A Review of Transpersonal Theory and Its Application to the Practice of Psychotherapy
A Review of Transpersonal Theory and
Its Application to the Practice of
Psychotherapy
Mark C. Kasprow, M.D.
Bruce W. Scotton, M.D.
Transpersonal theory proposes that there are
developmental stages beyond the adult ego, which
involve experiences of connectedness with phenomena
considered outside the boundaries of the ego. In healthy
individuals, these developmental stages can engender
the highest human qualities, including altruism,
creativity, and intuitive wisdom. For persons lacking
healthy ego development, however, such experiences can
lead to psychosis. Superficially, transpersonal states
look similar to psychosis. However, transpersonal theory
can assist clinicians in discriminating between these
two conditions, thereby optimizing treatment. The
authors discuss various therapeutic methods, including
transpersonal psychopharmacology and the therapeutic
use of altered states of consciousness.
(The Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and
Research 1999; 8:12–23)
T
he term transpersonal psychiatry is one with which
many clinicians may be unfamiliar, but the notion
of “transpersonal” as a psychological idea was, in fact,
first introduced by William James more than 90 years
ago.
1
The field is concerned not only with the diagnosis
and treatment of psychopathology associated with the
usual stages of human development from infancy
through adulthood, but also with difficulties associated
with developmental stages beyond that of the adult ego.
It is this latter idea, that there are stages of human growth
beyond the ego (hence the term transpersonal) that sets
these theories apart from other models of human development and psychopathology. The field stands, however, not in contradistinction to these models, but rather
as an extension of them. As Scotton
2
has noted,
This newly enlarged psychiatry stands in relationship
to the current psychiatry much as modern physics
does to classical Newtonian physics: The current
“classical” psychiatry is a subset of a larger system,
the new transpersonal psychiatry. (p. 6)
Although many clinicians may be unclear about the
term transpersonal, most have had more exposure to the
field than they may realize. Some transpersonal frameworks have gained relatively broad recognition, such as
Received October 21, 1997; revised August 18, 1998; accepted August
27, 1998. From Shasta County Mental Health, Redding, California,
and University of California, San Francisco. Address correspondence
to Dr. Kasprow, Shasta County Mental Health, 2640 Breslauer Way,
Redding, CA 96001.
Copyright © 1999 American Psychiatric Press, Inc.
12 J Psychother Pract Res, 8:1, Winter 1999the work of Jung or Maslow. Other approaches are less
well known, such as Grof’s holotropic breathwork,
3
guided imagery, or psycholytic psychotherapy.
All transpersonal approaches are concerned with accessing and integrating developmental stages beyond the
adult ego and with fostering higher human development.
Because of this concern, most transpersonal theories deal
extensively with matters relating to human values and
spiritual experience. This focus sometimes leads people
to confuse the interests of transpersonal psychiatry with
the concerns of religion. Transpersonal psychiatry does
not promote any particular belief system, but rather acknowledges that spiritual experiences and transcendent
states characterized by altruism, creativity, and profound
feelings of connectedness are universal human experiences widely reported across cultures, and therefore worthy of rigorous, scientific study. Inattention to these
experiences and the roles they play in both psychopathology and healing constitutes a common limitation
in conventional psychotherapeutic practice and research.
4–7
Transpersonal studies have their roots in humanistic
psychology and the human potential movement of the
1960s. Since its formal inception in 1968, transpersonal
psychiatry has grown steadily, and the proliferation of
related research and publications attests to the growing
maturation of the discipline.
8
Increased professional acceptance of the role that spirituality and religion play in
the psychotherapeutic process is suggested by the inclusion in 1994 of a category for “religious or spiritual problem” in the DSM-IV.
9
In this article, we briefly review major transpersonal
theories and how these may enhance the practice of psychotherapy. In particular, we discuss how transpersonal
theory can extend current models of psychosis and suggest new avenues for both differential diagnosis and treatment. Finally, we review current trends in transpersonal
clinical practice and the development of new therapeutic
technologies. Comprehensive review of this material is
beyond the scope of this paper but can be found in several
excellent texts.
10–12
TRANSPERSONAL THEORIES AND
HUMAN SPIRITUALITY
Mainstream psychotherapeutic systems have largely ignored human spiritual and religious experience, except
as sources for psychosocial support. In contrast, one of
the hallmarks of transpersonal approaches is the directness with which spiritual experience is addressed as part
of the therapeutic process. Ultimately the goal is not
merely to remove psychopathology, but to foster higher
human development. The notion of higher human development is defined somewhat differently in different
transpersonal systems, but most characterize it as involving a deepening and integration of one’s sense of connectedness, whether it be with self, community, nature,
or the entire cosmos. This process of deepening the experience of connection usually engenders the highest human qualities, such as creativity, compassion, selflessness, and wisdom, but for the unprepared individual,
experiences of deep connectedness can fragment necessary ego boundaries and produce chaos, terror, and confusion. Perhaps because of this possibility, the psychotherapeutic community commonly views oceanic,
mystical, or spiritual experiences with suspicion. Much
of this bias may have roots in Freud’s contributions to
psychological thought, such as Moses and Monotheism
13
and The Future of an Illusion,
14
in which he largely characterizes spiritual experience as a regressive defense.
This thinking stands in contrast to the earlier work
of William James, arguably the father of transpersonal
psychology, who pioneered the psychological study of
spiritual experiences in The Varieties of Religious Experience.
15
James’s view was more pragmatic than the later
Freud’s, and he suggested that spiritual experiences
should be judged by their effect on people, rather than
prejudged based on a particular theoretical, cultural, or
religious orientation.
Carl Jung was perhaps the first clinician who attempted to legitimize a spiritual approach to the practice
of depth psychology.
16
Several of his contributions are
relevant to the current discussion. In contrast to Freud,
Jung introduced the principle of trust in one’s psychological process, with the implication that consciousness
has within itself inherent tendencies toward growth and
evolution. This assumption has profound implications
for clinical practice, since it determines whether the clinician regards what arises in the patient as revealing or
obscuring the therapeutic course. In addition, Jung suggested that psychological development extends to include higher states of consciousness and can continue
throughout life, rather than stop with the attainment of
adult ego maturation and rational competence. He also
proposed that transcendent experience lies within and is
accessible to everyone, and that the healing and growth
stimulated by such experience often make use of the languages of symbolic imagery and nonverbal experience,
Kasprow and Scotton
J Psychother Pract Res, 8:1, Winter 1999 13which are not reducible to purely rational terms. In addition, Jung was among the first to examine spiritual experience cross-culturally, and his study of Eastern mysticism, African shamanism, and Native American
religion has helped define the universality of human
spiritual experience and its relevance to psychological
health.
Abraham Maslow continued this theme with his
naturalistic study of persons he considered to be “self-actualized.”
17
He found remarkably consistent descriptions
of the characteristics of enlightened people across cultures, and he concluded that human beings have an instinctive, biologically based drive toward spiritual selfactualization, which he characterized as a state of deep
altruism, periodic mystical peak experiences producing
a sense of union, and freedom from conditioned thought
and behavior.
18
On the basis of this study, Maslow developed his nowfamous theory of personality and development.
19
In it,
he proposed a hierarchy of needs and motivations, beginning with the most basic physiological drives for food,
water, and oxygen and culminating in the emergence of
a drive toward self-actualization and self-transcendence
and the dissolution of preoccupation with the concerns
of the ego. In later life, Maslow refined his hierarchy of
needs into a three-phase model of development: a deficiency-motivated stage, a humanistically motivated
stage, and a transcendentally motivated stage.
20
As Battista points out,
21
this model anticipates and closely parallels the prepersonal/personal/transpersonal model
proposed some years later by Ken Wilber, a major contemporary transpersonal theorist.
Wilber’s principal contributions to transpersonal developmental theory were first presented in Transformations of Consciousness.
22
In this work, he elaborates on a
developmental model that incorporates not only the
usual stages of human development suggested by Freud,
Jung, Piaget, and others, but also transpersonal or
transrational stages derived from non-Western wisdom
traditions. Like the earlier psychological theories from
which Wilber borrowed, his model is hierarchical in that
he claims that reality and psyche are organized into distinct levels, in which “higher” levels are superior to
“lower” levels in a logical and developmental sense. This
“ladder”
23
structure of Wilber’s “spectrum of consciousness” model undoubtedly relates to his use of Eastern
developmental theories, in particular the chakra system
of tantra yoga, which has a similar structure.
24
Each successive level subsumes the properties of the preceding
level, resolves the developmental problems associated
with that stage, and demonstrates new emergent qualities, as well as new developmental challenges. Thus he
suggests that each stage of development is associated not
only with the emergence of specific psychological structures and abilities, but, when aberrated, with specific
kinds of pathology.
Wilber identifies about ten stages of human development, the first five of which roughly correspond with
Piaget’s stages of cognitive development up through “formal operations.” He then posits a “vision-logic” stage
characterized by the integration of mind and body (or
thought and feeling) and associated with new emergent
capacities for the direct intuition of complex patterns.
Subsequent to this are four transpersonal stages: the “psychic,” in which individual consciousness extends beyond
the boundaries of the empirical ego, thus producing feelings of empathic understanding; the “subtle,” in which
consciousness gains access to archetypal forms; the
“causal,” in which observing consciousness merges with
what is observed, engendering formless, “non-dual”
awareness; and a final stage, in which one has a willingness and ability to travel among all the stages because
one is free of attachment to even the “highest” states.
As mentioned previously, Wilber broadly groups
these stages (with their associated emergent capacities
and pathologies) into three levels: the prepersonal, personal, and transpersonal, echoing the three-stage model
proposed earlier by Maslow. Prepersonal functioning occurs in the absence of full rational competence and an
intact ego, as in the case of children or some psychotic
individuals. It is largely instinctual in nature and shaped
by basic biological needs. Personal functioning is mediated by and oriented to the concerns of the ego. Through
identification with thoughts and feelings that arise out of
one’s attachments (“I need this,” “I don’t want that”), a
sense of separate identity is created, and this becomes
the nexus around which behavior is organized. Transpersonal functioning emerges when identification with personal concern diminishes, and it is associated with states
of being and modes of knowing arising from connection
with levels of reality beyond personal identity.
Because ego boundaries are diminished or absent in
transpersonal states, subject/object relationships are altered, or in some cases completely collapse, creating the
possibility of profound experiences of connectedness.
Most transpersonal theorists would argue that these experiences are not mere feelings of union, but rather that
in these states individual consciousness is actually conTranspersonal Theory
14 J Psychother Pract Res, 8:1, Winter 1999nected to and participating in phenomena beyond one’s
usual ego boundaries. Such a model may permit greater
understanding of anomalistic data such as psychic phenomena and the nonlocal effects of intentionas suggested, for example, in studies looking at the effects of
covert prayer on the hospital course of cardiac patients.
25
At present, the validity of such phenomena is highly controversial because current scientific paradigms cannot
easily accommodate the notion that human consciousness can have distant effects.
Wilber uses his model of prepersonal, personal, and
transpersonal stages to explain the apparent similarities
between regressive psychotic states and experiences of
mystical, transcendent union. Many poets, philosophers,
and clinicians have pointed out the apparent similarities
between the utterings of madmen and those of sages.
26
In both psychosis and “enlightenment,” individuals appear to have altered ego boundaries and to think and act
in irrational ways. But in the case of a psychotic regression, this is a prerational, pre-egoic state, and in the case
of healthy mystical experience, it is a transrational state
built upon and extended beyond a normal, healthy ego.
Wilber names this confusion between the two conditions
the “pre/trans fallacy,”
27
and Freud’s criticisms of religion as a regressive defense may be partly understood in
terms of this error.
The concept of the pre/trans fallacy underscores the
necessity of healthy ego development as a prerequisite
for constructive transpersonal experience: without it one
is unable to integrate such experiences and is at risk of
psychological fracture and regression into lower functioning states. Interestingly, character development is
emphasized in many of the non-Western wisdom traditions that use various techniques to induce transpersonal
states. Often the aspirant must go through extensive personal development and moral training prior to practicing
the methods, as a safeguard to prevent subsequent spiritual difficulties.
28
Also of interest are studies showing a
positive correlation between mystical experiences and
enhanced psychological functioning, further underscoring the substantial difference, in spite of superficial appearances, between psychotic regression and transpersonal states.
29
Not all transpersonal theorists endorse linear or hierarchical models. For example, in The Unfolding Self:
Varieties of Transformative Experience, Metzner
30
rejects linear developmental models entirely and instead presents
a pluralistic model of human transformation by examining common, universal metaphors for change. And in
contrast to Wilber’s linear paradigm, Washburn
31
presents a developmental model that can be regarded as a
spiral. This paradigm, largely derived from psychoanalytic and Jungian theory, views human development as
initially emerging from the preconscious depths of the
psyche, differentiating into ego development in the first
half of life and ultimately returning to, and ideally reintegrating with, the primordial depths in the second half
of life. If ego development has been healthy and successful, this reintegration can occur at a higher, trans-egoic
level; if it has not, the individual is at risk of regression
and loss of function.
Although the implications of whether human development is cyclic or linear, sequential or concurrent, chaotic or ordered are very significant, most transpersonal
theories have much in common despite differences on
this question. Generally they emphasize a more or less
three-phase process in which there are apparent similarities between the stages occurring before and after ego
development. Most theories emphasize that these similarities between stages are merely apparent and that profound and significant differences exist between pre-egoic
regressive states and emergent transpersonal states. In
fact, the elucidation of these differencestogether with
the development of theoretical and clinical criteria that
facilitate discriminating between pre-egoic psychotic
symptoms and trans-egoic mystical experienceremains one of transpersonal psychiatry’s central contributions to psychological theory and clinical practice.
The hallmark of mystical experience is a stepping
out of one’s self, of joining with something beyond or
outside one’s normal ego boundaries. It is possible, as
Huxley
32
has suggested, that these experiences of union
underlie humankind’s spiritual and religious inspiration.
These ego-transcendent states, which may involve access
to transrational modes of knowing and connectedness,
can be either powerfully helpful or destructive for a given
individual, depending on his or her psychological preparation, cognitive functioning, and social context. Transpersonal theory provides a framework for assessing such
factors so that clinicians can discriminate between cases
that warrant encouragement of further exploration of
spiritual experience and those that are best served by
attenuation of premature contact with transrational
states. In some cases, such work can help transform what
might ordinarily be regarded as psychopathology into
new emergent skills and abilities. The importance of such
discrimination is perhaps greatest in the treatment of individuals with psychotic symptoms.
Kasprow and Scotton
J Psychother Pract Res, 8:1, Winter 1999 15TRANSPERSONAL PERSPECTIVES
ON PSYCHOSIS
Look, my thumb touches my forefinger. Both touch
and are touched. When my attention is on the thumb,
the thumb is the feeler and the forefingerthe [felt].
Shift the focus of attention and the relationship is
reversed. I find that somehow, by shifting the focus
of attention, I become the very thing I look at and
experience the kind of consciousness it has; I become
the inner witness of the thing. I call this capacity of
entering other focal points of consciousnesslove;
you may give it any name you like. Love says: “I am
everything.” Wisdom says: “I am nothing.” Between
the two my life flows. Since at any point of time and
space I can be both the subject and object of experience, I express it by saying that I am both, and
neither, and beyond both.
33
(pp. 268–269)
The passage above is from a transcription of dialogue
with Nisargadatta Maharaj, a poor cigarette vendor in
India, who in his later life came to be regarded as enlightened. It reflects one of the common features of mystical experience discussed earlier, the loss of ordinary
ego boundaries. If this passage were less organized, it
could easily be dismissed as the utterings of a schizophrenic. According to transpersonal theorists such as
Washburn and Nelson,
23,26
one of the reasons for this
similarity, and for the prevalence of religious and mystical ideation in psychosis, is the existence of a common
phenomenon underlying both mystical and psychotic
states. This notion of connectedness or union is present
in some form in most cultures and all of the major religions. It has been given many names, including Brahman
in Hinduism, the Buddha-mind, the Tao, and the Kingdom of God. This Spiritual Ground can be regarded as
the source of one’s sense of union with self, other people,
the environment, and the universe. In yoga philosophy,
this Spiritual Ground is regarded as the true nature of
reality and self, with all mental activity serving only to
obscure this truth by creating a sense of separate existence.
34
This concept implies that the Spiritual Ground
becomes more accessible as the cognitive activity that
maintains one’s ego-identity diminishes. Whether one
experiences contact with the Ground as edifying or destructive relates to the developmental health of one’s ego
at the time this contact occurs, as well as the means by
which one’s ego boundaries are transcended. Contact
with the Ground is conceptualized as occurring through
“porosity” of the ego; this can occur either through spiritual development, which allows larger and larger fields
of the Ground to be identified as Self, or through illness,
trauma, drugs, or impaired development, which can permit premature contact with the Ground through defective maintenance of needed ego cohesion.
26
This model,
then, can account for the superficial similarity between
psychotic and mystical states, and also for the significant
differences between the sequelae of mystical experiences
and psychosis.
Discrimination between these two conditions is essential to optimize therapy and to prevent unnecessary
or even harmful treatment. Grof and Grof,
35
Lukoff,
36
and Agosin
37
have all proposed criteria for discriminating between prerational psychotic regression and
authentic transrational experience. Lukoff, for example,
proposes four criteria for differentiating between psychotic illness and a spiritual experience with psychotic
features. He suggests that emergent, transpersonal experiences are more likely in patients with 1) good premorbid functioning, 2) an acute onset of symptoms within a
period of 3 months, 3) the presence of a stressful precipitant that can account for the acute symptoms, and 4) a
positive exploratory attitude toward the experience.
In addition to assisting in the discrimination between
psychotic illness and “spiritual emergencies” (the term
coined by Grof and Grof for emergent trans-egoic experiences),
35
transpersonal models also permit discrimination between various subtypes of psychosis. As mentioned earlier, many clinicians believe that each
developmental stage engenders either new emergent
abilities or psychopathology, depending on the ability of
the individual to integrate the experiences associated
with that stage. For example, a healthy individual who
experiences what Wilber calls the “psychic” level, which
mediates a sense of direct connection with someone or
something outside the boundaries of the ego, may have
feelings of universal love and empathic understanding,
whereas someone unprepared for such a loss of boundary
may respond to this stage by developing paranoid delusions in order to shore up needed ego boundaries. In
both cases, the experiential substrate is one of transrational connection and loss of separateness: in the former
case, this leads to constructive feelings of love, empathy,
and compassion, and in the latter case, to paranoid ideation, the function of which is to generate greater separation.
Similarly, other transpersonal levels may lead to divergent experiences, depending on the preparedness of
the individual. For example, a stage that brings intuitive
wisdom, in which knowing is not preceded by rational
Transpersonal Theory
16 J Psychother Pract Res, 8:1, Winter 1999thought, carries with it the risk of individuals who reach
this stage developing ego inflation and grandiose delusions, should they incorrectly ascribe this knowing to
their ego. Claims of divinity, omniscience, and grandiosity may relate to problems at this developmental level.
Yet when this level is attained by someone with a healthy,
intact ego, the individual is likely to be judged by others
as particularly wise, insightful, and intuitive.
TRANSPERSONAL THEORY AND
CLINICAL PRACTICE
Such examples give some indication of how transpersonal theory may enhance diagnostic thinking regarding
psychosis: it can provide ways of differentiating between
regressive (pre-egoic) psychosis and transpersonal phenomena, and it can assist in the understanding of differences between various kinds of psychotic states. This
added diagnostic discrimination can then be used to
adapt treatment to the specific condition.
There are wide differences of opinion within the
transpersonal community as to the appropriateness of
doing transpersonal work with psychotic individuals.
Jung,
38
Wilber,
39
and Grof and Grof
35
have argued that
transpersonally oriented therapies are not appropriate
for psychotic individuals, whereas Lukoff and others suggest that transpersonal psychotherapy may be particularly appropriate for psychotic disorders, even serious
ones.
40
In general, initial evaluation should include not
only the usual elements of a psychiatric history, but also
an assessment of the patient’s spiritual experiences, developmental level, premorbid functioning, and interest
in exploring the symptoms. This information can assist
in determining whether the psychotic symptoms are best
accounted for by pre-egoic or trans-egoic mechanisms.
If the psychosis is regressive, treatment is oriented toward
strengthening ego function with standard pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy; in the case of a spiritual
emergency with psychotic features, appropriate treatment may be more expectant, with medications used
primarily to modulate, rather than suppress, loss of
boundary. Education, reassurance, psychotherapy focusing on biographical issues that may arise, and mental
training such as meditation can help the patient move
through and eventually integrate the psychotic state.
Such an approach offers clinicians a wider range of
therapeutic options than simply viewing reports of unusual or extraordinary experiences as pathological. In
his book Crossings, Heckler
41
presents a compelling case
for the constructive role that such extraordinary experiences can play in psychological and spiritual growth
when individuals find the means to accept, explore, and
learn from them. And given the potentially serious side
effects of neuroleptic medications, enhanced diagnostic
discrimination may prevent the unnecessary and potentially harmful treatment of many patients. The message
of transpersonal psychiatry is that not all that looks like
psychosis is illness. In some cases, these experiences represent developmental difficulties in individuals undergoing profound and important changes. In such cases, treatment should focus on safely supporting and guiding this
process, rather than suppressing it. The metaphor of midwifery is relevant: imagine the damage done if “treatment” prevented delivery.
THE USE OF ALTERED STATES OF
CONSCIOUSNESS IN
TRANSPERSONAL THERAPIES
Most transpersonal clinicians use conventional methods
of psychotherapy, perhaps along with pharmacotherapy,
to assist individuals, based on the expanded views of
human development we have discussed. In addition,
some use methods unique to the field, and most of these
involved the therapeutic use of altered states of consciousness (ASCs).
The use of ASCs is perhaps the oldest healing technique,
42,43
yet contemporary psychotherapy operates
largely within the realm of ordinary consciousness. Some
techniques, such as the analyst’s use of the couch or hypnosis, undoubtedly induce ASCs, and it is likely that
ASCs play a larger part in the therapeutic process than
is generally recognized.
44
Metzner defines an ASC as a change in thinking,
feeling, and perception, in relation to one’s ordinary,
baseline consciousness, that has a beginning, duration,
and ending.
45
In the shamanic traditions, ASCs facilitate
a “journey” in which one leaves one’s usual world, travels
to some other realm, has experiences, perceptions, and
insights, and returns, ideally changed in some constructive manner.
46
The conversion experience in Christianity
is another example of an ASC in which individuals may
have a profound change in thinking, feeling, and perception that is markedly discontinuous from their usual state
of consciousness.
Such experiences point to an important distinction
between state and trait changes. For example, a conversion experience represents a temporary change in state,
Kasprow and Scotton
J Psychother Pract Res, 8:1, Winter 1999 17and while it is often very powerful for the individual, in
itself it does not necessarily translate into changes in trait,
as William James pointed out in The Varieties of Religious
Experience.
15
Much of the disinterest of contemporary
psychotherapy in using ASCs may relate to the belief
that changes in state have little role in the real work of
psychotherapy, that of facilitating changes in longstanding traits.
47
Many practitioners of transpersonal psychiatry
would suggest otherwise, and the use of ASCs is relatively
common in transpersonal therapies. These therapists argue that helping individuals leave their ordinary states
of consciousness, with the attendant maladaptive patterns, can be a powerful tool promoting new patterns of
thought, feeling, and behavior. In addition, some ASCs,
by virtue of qualities inherent in the experience itself,
can catalyze enormously significant change. Reports of
individuals who have experienced states of ecstatic union
almost always include comments about the profound and
lasting personal changes wrought by such experiences.
48,49
Research correlating mystical experience
with improved psychological functioning does indeed
suggest that people may undergo trait changes as a result
of state changes;
50
moreover, the work of Jenike
51
with
obsessive-compulsive patients suggests that vigorous
treatment of state phenomena (obsessions and compulsions) can produce trait changes in persons with comorbid dependent, avoidant, or mixed personality disorders.
Much of the hypnosis literature also supports this contention that state changes may be useful in the larger task
of psychotherapythat of producing enduring change.
52
A single peak experience, however, is unlikely to produce the kind of lasting change sought after in psychotherapy, and the best approach may involve the skillful
combination of conventional psychotherapeutic techniques and the use of ASCs.
How are ASCs produced and made use of therapeutically? Many triggers have been described that can produce an ASC, including fasting, dancing, music, prayer,
relaxation, sex, ritual, and drugs, and these methods are
widely used by traditional cultures for healing and social
bonding.
53
We will limit our present discussion to a brief
review of a few methods being used or studied by transpersonal clinicians: guided imagery, hypnosis, meditation, and alterations in breathing patterns.
The therapeutic use of guided imagery involves the
use of sensory-rich experience to uncover and resolve
psychological difficulties. As the name of this technique
implies, the therapist plays an active role in guiding
patients on a journey through their fantasies, dreams,
memories, and other products of the imagination. Although visual imagery is perhaps the most common, any
combination of one or more sensory modalities can be
used in the therapy.
54
The essential factor correlating
with therapeutic efficacy, however, seems to be the richness of the sensory experience, and thus it may be useful
to recruit as many of the sensory modalities as possible
during the session. Guided imagery therapy is similar to
visualization and meditation techniques used for thousands of years by Buddhist and yogic practitioners and
to the vision quests and shamanic journeys found in traditional cultures.
55
According to Jung, imagery is the language of intuition, and the exploration of imagery is thought to allow
deeper contact with emotional and intuitive processes
than would mere thought about feelings. In guided imagery therapy, an atmosphere is created that allows imagery to emerge out of a patient’s unconscious processes.
This method is in contrast to visualization work, which
involves the intentional generation of a prescribed image. The emergence of unconscious material in guided
imagery therapy is often unexpected. Patients typically
find themselves on a “journey” into strangely familiar
but unanticipated realms. Interpretation is avoided until
the journey is complete, since engagement of the rational
mind tends to inhibit spontaneous and consciously undirected generation of sensory images. Clearly this state
represents an ASC, although there is seldom a formal
induction. The ASC arises from the attenuation of the
usual executive activities of the intellect and from the
inward-directed focus on internal imagery rather than
exterior sensory data.
56
As with all ASCs, such alterations create the possibility of individuals experiencing their circumstances
from new and potentially helpful perspectives. Rather
than engaging a patient’s defenses, guided imagery therapy can facilitate the emergence of material underneath
and around those defenses, and for this reason patients
should be carefully screened. Some suggest that those
with borderline personality or psychotic symptoms are
not appropriate candidates because of the potential for
ego defenses to be overwhelmed,
57
but these conditions
are probably relative contraindications at best. Linehan’s
use of Zen techniques and visualization with borderline
patients in Dialectical Behavior Therapy
58
suggests that
even patients with fragile or unstable ego functioning can
benefit from such work.
Hypnosis is similar to guided imagery therapy,
Transpersonal Theory
18 J Psychother Pract Res, 8:1, Winter 1999although it is more properly regarded as a state rather
than an activity. Some transpersonal practitioners use
hypnotic regression to do what is commonly called “past
life therapy,” in which patients explore connections between present-day conflicts and purported experiences
from previous lives. Although the theory of reincarnation
associated with this technique is controversial, the
method can be regarded as a variant of guided imagery
therapy, in which the recollection of past lives is dealt
with metaphorically rather than literally. Patients may
report compelling recollections of past lives, the details
of which often relate to present symptomatology. Full
recollection seems to engender psychological resolution.
The prescription of meditation is another approach
to using ASCs for therapeutic benefit. Meditative techniques fall into two general categories: methods that use
concentration on a specific object of meditation, either
internal or external, and methods that foster undirected,
receptive awareness. Most techniques of prayer, yogic
meditation, and Christian contemplation fall into the former category; techniques such as Buddhist vipassana or
insight meditation fall into the latter. Both methods have
been shown to provide physical and psychological benefits,
59
but because of differences in the actual practices,
one particular method may be more appropriate for a
given patient. For example, concentration practices actively focus attention on an object of meditation, to the
exclusion of other stimuli. For this reason, they may be
easier for patients with goal-oriented styles. Concentration practices also may be particularly effective in treating anxiety and pain conditions, since awareness of noxious stimuli is diminished as one concentrates on the
object of meditation. In contrast, receptive meditation
techniques, at least in the early stages, foster increased
awareness of all stimuli, including painful experience,
since no attempt is made to modify the contents of consciousness. This latter method is particularly suited for
intact individuals seeking to deepen self-awareness.
Those with a history of trauma must be properly screened
and prepared, since in the short term such practices will
increase awareness of traumatic memories and can worsen symptoms.
As this description suggests, meditation is not without risks. Complications include emotional lability, agitation, depression, and euphoria, but these tend to occur
early in the practice and are more common in those with
preexisting psychopathology.
60
Occasionally, intense
meditation practices may precipitate psychosis or a
“spiritual emergency” in vulnerable individuals, and in
such cases the practices should cease until symptoms improve. These relatively rare complications, however, are
far outweighed by the benefits of meditation, which include decreased anxiety; enhanced creativity, empathy,
and self-control; and greater capacity for psychological
insight.
61,62
Perhaps the most significant benefits are suggested by reports from advanced meditators about the
emergence of deep feelings of peace, joy, and compassion and transcendent states of consciousness, including
trans-egoic states of profound unity.
63
Meditative practices have been widely employed for thousands of years
by the non-Western wisdom traditions explicitly for this
purpose.
The use of alterations in breathing patterns is another
ancient method for inducing ASCs. Breathing practices
from yoga, Taoism, and Buddhism date back thousands
of years, and more recently certain methods have been
adapted as techniques for transpersonal therapy. For example, Stanislav Grof, a noted psychiatrist and LSD researcher, found that the effects of LSD could be amplified
through hyperventilation, and, along with his wife,
Christina, he developed a therapeutic system using
breathwork to induce ASCs without drugs.
Their theoretical framework was developed through
careful observation of thousands of patients undergoing
psychotherapy while experiencing the effects of psychedelic drugs. Like Jung, Grof observed that associative
memory is organized into collections of memories that
have similar feeling tones, so that engaging a particular
affect activates a set of memories linked by the presence
of this common affect.
64
He calls these structures “systems of condensed experiences,” or COEX systems. He
postulates that at the core of each COEX system is a
particular affective tone associated with powerful repressed memories from infancy and early childhood. As
the individual grows, each COEX system develops its
own set of defenses and semiautonomous functioning.
(The concept is similar to Jung’s notion of the complex.)
The memories that become connected with a particular
COEX system are linked not by logical or chronological
order, but through their association with a common affect.
Therapy, for Grof, involves establishing contact with
and completely reliving the core memories and associated affect imbedded within each COEX system.
65
Initially this was done with the use of psychedelic medications, which he describes as “non-specific amplifiers of
the contents of consciousness.”
66
As political realities
made further study of such psychedelic therapy difficult,
Kasprow and Scotton
J Psychother Pract Res, 8:1, Winter 1999 19the Grofs developed Holotropic Breathing as a way of
inducing similar ASCs without the use of drugs.
Grof’s holotropic breathwork provides sophisticated attention to set and setting, using hyperventilation
techniques, bodywork, and evocative music to induce a
powerful ASC; the intention is to access repressed
memories, perinatal experiences, and archetypal imprinting. Attention is given not only to the induction of
the ASC, but also to processing the material that arises
out of it with the use of group process and art therapy.
The method is not without risks, however, both
physical and psychological. Holotropic breathing is contraindicated for certain physical conditions, including
pregnancy, epilepsy, hypertension, stroke, and heart
problems, and it may not be suited for those with a history
of psychosis or severe personality disorders, since the
rapid emergence of repressed material can easily
overwhelm such persons. In addition, there is a muchdebated body of data suggesting that even mild hyperventilation may trigger panic in certain subsets of patients
with panic disorder. However, Barlow’s use of diaphragmatic breathing in the cognitive-behavioral treatment of
panic disorder suggests that some of these patients may
tolerate moderate breathing exercises,
67
and other reports call into question the connection between hyperventilation and the induction of panic.
68
Nevertheless,
until this matter is resolved, panic disorder should be
considered a relative contraindication for holotropic
breathing.
Furthermore, some clinicians express concern that
Grof’s method gives insufficient attention to working
through and incorporating the powerful experiences that
can arise in holotropic breathing workshops. The ideal
for many patients may be to use holotropic breathing in
the context of ongoing therapy, where traumatic and difficult material can be integrated over time. For those
properly prepared, this method can provide powerful,
transformative access to deep realms of the psyche.
TRANSPERSONAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Most transpersonal drug therapy involves the use of conventional psychotropic agents in ways informed by the
theoretical models we have discussed. Antipsychotic
medications, antidepressants, mood stabilizers, and
sedatives can be used to modulate but not suppress symptoms in patients undergoing spiritual emergencies. The
goal of such modulation is to attenuate the intensity of
symptoms just enough to allow affected persons to constructively explore the meaning of their experiences,
thereby facilitating the development of cognitive maps
linking ordinary consensual reality with transpersonal
states. The intention is to help the individual move
through and integrate these states, rather than merely
suppress symptoms. Such individuals will probably not
require chronic medication, and many may simply require psychological and social support, education, and
reassurance.
Hallucinogenic drugs, or psychedelics, are another
class of medicines that hold promise as adjuncts to transpersonal therapy. These materials are perhaps the most
powerful tools for inducing ASCs, and they have been
used by shamanic cultures for thousands of years.
69,70
In
industrialized societies, the therapeutic use of these medicines began in the 1950s; after the ensuing cultural upheavals, they were banned in the late 1960s. The reasons
for this ban were more political than scientific,
71
and in
recent years interest in the therapeutic application of
these materials has been renewed.
72
Psychedelic medications fall into two general
categories: 1) the tryptamines,
73
which are serotonin
analogues and include such materials as psilocybin
and dimethyltryptamine (DMT), and 2) the phenethylamines,
74
which are sympathomimetic amines and include drugs such as mescaline and the “designer drug”
methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), also
known as “ecstasy.” The tryptamines are generally regarded as more capable of inducing transpersonal states
characterized by the dissolution of ego boundaries,
whereas the phenethylamines generally produce effects
that preserve ego functioning. This makes most
phenethylamines more predictable in clinical settings
than tryptamines, and MDMA and related drugs generated significant interest in the psychotherapeutic community prior to being banned in 1984. Early reports suggested that these materials could acutely decrease
defensiveness, enhance empathy, and promote access to
unconscious material, thereby allowing patients to do
therapeutic work that would otherwise be too difficult
and inaccessible. Because these effects were typically
produced with minimal or no perceptual alterations,
some advocated the term empathogen rather than hallucinogen to describe this class of materials.
There are two prevailing models regarding the therapeutic use of psychedelics in Western culture. The “psychedelic” paradigm involves the use of high doses, typically of tryptamines, to produce an ego-dissolving
mystical experience. This model was favored by early
Transpersonal Theory
20 J Psychother Pract Res, 8:1, Winter 1999researchers in the United States, who claimed success in
treating a variety of refractory conditions, including
chronic alcoholism,
75
antisocial personality, autism, and
distress due to terminal illness.
76
Although the research
methods of some of these early investigators have left
certain claims open to serious criticism, many of their
findings are impressive and warrant further study.
77
Recently, researchers have begun investigating the utility
of psychedelics and related drugs in treating depression,
78
alcoholism,
79
opiate addiction,
80
and the distress
of terminal illness.
81
The other psychedelic therapeutic model is the “psycholytic” paradigm, which is most popular in Europe.
82
Derived from earlier therapeutic practices such as the
use of barbiturates as adjuncts to psychodynamic therapy
in “narcoanalysis” and the use of mescaline and datura
seeds by the Italian psychoanalyst Baroni in 1931, this
technique involves giving small, carefully titrated doses
of psychedelic medication to patients during the course
of psychodynamic therapy. The aim is to increase access
to unconscious material without overwhelming the patient or inducing transpersonal states. This method is
thought most appropriate for patients with characterological or psychosomatic problems or those with a
history of severe trauma.
83
The risks of psychedelic psychotherapy include the
possibility of precipitating a psychosis, since the intent is
to temporarily weaken or transcend ego boundaries, and
patients with poor ego defenses or psychotic symptoms
may therefore have to be excluded. Psycholytic approaches may be less likely to produce psychosis.
Phenethylamines carry the usual risks associated with
stimulant drugs, and histories of cardiac problems, hypertension, or stroke represent relative contraindications. In addition, controversy remains regarding the
possible serotonergic neurotoxicity of MDMA.
84
Nevertheless, when used clinically, psychedelics rarely produce prolonged psychosis or major complications.
85,86
Acute reactions including panic and paranoia are common, but these are regarded as part of the uncovering
process to be dealt with and worked through therapeutically. Chronic adverse reactions include “flashbacks,”
designated in the DSM-IV as “hallucinogen persisting
perception disorder,” characterized by intermittent, transient perceptual alterations similar to the effects obtained
during acute intoxication. This condition is poorly characterized, and the reported incidence varies from 15% to
75% of regular psychedelic users.
87
Reactions to these
flashback phenomena range from extreme fear to pleasure, and as with acute effects, a patient’s response to flashbacks may be interpreted psychodynamically. Regular
psychedelic use without apparent harm in some traditional cultures suggests that the physical risks may be
low,
88
and cross-cultural studies suggest that such use
may be associated with positive social and psychological
effects.
89
CONCLUSION
Transpersonal psychiatry offers a broadened view of
what it means to be human. It describes the developmental stages available to individuals as they grow from infancy to adulthood to levels of connectedness beyond
personal identity. It provides models of these transpersonal states of consciousness that can assist clinicians in
using patients’ spiritual experiences as part of the therapeutic process. These models can also facilitate discrimination between symptoms that reflect the emergence of
new levels of awareness and those that indicate regressive
psychosis and compromised ego functioning. This
broadened view may permit greater diagnostic discrimination and may prevent ineffective, unnecessary, or even
harmful treatment. The principal therapeutic methods
of transpersonal psychiatry are well known and include
most of the conventional psychotherapies, but these are
applied on the basis of models that take into account
developmental stages ignored by ego-oriented or purely
biological paradigms. In addition, transpersonal research and practice explores the therapeutic use of altered states of consciousness to facilitate connection with
levels of the psyche that are often unavailable through
exclusively rational or cognitive approaches. The use of
imagery, meditation, breathwork, psychedelic medications, and other techniques to produce altered states of consciousness may play a significant role in the advancement
of psychotherapy, but much research remains to be done.
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