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A fascinating article I came across in my most recent wanderings...
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One curious research finding, which has been confirmed by several major studies in five-year follow ups, shows that about
64 per cent of people in third world countries recover fully after a first schizophrenic breakdown. Yet the comparative figures for the developed world show that only about 18 per cent recover fully.
By looking at these findings from the human givens perspective, however, we can deduce some very significant things from them.
For example, in third world countries, there is a much stronger tradition of emotional and family support and greater tolerance for personal psychological crisis, which may therefore be less likely to spiral out of control. There are also more low-stress manual and handicraft jobs, and more meaningful tasks that people need to perform for their subsistence, that facilitate recovery in a close-knit community.
It is much easier, therefore, for people to meet their emotional needs for intimacy, support, status and validation in these situations, than in the culture we have made for ourselves. Clearly, an environment where emotional needs are met is a potent aid for helping people recover from psychological disorders, even ones as seriously incapacitating as schizophrenia.
An additional factor is that, in third world countries, the use of modern neuroleptic drugs to treat psychosis is minimal, whereas in the Western world they are the main treatment offered by the psychiatric profession, despite the strong evidence that these heavily promoted drugs hinder recovery, increase the rate of relapse and have a significant risk of causing severe brain damage.
Psychiatric theorists are at a loss to explain schizophrenia. The various simplistic ideas that it was caused by specific deficiencies in brain chemistry, such as ‘overactive dopamine systems’, have not been supported by research, despite the strident and misleading claims of some drug companies to the contrary.
In our book,
Human Givens: A new approach to emotional health and clear thinking, we described how the REM brain state, which underlies dreaming, is separate from the process of dreaming and dream content. It is also clear that the healthy brain is organised to keep the dream process separate from the waking state, which is why we find it so difficult to remember dreams. We have shown how the behaviour of a person in a hypnotic state clearly mirrors phenomena of the REM state, such as muscle paralysis, dissociation, imperviousness to pain, and amnesia for the event after ‘waking’.
A psychotic breakdown is almost always preceded by an overload of stress and severe depression in a person’s life, which, as we know, results in excessive REM sleep. We are now convinced that, when people are in psychosis, they are in fact trapped in the REM state, a separate state of consciousness with dreamlike qualities. In other words, schizophrenia is waking reality processed through the dreaming brain.
To illustrate this, we only have to look at a number of typical schizophrenic behaviours and experiences and see how they relate to the REM state.
Patients in a psychotic state often describe weird relationships with bodily feelings. One said that her legs felt empty: another that her arms didn’t belong to her. This is a well-known REM state phenomenon and is also noted in hypnosis: patients may feel that their bodies are dissolving because, in the dream state, most sensory perceptions about the body are shut out.
It is also known that people with schizophrenia are unusually resistant to pain: even more so during severe psychotic episodes. One patient jumped out of a second storey window of a hospital, broke both his ankles, and walked to the shops oblivious of the damage he had done — damage that would have caused excruciating pain for any person in a normal state of mind.
Again, this imperviousness to pain occurs in the REM state while dreaming, as we are cut off from sensory information. (Anyone who has woken up in agony because a limb, or ear, has been lain on in an unnatural way for a long period during dreaming will recognise this. The pain this causes is only noticed after you wake up.) It is this fact that is exploited when hypnosis is used for pain control or anaesthesia during surgery.
Psychotic patients may also talk about hearing voices. In the dream state, which is the province of the right hemisphere of the brain, people are not usually capable of independent thought, the province of the left hemisphere, because the mind is ‘locked’ into the metaphorical script of the dream. But if an individual is trapped in a waking REM state, with waking reality happening around them, there is still likely to be activity in the left hemisphere of the brain.
We suggest that, because the REM state operates through metaphor, the only way it could make sense of these independent left brain thoughts would be to create the metaphor of hearing voices, or being watched, or spied upon by aliens — which easily becomes paranoia.
The visual illusions or delusions associated with schizophrenia are totally characteristic of the dream state, which generates hallucinatory realities that we believe in unquestioningly for the duration of the dream. Stage hypnotists make use of this when they put subjects into what is in effect a psychotic state, and induce them to believe that they are someone else or that non-existent people and objects exist.
Rapid eye movements are often seen to occur in psychotic states, which, of course, are the defining sign of the REM state. Psychotic patients also very quickly convert thought into sensory experience, with the result that they can become highly emotional almost instantly. When recalling a distressing memory, for example, they can be instantly transported right back into that memory and re-experience the emotions connected with it. That phenomenon, too, is a characteristic of the dream state, when arousals from the emotional brain trigger a thought pattern, in the cortex, which is immediately converted into a sensory metaphor — the dream.
It is not surprising, then, that psychotic patients not only talk in metaphors but live them out, which explains their often bizarre speech and behaviour.
The REM state, as we have explained, is in effect a reality generator. It creates all kinds of perceptions in our dreams, but these are illusory perceptions — vivid metaphors. One psychotic patient actually described herself as “being trapped in the land of illusion”. Indeed, we know from talking to psychotic patients in their saner moments that they readily recognise that they are trapped in a dreaming state.
We suggest that we can use this insight to help people make sense of their psychotic experience. ..
[b]Read the rest of the article here:
Schizophrenia: waking reality processed through the dreaming brain
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See also:
- The Role of Metaphor
- When the Dream Becomes Real: The Inner Apocalypse
- Mental Breakdown as Healing