind affects how the brain works. I see it as our mission
going forward as a society to increasingly have people realize that how you
focus your attention, and what you focus your attention on, has very significant
affects on how your brain works.
I think that in the materialist culture that the 20th century
bequeathed us there is a tendency for people to view themselves as just passive
recipients of their own mental contents. Essentially viewing themselves as
almost like machines, people can come to believe there is nothing very much you
can do about your troublesome feelings unless you take some drug, and that
you're basically doomed to more or less to sit there experiencing the affects of
a problem like OCD until someone finds a drug to make it better.
Now in no way am I implying that medications are not very
helpful in treating neuropyschiatric conditions with a clear cut biological
basis, such as obsessive compulsive disorder. However I think that to go forward
as a medical community and as a society we need to realize that the materialist
approach not only to mental and physical health, but even to life itself, tends
to strip us of our capacity to connect with the power we all have within us. And
it is this power, with which we are all endowed, that enables us to bring about
tremendous changes in the way we live and even the way our brain works.
I think its relatively clear, if you just think about the
implications of all this, that it can have profound societal affects in terms of
issues of personal responsibility. Actions truly have consequences not only in
the most ordinary way of how they affect other people but even how it affects
your brain and how it works. This is the big message going forward and the great
implications it has for treating mental health problems, and medical disorders
in general, are extremely important.
In the next few minutes I'm going to try to explain to you how
much the symptoms of this condition can be understood as a brain related medical
problem. The first point is that people with obsessive compulsive disorders have
increased metabolism, or another way of saying the same thing is excessive
energy use, in a specific region of their brain. This excessive energy sits
right over the eye orbit or the eye socket, an area of the brain called the
orbital frontal cortex. There is a picture of this in my book Brain Lock on the
back cover and on page xxiii.
It is well known from a lot of neurobehavioural research that
this part of the brain is involved in people making emotional assessments of
their environment. More specifically, it is involved in getting the feeling that
something isn't right in the environment, or what we can sometimes call an error
detection signal. The big point is that people with obsessive compulsive
disorder have shown increases in metabolism in this part of the brain that gives
one the feeling that something is wrong. This part of the brain is really
overactive in people with OCD.
There is almost certainly a connection between that biological
change and for instance the description we just heard of feeling like you live
in a dump, and the reason why the bothersome feeling doesn't go away is just
because the brain is overactive.
Another important brain structure for understanding OCD is the
caudate nucleus. There is a picture of it on page 59 of Brain Lock. The caudate
nucleus is like an automatic transmission in the brain. What is happening and
where the term brain lock comes from, is that an error detection circuit that's
contained in the orbital frontal cortex literally gets locked in gear. The
result is you are bombarded with these very bothersome troubling feelings.
This is the situation in overview--at the bottom of the front
of the brain is the orbital frontal cortex, which can send error detection
signals. It sends its signals by a direct connection to the caudate nucleus,
which acts like an automatic transmission. Largely because of biologically
inherited traits the caudate nucleus gets stuck in gear again and again and
again and these very bad thoughts, these bothersome troubling thoughts, keep
bombarding into the persons conscious awareness.
Now what can one do about this? The really good news is that
there is a lot that can be done about this problem. While it is quite common,
affecting one person in forty in the general population, there is also a huge
amount of data that it is a very treatment responsive illness.
There are certainly medications that can help with the
treatment process. What those medications do is actually act on the
neurochemical transmitter serotonin, which is very widespread throughout the
brain, particularly in that caudate nucleus and orbital frontal cortex area. By
modulating serotonin levels in the brain, the medications over a period of
several months bring down the intensity of the intrusive bothersome feelings.
We can also change the activity in those very same structures
of the brain by learning how to redirect our attention and the way to redirect
our attention is largely a function of a mental process called mindfulness. This
has profound philosophical significance and was first described 2500 years ago
by Gotama Buddha.
Mindfulness is the foundation of Buddha's philosophy and of the
practice of meditation. However, when used as a form of mental development for
something like treating OCD, it has no religious content at all. This is really
important to stress--nothing in the use of mindfulness would ever impinge on the
religious beliefs of any other religion. Even though in some sense it has what
you might call a spiritual content, this is in a general sense of having the
mind influence the brain.
Mindfulness as a mental action is described in the abstract in
the conference program book (which I have attached as an appendix at the end of this paper). I really encourage you
to read the abstract to have a record to refer back to. Understand that
mindfulness is an action in which you learn and train yourself to direct your
attention in a wholesome and healthy manner.
Mindfulness is a training process to observe your inner
experience with calm and with a feeling of clarity. Observing the inner
experience calmly, clearly and without responding to it. For instance in the
case that we just heard one would make mental notes reminding oneself that
although the experience is very unpleasant, it is not something that one needs
to worry about in terms of taking over control of ones mind. The process of
observing in itself helps people increasingly come to the realization that they
can change their responses to those thoughts in very adaptive ways.
The Four Steps are the basis of the treatment approach
presented in the book Brain Lock (they are listed in a
chart on page 219). The term brain lock refers to the error detection circuit
that is locked in the on position. The Relabel step, which is the first step and
recognizes the intrusive thoughts and urges as nothing but the symptoms of OCD,
is essentially the equivalent of what I have just described as mindfulness.
Another way of thinking of the Relabeling step is called "making mental notes."
What you want to train your mind to do in the Relabel step is
to recognize that the reason why you feel like you do when you are having on OCD
symptom is simply because of a medical condition, a treatable medical condition.
What this does is begin to put things in a real life perspective. You can begin
to understand why your consciousness is being bombarded by such bothersome
experiences.
We are now taking advantage of advancements in medical science,
which have shown us without a doubt that there are brain mechanisms that are
responsible for those feelings being there. Then we are coupling that to a
traditional process of mental observation. We are using that traditional process
of clear-minded mental observation to really put in a context why these thoughts
are bothering us so much--because we have a treatable medical condition. The
second step answers the question why does it keep bothering us.
The first step is to Relabel. We put an accurate notation in
our own mind that answers the question, "What is this that's bothering me?" and
the answer is a treatable medical condition, OCD. In fact this process works
equally well for panic attacks, panic disorder, social phobia and essentially
all the anxiety disorders. We must realize that the feeling itself is not what
is important, it is our understanding of the fact that we can mindfully observe
the feeling and thereby change our responses to it. This will make us well and
make our minds more powerful and even change the underlying chemistry of our
brain in ways that move us toward the healthy path.
So the second step, Reattribute is answering the question, "Why
do they keep bothering me?" The thing that really makes them debilitating is
that they don't go away, they keep bothering you and bothering you. The answer
to that question is that the intensity and intrusiveness of the thought or urge
is caused by the medical condition OCD, and it's probably the result of a
biochemical imbalance in the brain. So you attribute the bad feeling to OCD and
stop blaming yourself for it.
We then came up with this little aphorism that a patient
actually said, "it's not me it's the OCD". Now that has a lot to do with
mindfulness because it's mindfulness that is allowing you to see clearly that
you are not the disease and that your mind and your consciousness are not the
disease process. There is an observing aspect of the mind that can really
maintain its independence even though the contents of the consciousness are
being flayed around by the disease process. We are really training the mind to
not identify with those experiences but to see ourselves as separable from those
experiences.
Now once we see our mind as separable from those experiences we
can go on to the critical third step. This step, called Refocus, actually
changes how the brain works. In the Refocus step the critical key phrase is
"work around." Work around, I am using as a technical term. Work around the OCD
symptoms by focusing attention on something else by doing something else and the
key phrase here is do another behaviour. The term "work around" means don't
wait for the feeling to go away--Work Around it by doing another behaviour,
even though the feeling is still bothering you.
Now why is that so important? The reason why work around is a
technical term is because the hard part of this treatment that really requires
will and stick-to-it-iveness and courage is remembering that you can't make
those feelings go away in the short term. You really are working around
them, and in that way its like an obstacle course.
You have to go over or around or any way you can get past
getting locked into compulsive behaviours like washing and checking. You remind
yourself I want to do something useful, and generally what you want to do is
something that you like to do that's both familiar and useful.
When you do this on a regular basis you literally change the
gearbox shifting capacity of the caudate nucleus. What you have happen is that
the gearbox now starts shifting to good behaviours. Because of the underlying
medical disease process it won't shift to the good behaviours unless you
literally shift it yourself by refocusing your attentions willfully on an
adaptive behaviour. The key phrases are do another behaviour while
working around the fact that the bothersome thoughts and urges are still
there.
The most important rule of thumb for this critical step is not
to try to make the thoughts go away, because in the short term that's something
you can't do. There are powerful brain mechanisms going on and that's where
people need a lot of support with this treatment. There is a natural tendency to
want to make these symptoms just go away. However you have to accept the fact
that the symptoms are there but realize with mindfulness that they don't have to
control what you do. This is why we say "It's not how you feel it's what you
do that counts," and that's such an important principle for life.
In practice this means that if you want to change how you feel
you have to do good things. If you put all of the focus of your attention on
doing good things, your feelings will naturally follow. If you put too much of
your attention on how you feel then you get a lot of emotional responses because
you are too wrapped up in your feelings, and things can just spiral into
becoming more and more intense and out of control.
Now when you do things in the proper way and put your attention
on your action what ends up happening is that you really come to Revalue which
is step four and is the last step of this process. It can often take several
weeks or months to kick in. Revalue means that you really learn not to take the
OCD or what ever anxiety symptom we're talking about at face value. Instead you
literally recognize the feeling in a different way. This is the most
powerful part of mindfulness because with mindfulness you can literally have the
same feeling but have a totally different meaning than it did before you were
mindful.
So it is not the feeling that needs the change, it is your
understanding of the truth that needs to change. As your understanding of the
truth develops then this feeling that I need to wash, I need to check, I can't
breathe if it's a panic attack, whatever the phobia might be changes. The key is
to put a different value on that feeling and say "oh well that's just the
symptom, that's just the medical symptom I don't need to listen to that I'm
going to refocus and do an adaptive behaviour." Yes it takes mindfulness. Yes it
takes mental strength. But it's a powerful process with powerful results.
When you do this it literally changes your brain in a very
significant way. You literally have used your mind to change your brain. We can
also use the standard medications, the so-called Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors
to change the activity in the gearbox in ways that are helpful. As we said
before the medications change the activity in the gear box and the feelings do
decrease on account of that. I'm more than happy to use medications in people
for whom they are appropriate, and in more than half the people with significant
OCD they are appropriate at least in some course of the treatment. The fact that
is so encouraging for us that you can cause those same changes to occur in the
metabolism of the gear box by using just your mind and its capacity to refocus
on a new behaviour.
With the learning of new and better habits, and the new
patterns of focusing attention, you literally see biological changes in the area
of the brain that functions as the gearbox. I strongly believe this lowers the
need for medications, too, although much more research needs to be done on this
aspect of treatment. I think all of the clinicians here at the conference would
agree that when people do the cognitive behaviour therapy there is often a
progressive decrease in the amounts of medication that are needed.
Slowly over time you can see people needing less medication
than they would if they did not do the cognitive behaviour therapy. I would
strongly urge clinical researchers in the field to really pursue this hypothesis
in a systematic way. I think it would be really good to collect more data that
says as people work on cognitive behaviour therapy and change how their brain
works their requirement for medication decreases along with that. Already we
have a lot of clinical evidence that this is true.
This is very helpful and it's also financially helpful to. It's
certainly helpful on the side effect picture. But another point that is even
more important is that we are now empowered and we realize that our mind has
real power to affect how our brain works.
The focus of our will through the utilization of refocusing of
our attention and doing another behaviour empowers us to change inborn
pathological circuitry in the brain. In that message I think comes an awareness
that can really affect our entire culture in terms of the power of mindfulness
to change not only our lives but even the inner workings of our brain. Thank you
very much.