1 / 25

Buddhist Background to MBCT

Buddhist Background to MBCT. What is the Nature of suffering What can be done about it. The story of Siddharta. The Four Ennobling Truths. Social Context – Noble by how you live your life rather than by position of birth Question of Suffering “ I only teach suffering and its cessation”

Download Presentation

Buddhist Background to MBCT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Buddhist Background to MBCT

  2. What is the Nature of suffering • What can be done about it

  3. The story of Siddharta

  4. The Four Ennobling Truths • Social Context – Noble by how you live your life rather than by position of birth • Question of Suffering “ I only teach suffering and its cessation” • The nature of the self

  5. Noble truth • Not truths in conceptual sense – like dogma • More to explore in your own experience – precepts to be checked • All have an action i.e. Dukkha is to be fully known • Why is it important when teaching MBCT ?

  6. “ The patterns of mind that keep people trapped in emotional suffering are, fundamentally the same patterns of mind that stand between all of us and the flowering of our potential for a more satisfying way of being “

  7. The first noble truth • “ There is Dukkha “ • Image of wheel • Not personal – applies to everyone • Comes with an instruction “ To fully know Dukkha”

  8. Two Arrows

  9. Different levels of Dukkha • Most obvious physical pain • Subtle sense of unease • Pleasure – will end • Impermanence • Our minds want things fixed • Not personal – group effect in MBCT • Habitual response to Dukkha

  10. Second Noble truth • Immediate cause of Dukkha is tanha • Literally means unquenchable thirst, a craving that you can’t let go • Pleasant sensations – have to hold onto • Unpleasant sensations – have to get rid of • Can’t let go of need for things to be in a particular way

  11. Action point • Let go • Nothing should be grasped at or clung to as me or mine

  12. “that was a bad mindfulness session, I can't get the this whole thing, Perhaps I'm not cut out for teaching MBCT. But I mustn't be that because ten I would feel a useless person. I cannot let myself think that because then I will never be happy”

  13. Third truth • “ If Dukkha and craving arise due to one set of conditions, it will cease with a different set of conditions “ • Action point – observe the lessening of suffering with the lessening of craving

  14. Fourth Noble Truth • Eight fold path • Right intention • Right action • Right livelihood • Right Mindfulness

  15. Relevance to MBCT/MBSR • Reduces Mindfulness to a series of techniques • Transform the process that underlies suffering • When difficulty arises – provides a road map

  16. 1. Generality • Wide generality – we all experience suffering- basic underlying structure is the same • Work with lower intensity suffering before moving to more difficult issues • Experience of 8 week course can begin a process

  17. Universal and unavoidable • Unavoidable – reduces personal identification with suffering • Makes clear that any quick fix i.e. – better car, partner ,job ,house etc • Evidence base – uses this

  18. Co –dependent Origination

  19. Exercise • – imagine your boss rings you at 9.30 pm – critical tone • Wants you to fix a problem

  20. Three Strategies for Change • 1. Change the input – i.e. From thoughts/rumination to breath body sensation • 2. Keep the input the same – change the processing – attending to unpleasant experiences • 3. Change of view –

  21. Change of input • Habitual patterns i.e. –what did I do wrong • Selective retrieval from memory – basis of ruminative thinking -> depressed mood. • Change the input to neutral – sensation of the breath

  22. Implicit v propositional meaning Implicit meaning • Oh what can ail thee, knight at arms • Alone and palely loitering • The sedge has withered from the lake • And no birds sing

  23. Explicit meaning What is the matter old fashioned soldier standing by yourself and doing nothing with a pallid expression? The reed like plants have decomposed by the lake, and there are not any birds singing

  24. Change the how of processing • Instead of changing input • Bringing mindful awareness to the experience itself • Going beneath the story to the body sensation – acceptance

  25. Change the View • Common finding - these thoughts and feelings aren’t me • Provide direct experiential data – body as body , thoughts as thoughts • Rather than independent existing self

More Related