vendredi 8 mai 2009

So-called 'Schizophrenia' as Intense Transpersonal or 'Spiritual' Experience, Transformation Process, Spiritual Awakening or 'Spiritual Emergence’.

Spiritual emergency and human nature…

The combination of Western scientific research with Eastern psychologies such as Buddhism has resulted in new concepts which shed light on the nature of the human personality or 'psyche' i.e. ‘human nature’. Human nature can be defined in terms of the biological needs for growth of the human organism as a social organism. Human growth is described in terms of socialisation which is a function of the development of moral consciousness or 'conscience'. Complete development of human conscience depends on fulfillment of motives for natural human behaviour i.e. 'human needs'. As well as the obvious physiological needs, human needs include so-called 'lower' psychological needs for self-esteem - the 'ego needs' - and the so-called 'higher' psychological needs for spiritual development - the spiritual needs of the transpersonal dimension of human nature i.e. 'metaneeds'. Fulfillment of metaneeds results in heightened intuition and increased awareness necessary for effective adaptation to changing social conditions i.e. ‘social intelligence’. Human adaptability depends on spiritual growth involving the person's evolution from the egocentric perspective of emotional immaturity to the transpersonal perspective of emotional maturity. Spiritual growth of normal development is gradual and fluidand results in spiritual awakening or 'spiritual emergence'. If the process of 'spiritual emergence' is very rapid and dramatic, the sensory and psychic experiences become so intense, chaotic and overwhelming that it is too distressing for the person to bear and so they experience psychic overload and spiritual emergence becomes ‘spiritual crisis' o 'spiritual emergency - also known as transpersonal experience, psycho-spiritual transformation, transpersonal crisis, psycho-spiritual crisis, the spiritual journey, hero's journey, dark night of the soul, spiritual opening, psychic opening, psychic awakening, spiritual awakening, enlightenment, kundalini awakening,kundalini process, kundalini crisis, shamanism, mysticism, gnosis, the psychotic-visionary episode, dark night of the soul, the alchemical process, positive disintegration and so on. Spiritual emergency is a sign of health and a part of the human condition characterised by spontaneous alternative consciousness states or ‘realities'. The person learns to grow beyond cultural conditioning and the expectations of others… beyond fear based ego-consciousness to a new level of awareness or 'higher consciousness state' of spiritual renewal or spiritual rebirth.With spiritual rebirth the person experiences an inner sense of emotional liberation and discovers ideas and behaviours which promote growth and the affirmation of life which is characteristic of total well-being or 'high level wellness'. As a healing or renewal process involving the positive transformation of the self, spiritual emergency is a concern of'transpersonal psychology'.

So-called 'schizophrenia' is not a 'mental illness' but an intense transpersonal or spiritual process or experience which represents spiritual awakening and has been designated as 'spiritual emergency' (See the writings of Christina and Stanislav Grof).

Much needless suffering results from ignorance of the nature of the human personality or 'human nature'. Insights into the workings of human nature are provided by the healthy process of healing in which the individual experiences the psychic overload of uncontrollable spiritual growth and crisis i.e. spiritual emergency or so-called 'schizophrenia'.


Schizophrenia has been described as a nonspecific disease by the psychiatric profession. This supposedly devastating condition was originally named by German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin (1856-1926). Kraepelin believed that the condition involved irreversible mental deterioration' and coined the term 'dementia praecox' - Latin for 'prematurely out of one's mind'. It later became clear that the term was a misnomer and a new term was coined in 1910 by Swiss psychiatrist noted for his kindness and humanity Eugen Bleuler (1857-1939). Bleuler, teacher of Carl Jung, was professor of psychiatry at the University of Zürich where he headed the famous Burghölzli Clinic. He coined the term 'schizophrenia' to mean 'splitting of the mind' since the condition seemed to involve a mental split between thought and emotion. The term is derived from German 'schizophrenie' from Greek 'skhizein' meaning 'to split' and 'phren' of unknown origin meaning 'heart or mind'. According to Greek etymology, ‘schizophrenia’ actually means 'broken soul' or 'broken heart’. There is still no universally accepted definition. The term has been applied to many so-called 'mental illnesses' which represent a set of socially and culturally unacceptable thinking and behaviour patterns and which other people greatly dislike thus making it a model of 'unwanted conduct'. The condition is largely misunderstood as a result of people’s fear of the unknown.

It turns out that schizophrenia is not a disease or a 'mental illness'. In fact the condition is not a hopeless one but a brilliant one. Schizophrenia is a personal 'story' which involves a natural and temporary self-organising transformative process or crisis of transformation, a ‘psychospiritual crisis’now known by its new name - 'spiritual emergency' - the term coined by psychiatrist Stanislav Grof. Spiritual emergency is a self-healing process involving the dissolution and removal of illusions and false beliefs which originate in the programming of social conditioning and which give rise to pathological thought complexes. These prevent the person from making the accurate evaluations of their social environment which they need in order to make effective decisions for social adaptation.

Effective decision-making for appropriate sociability depends on transcendance of the limited sense of self or 'ego'. In a period of crisis, the person instinctively surrenders to an organismic process involving the temporary separation of thought and emotion (‘ego-loss’) in order to confront their thoughts without having to deal with the emotional implications. Ego-transcendance purifies and sharpens consciousness and therefore results in clarity and a true perception of reality. Accurate perception is a function of moral consiousness or 'intuition' of ratonal conscience and depends on complete moral or 'spiritual development’characteristic of the human psyche or human personality i.e. ‘human nature’. Consequently the apparent 'craziness' of spiritual emergency is an indication of the passage into a higher consciousness state required for effective adaptability. As a part of the human condition spiritual emergency is a concern of so-called 'depth psychology', also known as 'spiritual psychology' or 'transpersonal psychology'. Transpersonal psychology is concerned with the 'beyond ego' or 'transpersonal' dimension of the human psyche or ‘human nature’- the source of motivation for human productiveness and creativity or ‘work’

So what is human nature? Human nature is a function of spiritual growth or 'spiritual emergence'. Western scientific research combined with Eastern psychologies such as Buddhism provides new concepts which shed light on the nature of the multidimensional human psyche and the human personality i.e ‘human nature’. Human nature is a social nature and the human organism is a social organism with instincts for sociability. The development of human socialisation can be characterised in terms of biologically based motives or 'human needs' which include both 'lower' psychological needs for self-esteem - the 'ego needs' - and 'higher' psychological needs for spiritual development - the spiritual needs or 'metaneeds'(see Abraham Maslow). Metaneeds are subconscious needs which must be fulfilled in a process of normal spiritual development or 'moral development'. Moral development is a function of personal evolution from the limited sense of self or 'ego' and its egocentric perspective to the expanded sense of self or 'Self' and its transpersonal perspective of ego-transcendance... a function of moral consciousness or 'rational conscience'. Rational conscience is a function of consciousness of social values of sociability... moral justice, 'knowledge' as understanding, ‘peace’as social responsibility, 'lovingkindness' as wisdom of compassion and so on i.e. 'human values'. Human values are the universal moral values required for survival of the species as a social species. Awareness of human values results in heightened intuition of social intelligencewhich is necessary for effective adaptation to the complexities of changing social conditions i.e. 'adaptability'. Human adaptability depends on preservation of the integrated functioning of the personality as a whole... the basis for personal power or 'self-empowerment'. Self-empowerment is a function of the integrity of moral consciousness or 'conscience' (moral values of humanness). of spiritual growth as development of conscience and involves the attainment of knowledge of one's true nature or 'higher self' 'self-knowledge' as the source of personal power required for adaptability... i.e. transformation or 'enlightenment' of 'spiritual emergence'. Spiritual emergence is a gradual, dynamic, fluid naturally ordered and integrated on-going process of personal development into greater maturity and spiritual awareness... which results in the expanded sense of consciousness... understanding of the ultimate unity of all things... human divinity... sense of compassion... increased creativity. It takes place over a period of years and depends on conditions of freedom in education... i.e. 'free education' or 'holistic education'.

Each person is at a different stage of spiritual emergence depending on the level of their moral or spiritual development.

Transformation crisis or 'spiritual emergency'.
If in highly sensitive individuals the processs of spiritual emergence is blocked for any reason they might be warned that their growth is in grave danger and that they rapidly need to make essential adjustments in order to adapt effectively. The transformation process of spiritual emergence can be so dramatic that it becomes uncontrollable and reaches a point of crisis... 'psychospiritual crisis' or 'spiritual emergency'... also known as transpersonal experience, transpersonal crisis, psycho-spiritual transformation, spiritual journey, hero's journey, dark night of the soul, spiritual opening, psychic opening, psychic awakening, spiritual awakening, enlightenment, kundalini awakening, kundalini process, kundalini crisis, shamanic initiation, shamanic crisis, psychotic-visionary episode, ego death, ego loss, alchemical process, positive disintegration, post traumatic stress disorder with psychotic features, night sea journey, psychosis, shamanism, mysticism, gnosis, inner apocalypse, and so on. Spiritual emergency is a process of healing and renewal and involves a positive transformation of the self. The process is characterised by spontaneous alternative consciousness states or ‘realities' in which the person experiences unbearably distressing psychic overload involving chaotic and overwhelming sensory experiences. During the process they learn to grow beyond fear based ego-consciousness, beyond cultural conditioning and the expectations of others. They learn to grow to a new level of awareness... to higher consciousness states which are characterised by an inner sense of emotional liberation allowing for the discovery of ideas and behaviours of increased social adaptability. This so-called 'individuation'... 'self-realisation'... 'self-actualisation'... 'spiritual renewal' or 'rebirth'... represents the affirmation of a life of total well-being or 'high level wellness'.

"If the human race survives, future men will, I suspect, look back on our enlightened epoch as a veritable Age of Darkness. They will see that what was considered 'schizophrenic' was one of the forms in which, often through quite ordinary people, the light began to break into our all-too-closed minds." (Ronald D. Laing)