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Applications of Yoga in the Field of Mental Health
Swami Satyaprakash Saraswati
& Sannyasi Amarajyoti (UK)
The societal view of mental health
In the West, our definitions of mental health tend to relate to absence
of maladaptive behaviours (violence, phobias, compulsions) and freedom
from symptoms (anxiety, depression, seeing things and hearing voices).
We tend to view a healthy person as one who conforms to normal social
expectations of behaviour - can maintain relationships, keep a job, is
friendly, etc. These definitions are limited because they relate to the
norms of the culture or society in which they are formed and, more importantly,
they take no account of any ideal state of mental health.
Blacks Medical Dictionary states that: "Problems of feeling, thinking
and behaving may be regarded as a mental illness if they become excessive
for the particular individual in relation to the difficulties experienced."
In today's Western society, we can see the outcome of such a limited
definition, as explained so concisely in the Bhagavad Gita (2:62-63):
"When a man dwells upon the pleasures of sense objects, attraction
for them arises in him. From attraction arises desire, the lust of possession,
and this leads to passion, to anger."
"From passion comes confusion of mind, then loss of remembrance,
the forgetting of duty. From this loss comes the ruin of reason, and
the ruin of reason leads man to destruction."
Balance is the essence of true mental health
A different view, which is perhaps higher and more difficult to attain,
is one that gives meaning to our lives in a way that 'mere social success'
cannot. Mental health, then, could be defined as 'a whole balanced person,
living a life which is in harmony with themselves and the universe around
them'. If we choose to view it in this way, then social success has little
meaning - and most people have limited mental health.
Balance is the essence of this yogic ideal - and here we are considering
the notion of energetic balance. When energy is blocked and not flowing
freely, this manifests as the state we call depression. When energy is
deranged and scattered, it manifests as the condition we call anxiety.
When energy is out of balance and the person is out of touch with reality
- as it is commonly experienced - and in touch with a different reality,
when it becomes difficult to function on day-to-day levels, it is labelled
psychosis.
What, then, do we mean by balance? We may be considered balanced if we
can move from one situation to another, adapting ourselves where necessary.
To be quiet and introspective at times and, at other times, allowing the
energy to flow outwards and to make contact with the world. When there
is a mental imbalance, we often find that the energy is 'stuck', with
too much or too little energy going into the world or into ourselves.
When we work with yogic practices, we try to bring the whole of our being,
our mind, body, energy (prana) and spirit into a more harmonious and balanced
state.
Pranic imbalance
According to Swami Niranjanananda, "Pranic imbalance is a relatively
new concept. We have been geared up to look at ourselves from the physical
and mental viewpoint. However, yogis have attributed the cause of most
of the mental, emotional or physical imbalances as originating in the
pranic body, the pranic structure."'
In yoga, we understand the pranic structure as broadly relating to these
polarities:
- The energy flowing in ida nadi is passive and mental - it manifests,
in the neuropsychological body, as the parasympathetic branch of the
autonomic nervous system and has an introverting tendency.
- The energy flowing in pingala nadi is active and vital - it manifests,
in the neuropsychological body, as the sympathetic branch of the autonomic
nervous system and has an extroverting tendency.
So how might we describe the energetic imbalance in the case of a depressed
person? Excessive thinking, introversion and parasympathetic activity
with insufficient access to energy.
In the case of a person with anxiety/panic attacks, how might we describe
the imbalance? Here the energy is scattered, there is often hyperactivity,
the sympathetic nervous system is continually overactive and consequently
the person becomes unable to respond to real threat or crisis. The efficacious
practices of yoga are different for the two groups, but there are common
practices suitable for both groups. Thereafter, yoga practices are many
and varied; a program can therefore be tailored to meet the needs of the
individual with particular mental health difficulties. For those who experience
depression, the more dynamic yoga postures (asanas) and breathing techniques
(pranayamas) are indicated, as well as balancing practices such as alternate
nostril breathing (nadi shodhana). For those who are experiencing anxiety
and maybe manifesting panic attacks, the more introverting and calming
practices are best, together with practices to balance the energy.
For people with psychotic illness, it is important to use practices which
are grounding and balancing. Of these, work done for its own sake, rather
than for any reward (karma yoga), preferably in an ashram (where the work
may be hard, grounding, physical work) is undoubtedly the best. The aim
is to keep the awareness in contact with the body and its connection to
the earth. For this group, all yoga techniques should be practised with
open eyes.
Of course, the teacher must be familiar with those practices which are
contra-indicated for each group of people.
Often people with mental health difficulties come to yoga with the belief
that they need to practise meditation and that this is the panacea which
will resolve all their difficulties. In the short term, this is not true.
Only when some balance has been restored by the practices of hatha yoga
and maybe relaxation, does it become possible to practise meditation.
Then it is possible to gain insight into, and resolve, the underlying
causes of the condition.
Reference
'Swami Niranjanananda Saraswati (1993) Yoga Darshan. Sri Panchdashnam
Paramahamsa Alakh Bara, Deoghar. Ch 18, p 435.
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