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What kinds of suffering and love for what
kinds of healings of whom?
Author: Fredinand Wulliemier
Summary
If we have to suffer in order to grow physically and psychologically,
and if at each stage of our evolution we do experience specific
sufferings, the same seems true as far as love is concerned. We
need love right from the beginning of our life and throughout
our different evolutive steps, until our physical death. At these
different levels though, these loves have different qualities,
related to different degrees of human maturity.
In fact, these different types of love we are looking for, feeling
and providing along our life seem to have a common denominator.
But they do not have the same effects and don't heal us from the
same ailments. The main difficulty for us is to accept the necessity
to go through pain and suffering, in order to develop universal
love in ourselves.
As far as therapy and healing are concerned, for one human being
to be therapeutic to another one seeking help from him, one must
himself previously be healed from the ailments corresponding to
the various stages of evolution presented to him by his different
patients. As a result, such a therapist will treat them with humanness
and facilitate their access to the next evolutive step and its
corresponding type of love.
More specifically, the only safe way for a true spiritually orientated
therapist to favour a healing process consists in being himself
or herself connected to a divine source, that should be free to
flow through him or her in the most refined possible way, if possible
continuously. This kind of source will automatically provide a
supra-individual type of love, which may also be called transpersonal,
universal or divine love. This automatic phenomenon becomes possible
when the corresponding channel is open, namely when the spiritually
orientated therapist contributes to create and to maintain in
himself or herself a "spiritual condition", which is
the result of an effective spiritual practice, behind which we'll
usually find a spiritual Master worthy of such a name. Of course,
such a spiritualized inner condition becomes permanent only when
the therapist or the healer is surrendered to this divine source,
that is to be found in his own heart, where it dwells eternally.
This divine source, which may also be called by different names
(such as the Atman or the Self or the Centre or God or the Master),
is in fact the real doer.
As far as healing is concerned, this love has to be associated
to some other spiritual qualities and spiritual tools in order
to be effective, such as faith and will. Different kinds of results
may also be observed, related to different levels of spiritual
approach (closeness to the source). For instance, the visible
miracle consisting in the disappearance of a physical symptom
is not of the same order as the less spectacular miracle leading
to the transformation of a human heart.
A sensitive subject
Knowing that I have not become love myself I started by refusing
to talk when Jean-Marc Mantel asked me to participate in the seminar,
despite his affectionate, brotherly way of doing so. Knowing that
my spiritual Master had said that people usually talk of what
they have a problem with, and knowing that he was to be present
in our gathering, I later on accepted, with the prayer that he
would do or undo the right thing in me, only if I would take the
risk to expose myself on that sensitive subject.
Before tackling the subject more directly, let me add that I
shall speak as a psychiatrist, working mainly as a psychotherapist,
who became spiritually orientated under the influence of the practice
of Sahaj Marg yoga and of the spiritual master behind this method,
Shri Parthasarathi Rajagopalachari, whom we usually call Chariji.
First we shall deal with our growth process and its stages, with
their corresponding sufferings and the different kinds of love
related to these stages.
Then we'll see if therapists, whether spiritually orientated
or not, are different from their patients regarding their evolutive
growth and these two interrelated or connected feelings called
suffering and love.
We shall end with some questions and hypothesis concerning the
ingredients necessary for different kinds of healing process.
Different sufferings during our growth
process, leading to different kinds of loving abilities:
According to my personal experience, which I found confirmed
by sayings and by spiritual and religious teachings, love cannot
be separated from our growth process and our suffering. If we
take for instance the advice or the order of God the Creator,
contained in the Torah: "grow and multiply", we may
say that it points out the necessity to mature first, to become
an adult, prior to being able to love another human being and
reproduce.
Now, as far as growth is concerned, we all know, without accepting
it so easily, that as the saying goes "suffering
is a part of growing up".
So there seems to be no growth process in the sense of
evolutive process without pain and suffering on one side,
love on the other side. And this truth seems valid from the very
beginning of our life until our death. In other words, the more
we are able to accept pain and suffering, the more we become able
to love, which is a reliable sign of maturity.
Generally speaking, if we consider pain and suffering as inevitable,
we'll accept it as our common lot, the only difference amongst
people being that we go through more or less suffering, in other
words a variation in the quantity of pain and suffering, whether
we learn to walk as a one-year old child or we try to approach
God as spiritual seekers.
If we study this phenomenon of human suffering in more detail,
we learn to distinguish between different kinds of suffering,
starting with what I called elsewhere the "non-specific suffering"
[1], a suffering common to everybody, each time one has to operate
the necessary changes for getting over the obstacles leading to
the next evolutive stage. This non-specific suffering includes
a mourning process, or a "dis-identification" from the
previous stage of functioning, which includes various behavior
patterns, habits, ways of thinking and decoding what we call reality,
and all kinds of "belongings" the person possessed.
So when we observe ourselves as human beings during our evolutive
steps of growth, this more or less painful morning process seems
to be necessary before we can take the risk of being pushed to
evolve one step further.
This general or common type of suffering can be distinguished
from the more specific sufferings we go through at the different
evolutive stages, that have been described by different schools
in the fields of phychology and spirituality and that Ken Wilber
has brilliantly summarized [2,3].
Now it is obvious that these specific sufferings which we may
experience, are closely related to what we call symptoms or diseases.
The same is also true for the non-specific type of suffering,
which can also result in symptoms, especially when we resist to
the necessary mourning process included in the transition from
one evolutive stage to the next.
In a spiritually orientated psychology, I would suggest pain
and suffering to be considered in different and complementary
ways:
- As an alarm signal for something to be corrected, in agreement
with the cybernetic and the systemic models, which have proved
their pertinence in family and network therapy;
- As the price we must pay for not effectuating the necessary
changes, for example in the case of immature and stubborn persons
(or systems such as families, corporations or institutions),
who will tend to decode their sufferings as unjust knocks on
their head or as bad luck, hence continuing to give and receive
such hurting knocks;
- As the manifestation of samskaras, which
are undergoing their bhoga for extinction purposes, in other
words for refining us [f1]
One may ask: why insist on pain and sufferings when the main
subject is love and its healing effects? Although it may appear
rather strange to link so directly these two feelings, they will
appear closer if we accept to go a little deeper into our own
introspection and in the observation of others.
As far as the non-specific suffering is concerned, which is related
to the difficulties we meet during our ascent from a stage of
development to the next, we all have felt and observed that a
loving attitude is an important ingredient, if not the most important,
from the part of the persons in close relationship with the one
or the ones suffering more or less when trying to successfully
realize the necessary transition from one stage to the next. Let
us take two examples:
- a baby learning to talk, for which a favourable loving relationship
with its mother is essential in order to permit the numerous
repetitions of trials necessary for memorizing and correcting
purposes;
- family members learning to negotiate amongst themselves, in
order to find practical solutions in their daily life: a great
deal of human love is then necessary for preventing the escalation
of egotic frictions due to personal desires or rigid pseudo-mutual
rules prevailing in the family system. Love or rather human
affection is also necessary for creating an atmosphere of sufficient
solidarity and for facilitating in the same time the individuation
process of each member of the family [4].
Perhaps do we discern, through these very common examples, that
there are different kinds of sufferings and corresponding loves,
and also a common denominator to them. As far as love is concerned,
the common denominator proposed here is a sort of attraction force.
To see and admit the existence of this common denominator doesn't
imply that the various consequences of this force of attraction,
related to the different stages of human maturity, should be the
same. On the contrary, observation shows that they can even have
opposite results, depending on the level of consciousness and
of functioning of the person. It is for example obvious that the
acting out of sexual perverse tendencies, like the unfortunately
nowadays fashionable pedophilia due to a very strong attraction
indeed has destructive effects; whereas compassion may
help somebody to repair himself. This phenomenon of inversion
is well-known, and satisfactorily explained in Sahaj Marg philosophy
as the principle of invertendo, described by Ram Chandra
[5].
Perhaps some simple questions, presented in a certain order,
will tend to make more obvious this link between different kinds
of sufferings and different kinds of attraction, often unduly
called love. This way of proceeding will dispense us from a schoolish
approach:
- Why heavily symptomatic patients seem to be so attached to
their symptoms?
- Why are sado-masochistic relationships rather long lasting
ones, as we may observe in so-called co-dependant partners,
married or not?
- Why are we so attached to the house we have built by the sweat
of our brow?
- Why a mother, who suffers during delivery, loves her child
so much?
- Why are poor people more generous than rich people most of
the time?
- Why do some generous people have so much difficulty and suffering
when they are given something?
- Why did we create the word compassion with a root or etymological
meaning of suffering with or together?
- Why is it reported that saints have suffered so much, and
in the same time expressed so much love and compassion, like
Jesus did, even when he was crucified?
So we can perhaps see a first important link between suffering
and love according to the well-known saying: "We love that
for which we have suffered the most".
At a higher level, personal suffering has been completely mastered
by the Saint, who has, who has become capable of such a degree
of compassion and even of universal love, that he can now truly
partake of the sufferings of his fellow beings and alleviate them.
On this, one of the definitions that Shri Ram Chandra gives of
a Saint is: "A Saint is the target for the world's sorrows"
[6]. I suppose that in this case, the suffering which is felt,
can no more be attributed to anybody in particular, for the so-called
others are not only considered as brothers and sisters (essentially
equal to himself) but mainly as part of himself in a united universe,
where there is neither interior nor exterior, where there is no
defensive shell any more. In a Reality where there is no more
subject-object relationship, that is no separation, there can
only be a question of "universal love and universal suffering",
or something beyond both "impersonal" love and suffering.
That is, the Saint's suffering no longer deals with ego, with
its pleasure or its pride, but solely with universal love, which
such a person cannot avoid diffusing, not because he or she loves
others but because he or she has become love, as God Himself is
characterized in some religions.
Two quotations from Shri Parthasarathi Rajagopalachari illustrate
such a level of consciousness:
"Without pain there is no love,
the greater the pain, the greater the love, (....). It is easy
to suffer from your pain, but if you love somebody so much that
their pain affects you, that pain is going to be worse than your
own pain. (....) When I see you eating an ice-cream, I cannot
enjoy your ice-cream, but when I see you suffering, I can suffer
with you." [f2]
"You cannot avoid pinpricking me,
I am like 'a pincushion'." [f3]
One can understand therefore, why certain gurus of lower calibre
choose their disciples very carefully and limit their number.
But one can also understand the probably irreplaceable usefulness
of suffering for one who aspires towards universal love: suffering
which has now become truly altruistic is a signpost in the quest
for that love.
In saying that I am of course not trying to promote masochism,
or naively stating that suffering does always lead to love. I
would rather suggest that suffering may have two opposite consequences,
according to our decoding, itself related to our basic attitude
towards it:
- either it contributes to hardening our protective egotic layers,
in other words our egotic defense mechanisms, well described by
psychoanalysis [7], and especially our tendencies for splitting
and projecting;
- or it contributes to soften us, to make us more sensitive,
more able to resonate to the feelings of our fellow creatures.
It happens when we are first able to interiorize or absorb the
events which provoke suffering, a capacity that is already at
disposal of the child, described in terms of "depressive
position" by M. Klein [8]. This capacity can be developed
tremendously and experienced at a much higher level of development
only by a few human beings, such as saints, sages and spiritual
masters.
Now, as far as love itself is concerned, the same kind of hierarchical
discernment will be useful for our understanding:
- At one end, some persons are only capable of a primitive type
of "love", more appropriately called attraction or attachment
or co-dependency or possessivity, for example to a particular
person, from whom they expect to receive what they call love
in fact human affection and satisfaction of their desires
rather than to whom they are willing to provide love. This quest
for affection and satisfaction is often coupled with a kind of
attachment to their sufferings or symtoms, to which they cling
or are fixed, as psychoanalysts say.
- In between there are many steps, for instance the common stage
where some affection is given in return for the same. Psychoanalysts
call this kind of trade: "anal tenderness". In other
words: "if you give me first I shall give you too".
- At the other extreme, Saints not only love certain persons,
such as close family members or friends, but every human being,
every creature, the whole creation and its Creator and the Absolute,
so that as already mentioned they don't love anymore
but they have become love themselves on a permanent basis. It
has become possible in their case because nothing of their "I"
or ego is left for a subject-object relationship, in other words
for preventing them from an effective unification between their
self and their atman or Self.
- So a hierarchical distinction between different levels of human
love on one side, and divine love on the other side can and should
be made, where the former may be seen as related to different
kinds of horizontal links and attractions between two or several
persons, and the latter as related to a vertical link to the divine.
In other words human love deals with preferences, with particular
objects of love, whereas universal or divine love exists only
when there are no more preferences, no more friends, in fact no
more desires. In other words, where there are desires there is
no universal love.
Definitions of love
Let us summarize and suggest that this attraction force may be
named love, only starting from a certain degree of purity of our
heart, corresponding to a certain level of refinement of our ego,
which permits this attraction force to cease to be egoistic and
later on even to cease to be relational. At that higher stage
love may be defined as a stable quality of the heart, that loves
continuously without distinction, without any preference for anybody
and without any idea of return, so that this loving heart is now
able to help us, and to help us to help others. Chariji often
compares such a loving heart to the candle that consumes itself
and illuminates everybody without any distinction or condition,
because it cannot do otherwise, it is in its nature to do so [9].
Consequently and more precisely, possessivity cannot be considered
as a helping type of attraction, whereas altruistic love can already
be considered as such, and universal love even more so, which
becomes a "forceless force" when completely pure, that
can radiate and even be transmitted under certain conditions [10].
So it seems that true love is to be considered as effective for
our growth and evolution, and also for a healing process to take
place (as we'll see later), because of its very attractive and
unifying power, in other words because of its reducing and dissolving
capacity of our fears and anxiety and their consequences
I mean our defense mechanisms and various psychological and somatic
symptoms.
In terms of energy, we could say that love
provides the necessary amount of energy for the restoring, and/or
the transformation process or the transition [f4]
to a new and stable level of consciousness and functioning, in
other words to a "nobility of character".
A summary of what has been exposed to you so far is contained
in the following tables 1 and 2,
which will be also useful for our next topic.

The particular case of therapists
and their loving capacity
Between heavily suffering patients, trapped in their possessive
type of love, characteristic of their co-dependant relationships,
and saints dispensing universal love, are situated most of the
therapists.
I am not aware of true scientific studies concerning the levels
of development and the types of corresponding love dispensed by
psychiatrists, by psychoanalysts and more generally by therapists,
so that I can only give my personal evaluation regarding this
point:
- I remember for instance to have been evaluated through one-hour
interviews, by two so-called didactic psychoanalysts, when I
applied for attending seminars of psychoanalysis, in order to
become myself an officially recognized candidate-psychoanalyst.
At those occasions I don't remember to have really been evaluated
regarding my capacity for dispensing love, although perhaps
indirectly and implicitly by means of the appreciation of my
level of functioning, comparatively to the psychoanalytical
standard called the "oedipian organization of the genital
stage" [12].
- During the years I was running a unit of liaison psychiatry
in a general hospital, I also remember having tried to make
aware some young or less young colleagues psychiatrists and
psychotherapists of some personality and behavior problems arising
with colleagues and patients, due to a lack of empathy. My not
very effective interventions were due to the presence of a preponderence
of aggressivity and seduction that I could observe, and unfortunately
also manifest myself.
- Very often I have silently evaluated some colleagues during
discussions, professional and private.
If I try to summarize my appreciation of about a hundred psychotherapists,
met and observed during the last 30 years, I would say that:
- psychotherapists were functioning at their best with their
patients rather than with their colleagues or family members;
- no one I happened to know personally was established in a
transpersonal state, from which level he or she was radiating
universal love;
- only a minority of them were mainly established at the so-called
centauric or existential level of consciousness described in
the literature [2] (see table 1). In my understanding of this
existential stage, corresponding to the self-actualization stage
described by A. Maslow [13], or to the stage of autonomy and
solidarity of M. Bowen [14] (see table 2), the person is already
rather tolerant and respectful and capable of dispensing a human
type of affection, often called empathy in our corporation.
This is possible when the therapist is not any more loaded and
bothered by personal and interpersonal problems. Although he
has not yet solved for himself the problems of human mortality
and suffering and the meaning of life at that level of consciousness
and functioning, he has become more altruistic and tends to
evolve in the direction of what Chariji has described in details
and summarized under the label of a "noble character"
[15,16]. Of course this level should ideally be attained by
all psychotherapists;
- most of the therapists were mainly situated below the existential
or centauric stage, namely either at the identity stage or at
the rule-role (or script) level described by K. Wilber, with
or without so-called phantasmic-emotional overflowing tendencies
[3], in other words not offering regularly truly altruistic
love or even a natural type of tolerance.
Now I am not saying this with the purpose of criticizing anybody,
but as an explanation why psychotherapists are usually most able
and skillful for treating one or two evolutive categories of persons
requiring help. To be more precise, therapists will usually be
most at ease with patients close to them, in terms of their own
level of functioning, in which level(s) they have at least stayed
during a long time, usually because their own family of origin
was mainly transacting at that stage of development.
Maybe for that reason of facilitated identification (psycho)therapists
are able to feel what is usually called empathy in our corporation,
(a feeling made of sympathy, affection, concern and comprehension),
more or less selectively for those particular patients close to
them, who for that reason feel themselves rapidly understood by
their therapists. As a result a good collaboration or therapeutic
alliance or union can take place with such patients, favorable
for a positive therapeutic issue. We may also say that in these
conditions the therapist is able to dispense a human kind of love
in various and appropriate manners, that a mother, a father, a
teacher, a brother or a friend can give. These different kinds
of human love seem to bring some repairing effects, especially
when the therapist knows the kind of suffering his patient is
offering to him, for having suffered it himself and transcended
it.
Prerequisites for spiritually orientated
(psycho)therapists
As far as spiritually orientated therapists are concerned, the
same general principle may be applied, namely that, in order to
be effective, therapists should first have transcended or been
healed from the problems their patients are bringing to them.
As a consequence the prerequisites are the same for both types
of therapists at the human level, in the sense of their capacity
for empathy, ideally through the loving heart of a mature individual
having built a noble character. For them however the pass mark
has been set higher if the recommendations from the International
College of Therapists are to be taken in consideration, as proposed
by J-Y Leloup [17]. According to this charter, the spiritually
orientated therapist is for instance supposed to work part of
his time unpaid and to spend part of his daily time in spiritual
practice, such as meditation. This measure allows him to test
at least to some extent the degree of purity of
his empathy or loving ability.
Naturally such therapists have ipso facto to be linked to a spiritual
source for corresponding to the definition of spiritually orientated
therapists and, at a practical level, for being able to deal with
some specific problems that patients interested in or already
practising a spiritual path may have. To be linked to such a source
implies of course a serious dedication to their particular spiritual
practice, if possible continuously. This is most possible when
love is felt for the divine source, with which the seeker is supposed
to unite, as recommended for example in Sahaj Marg Yoga by Shri
Ram Chandra in his third maxim: "Fix your Goal which should
be complete oneness with God. Rest not till the ideal is achieved"
[5]. Practically, for such a goal to be achieved,
the best known and most effective way seems to go through a Master-disciple
relationship (see table 3), where the latter
brings to his Master what he or she thinks to be love, that the
Master accepts before starting to teach his disciple what love
really is, including a preparation for surrendering [f5].
But as we all know, this ability to love and remain constantly
connected to the divine source of universal love, up to the point
of surrendering to it, is both our aspiration and our main problem,
the reason why most of the time an effective technique and a Master
of calibre are necessary.
I am also convinced that love is the necessary basis for the
spiritually orientated therapists in their use of spiritual tools,
like prayers and subtle positive suggestions, which remain silent
and not necessarily mentioned to the patients.
All these prerequisites appear to me as significant characteristics
of spiritually orientated therapists, who want to convey some
help to human brothers and sisters having come to them, regarding
both their suffering and their preparation to pass from a so-called
personal or psychological field of functioning and understanding
themselves and their world, to a transpersonal or spiritual stage
of functioning [16].
It is my hope that this growing new type of spiritually orientated
professionals will contribute to de-specializing the historically
split functions of the priest and the therapist. Regarding this
point, I would like to thank Jean-Marc Mantel, the coordinator
of the International Association of Spiritual Psychiatry (IASP)
to have practically de-specialized this association, by opening
it to non-professional responsible persons, realizing that they
also have therapeutic possibilities of interventions, at least
upon their close and significant others, such as family members.
The composition of the present seminar, with a majority of non-professional
therapists, is a significant illustration of this trend.
Some personal experiences
In order to become more explicit and less theoretical about this
delicate subject, let me here take some risks and give some information
related to my own experience as a psychotherapist for the last
30 years the last 10 as a spiritually orientated one
in order to illustrate some of the topics, reflections and ideas
introduced so far in my talk. These observations and experiences
are reported in a chronological order, corresponding to my own
evolutive trajectory and its limitations, past and present:
- As a rather young psychoanalytically orientated psychiatrist
I became once the object of an erotomaniac type of transference
from a young and so-called neurotic borderline lady, who claimed
to love me; and the only slightly effective thing we could do,
according to the advice of my supervisor (a full trained didactician
psychoanalyst), was to space out the sessions, with the result
of moderating the intensity of this particular type of possessive
attraction or transference, which of course was blocking further
introspection and possible changes in the personality and in the
life of this person. This experience gave me a first opportunity
for relativizing the power of theories and techniques in
that case psychoanalysis and its usual tools when dealing
with intense human erotic "love" or rather attraction.
- Without renouncing psychoanalysis and its derivates, I decided
later on to explore and test some other therapeutic methods, like
neo-behavioristic techniques, humanistic types of approach and
family therapy. This period brought me the pleasure of exploration
and a new sense of freedom for choosing the most appropriate therapy
for such and such a person or a so-called system (including several
persons, such as a nuclear family), according to different criterias
not useful to be mentioned in the present context. Nevertheless
several patients continued not to benefit from this or that particular
technique of help, whether applied by myself or by colleagues
collaborating directly or indirectly with me. Unable to explain
these facts, I continued to observe, hoping to become a better
psychotherapist, cheerful enough for not yet questioning myself
about my true loving capacity, and having now more appropriate
techniques at my disposal.
- After several years of teaching in the medical field I started
to notice that each group of students or professionals were regularly
more joyous, active and creative during our workshops. In fact
the only thing I could find for explaining the changes that had
occured in-between was not of a technical order but something
in myself, in the sense of a new ability to look at the students
in a more positive and affectionate way, just because I was not
afraid any more of facing them (even if it had not been an intense
fear in the past). It made me understand by my own experience
that love is the opposite of fear. In other words fear could not
exist when some kind of love which we may call an affectionate
attitude or an empathic attitude was sufficiently present
or even predominant.
- Another thing I noticed after several years of psychotherapeutic
practice was that the only determining criteria for refusing to
accept a patient requiring help through psychotherapeutic sessions,
was my incapacity to feel concern and sympathy (empathy) for him
or her although many well-known secondary rationalizations
can be put forward for such a refusal. This active refusal of
mine happened three times in my private practice. It occurred
each time with rather paranoid persons, heavily claiming and protesting
as soon as they were sitting in front of me during the very first
session. My understanding of these experiences was that these
three persons were probably demanding much too much love, comparatively
to what I felt myself being able to give for a therapeutic process
to start.
- In the same line but at a lesser degree, several patients had
decided to stop their sessions after some time, in other words
stopping their efforts to change further. The main explanation
I could give for that more frequent and also very well-known phenomenon
was again that it happened when I was myself not open, receptive
and giving enough.
- With some patients, who touched me most
because of both their tragic lives and their courage, I noticed
the appearance of synchronic and "syntopic" events [f6]
sometimes even various parapsychological phenomena, as the psychoanalyst
M. Balint reported long time ago [18]. Although I could not completely
agree with his explanation for the onset of these parapsychological
phenomena, that he attributed only to a quest from the part of
the patients for more love from the psychotherapist, I felt that
something was true in his statement. Later came the idea that
synchronicity, syntopicity, telepathy and other parapsychological
phenomena could rather be the various expressions of a strong
enough attraction or affinity of events or persons, able to produce
such phenomena because some particular chakras were open and activated
enough.
- During this long period of about 20 years of psychotherapeutic
activity I didn't question the idea that I was myself the doer,
and I behaved accordingly. So I used to be rather tired at the
end of one full day of psychotherapeutic sessions, hoping that
my wife would lovingly welcome this tired hero of mine. I was
also disturbed when a patient was aggravating, stagnating or stopping
his or her psychotherapy, because I felt responsible for results
that I expected as positive, partly to reassure myself
self with a small s, in other words my ego.
- Many things started to change for me after my own spiritual
path was discovered ten years ago:
-Soon after my introduction in the Sahaj Marg system of yoga
I heard the speech of one of the followers of this method, a speech
which left a deep impression on me. He was proposing the shift
from a decision-making type of behavior, based on personal experience
or transmitted knowledge from others' experience for instance
in the professional training to a non-limited experience
stemming out from the Master inside us, providing we could listen
and obey to this divine entity, that we may of course also call
the atman or the real Self or the Centre etc. This speech was
a kind of revelation to me, in the sense that it was giving me
a possible solution to the unsolved questions regarding the efficacy
of the various therapeutic techniques and to the secret hidden
behind these various techniques for helping or not helping people,
a subject I had tried to tackle during some of my academic years.
I also felt this suggestion of listening to and obeying the Master
(or the Self or the Atman) as a risk worth taking. To take such
a risk was of course, in my own case, implying a sufficient confidence
in the model of both the inner Master and his realized incarnation
in the concrete form of a human being representing his own Master.
From that day on I observed him and Him as seriously and systematically
as possible, often testing Him also, as a precaution and a defense
from the part of my ego, preventing me from a rapid loss of control
due to a possible loving Him and worse than that for a
complicated Westerner surrendering to Him!
- After some time of practising this method of Sahaj Marg yoga
I was made a preceptor, authorized to clean the subtle body of
followers of this system, and to transmit what we call "pranahuti",
which may be considered as "pure Universal Love stemming
out from the heart of the Master" [19]. In parallel, as a
psychotherapist, I noticed that I felt freer by letting more often
my heart work instead of my brain or my ego, so that unexpected
words going together with transmission of this pranahuti or universal
love started to come out automatically during therapeutic sessions.
I observed also that these interventions produced almost no resistance,
because the patients, now also considered spiritually as my brothers
and sisters, were touched in their hearts too. Those
who commented upon that type of minimum interference interventions
[f7] , reported that they felt them
as adequate and penetrating, and also giving them the feeling
of having been deeply understood. Such interventions, produced
very rapidly and spontaneously in a state of inner balance, became
for me the true intuitive ones, to be distinguished from instinctive
and from emotional reactions on one hand, and from intellectually
prepared interventions based on reasoning and conscious strategies
on the other hand.
- With the increasing importance given to this essential tool
called transmission of universal love whose effective presence
is often recognized as soft vibrations by meditators it
was not possible anymore to perceive myself as the source of the
therapeutic effects, neither as the doer nor as the un-sufficient
or the guilty professional. Consequently results became less important
to me, although obviously present. In other words, if the "I"
diminishes, "I" am not thinking any more that "I"
am loving. Hence Master's love or divine love may flow and the
results belong to Him, which may be felt as a great relief since
responsibility is also transferred to Him.
- Because some patients were spontaneous and open enough to express
it verbally, I got the confirmation that without themselves actively
practising spirituality, some of them were sensitive to these
already mentioned spiritual kind of vibrations and to their variations,
or to the spiritual atmosphere that was prevailing during sessions,
sometimes right from the beginning of our therapeutic collaboration.
- Later on this touching effect gave the result that quite a
few patients, students, colleagues and friends manifested interest
in spiritual practice and started to meditate also. At the beginning
I was rather reserved as far as talking of my own experience is
concerned, according to the professional conditioning called "benevolent
neutrality" that I had got from my previous Freudian psychoanalytical
training. But later on I lost this so-called neutral attitude,
retrospectively considered as the result of some kind of fear.
Of course I don't mean that spiritually orientated
therapists have to preach grossly but that they should be or become
open enough to speak of what they are, what they do and what they
love, as recommended by Chariji himself in another context during
his recent stay in Spain [f8] .
- So I was only half-surprised that the rather fringe line kind
of teaching I had been lead to give to the medical students in
Lausanne (Switzerland), called "Our Bio-Psycho-Spiritual
Development, its Troubles and their Remedies", did not produce
negative reactions from the part of my chairman, who on the contrary
encouraged me to continue such a teaching with almost the same
empathic words as my Master Chariji used when I asked for His
advice about it.
- In parallel with the verbal interactions, characteristic of
the psychotherapist's work, I started to use the spiritual tools
at disposal in my spiritual practice, namely silent subtle positive
suggestions and prayers [16]. I noticed that only when I was able
to use them in the right attitude, namely with sincerity if not
love, something significant was happening. As far as my verbalized
suggestions or prescriptions were concerned, I could observe that
they were more often followed when pronounced with a new softer
voice, specific of my remembrance of the inner presence of the
Master.
- Looking at so-called patients in a different way, the selection
of them also evolving, more and more new patients phoned me also
or even mainly because of their interest or aspiration to spirituality,
or because they were already involved in a spiritual path [20].
I noticed also the unexpected return of former patients, who justified
their request for one or two sessions by focalised problems situated
at the psychological level, but revealing very rapidly (after
one or two sessions) an underlying spiritual quest. These repeated
experiences gave me the opportunity to realize that the real cause
for these meetings was not the need for a professional competence
or a human type of attraction. In other words it was not a psychological
problem or an unfinished transferance or counter-transferance
that had brought these persons back to me, but something of a
different nature that they had felt in their heart, something
not necessarily situated logically according to our classical
space-time frame of reference, something I may either call pranahuti
or universal love or Master's love. This different way of considering
things helped me to look more often at events or persons
and especially patients as sent by the Master or God and
as opportunities to do the right thing. By saying that I am of
course not pretending to have regularly done the right thing at
the right dosage and at the appropriate time.
- Three years ago I decided to work partially at home, outside
the city now 60 % of the time so that most of the
consultations have taken the form of a walk in the forest followed
by a cup of tea. This peripatetic way of conducting therapeutic
sessions has of course many advantages at the psychological and
the somatic levels, already known from Socrates. But the main
reason for this change was not to emulate Socrates but was corresponding
to a different way of feeling in resonance with most of the persons
coming to my office, who are now first seen as suffering hearts
or souls, and only secondarily as, for instance, a forty year
old woman with a particular personal psychopathology caught in
a particular type of transactions in her family system.
After three years of observation I could notice that the nature
of the quest tended to remain limited at the psychological level
for the patients continuing to prefer to consult in the clinic
in town, that I share with a few other systemic and humanistic
orientated therapists.
These accumulated experiences restored gradually in myself some
hope in the possibility of softening and refining the human character,
starting of course with my own. To tell the truth I must say that
I had been convinced since my childhood, that the transformation
of our character was the main and crucial issue for the human
race. Later on, as an adult, this conviction was only slightly
transformed in a crucial challenge regarding psychiatry and psychotherapy.
Since, as we know, western psychotherapies have been rather unsuccessful
regarding this wishable achievement [f9]
, I had been interested in reading the statements of saints or
sages like Vivekananda and Lalaji [21], who stressed the importance
for spiritual aspirants to work on their character. This is a
crucial point because if it is not taking place, evolution stops.
So I remained disappointed until I found my own spiritual path
and the necessary guidance of my Master Chariji regarding this
point [15].
Now, one may think that working as a spiritually orientated psychotherapist,
hopefully guided by the inner Master, reveals a regressive or
even pathological tendency to co-dependency, especially when there
is an incarnated Master in the picture, to whom one asks even
in conventional ways for confirmations, clarifications and corrections.
But it is well known in different traditions that in a mystic
type of evolution, what matters in such a relationship between
the Master and the aspirant is love, allowing surrendering and
merging called layavastha in Indian litterature [5,6]
of the self with the inner Master (or the Self) and the Ultimate.
This process may appear as a regression instead of a progression,
only because it is a process of a paradoxical nature, which is
well explained by the principle of invertendo, and by the process
of "involutive evolution", introduced by P. Rajagopalachari
[22]. I have used these two principles for explaining this phenomenon
of involutive evolution in psychological terms in an article of
our IASP Journal [23], so that it has not to be discussed further
here.
Healing and healings
Many questions may be asked concerning healing, which could be
a wide subject by itself. Because of lack of time and personal
incompetence, I shall limit myself to the formulation of some
questions that appeared as being central to me at different occasions
in my life, and also recently when I was pondering on the theme
of the present seminar. I shall take however liberty of suggesting
some guidelines for answering these questions:
-A first question could be: who or what can be healed? Is it
first of all a must for the therapists, as it was indirectly suggested
above? But should priests and teachers and educators and parents
not be healed also? To heal the patients who complain and request
help appears of course logical. But what about the different living
"open systems", such as families or institutions or
countries, caught in problems of violence out of their control,
either within themselves or with their neighbours? Is it our society
as a whole that has to be healed as a priority since it is presently
traversing an important crisis? In that case, whose business is
it?
Of course the sole pertinent answer to these questions from a
spiritual point of view, regarding who should be healed, is to
start with oneself. For instance, am I or was I healing something
in myself in pondering upon this subject of love and healing?
Am I facilitating something of that kind when speaking to you
right now? During this seminar, am I behaving I mean inside
me and in the interactions with others in a way that has
a healing component for someone else? Regarding the atmosphere
of these joint seminars of the International Association of Spiritual
Psychiatry, the Israeli Association of Spiritual Medicine and
Psychiatry, the Shri Ram Chandra Mission and other Associations,
whose precise names I don't know, are we going to contribute to
heal each other by sharing universal love and building a brotherhood
during these two days? In other words, will our sectarian tendencies
be healed and disappear or are we going to remain bound together
in different groups, fearing or disqualifying each other?
-As a second question one might ask: what should or could we
be healed of? Is it of problems or symptoms in the body, or is
it of some pathology in our mind, or is it of some "grossness"
in our hearts or of samskaras (deep rooted programs or impressions)
in our souls [24]?
The conventional medical definition of healing seems to fit best
with the physical healing: at that level of observation and comprehension,
a healing process has taken place when the objectivable symptoms
and the complaints or sufferings have disappeared. It is a fact
that the most spectacular healings are the ones measurable by
our senses, the visible ones, in other words the physical ones,
sometimes called miracles when they appear very rapidly and unexpectedly.
Psychotherapists have also produced criterias corresponding to
the results of a successful healing process. These criterias vary
according to the different schools of psychotherapy because the
variables are softer or rougher, since this scientific domain
is itself subtler. Based on my own observations, three minimal
conditions seem necessary for a healing process to start at the
psychological level, according to a psychological view acceptable
by most of the psychotherapists:
- the person accepts his or her symptoms as part of himself
and not as some phenomena exterior to himself, which he wants
to get rid of.
- a shift is taking place in the way of decoding the symptoms
or the suffering, as reported by some other authors [25,26],
which acquires a credible new meaning, bearing a potential for
a positive issue, sustained by both the patient and the therapist.
In other words, the symptoms are considered as masking the positive
vital force of the patient that has been blocked and therefore
needs freeing.
- a stable positive attitude from the part of the therapist,
leading to a loving understanding of the patient and even of
his symptoms.
Now what about a spiritual healing? How to judge and by what
kind of experts the changes taking place in the heart or the soul
or more technically speaking, in the causal body of the person?
Who has the authority and the competence to state that this disciple
is liberated or even realized or merged with the Ultimate? Can
we say that somebody is healed already when liberated? Is he then
"over-healed" when divinely realized (stage of realization
of the Self, to be differentiated from the stage of self-realization
described by A. Maslow [13]? It seems obvious to state that a
spiritual Master worthy of the name is the adequate expert and
authority, but as we know, there are different kinds of spiritual
masters on the market, always both praised and criticized. May
be the classification of masters proposed by Ram Chandra (see
table 3) can help us. According to this
classification, one may of course conclude that the subtler the
tools and the healers or the closer they are to the divine source,
the more subtle, rapid and effective the spiritual healing will
be.
We now come to three other interconnected questions:
- what are the ingredients implied in the spiritual type of
the healing process?
- is love the only active ingredient or a sufficient one?
- are the possible other ingredients facilitated by love?
In order to benefit from some light I opened some dictionaries
and found that, etymologically speaking, if we take the examples
of the English, German and French languages, healing seems to
be related to four sources of meaning:
- one in the direction of defense and protection (in the french
word "guérir");
- a second one to saintliness and a third one to salvation (in
the german terms "heilig" and "Heilung"
and the English "holy");
- the fourth root seems related to the concept of unity through
the english word "whole".
So, along this etymological line, universal love appears as the
ingredient of choice for all these roots of the healing process.
Actually, love is usually felt as a protection and we don't think
that there can be saintliness without universal love. The same
love seems necessary for salvation to take place, and we have
already mentioned the association between love and wholeness through
its unifying process, its capacity to bring back parts into a
whole, to overcome or dissolve resistances to change in the direction
of a deeper and higher level of understanding and functioning,
and to bring peace between conflictual parts in ourselves or between
persons caught in a struggle, like boxers in a clinch. In other
words, love is necessary to transform the "dividuals"
that we are (as reported by Jacques Vigne [27]), into true in-dividuals
that we should become.
- In our daily therapeutic activity however, some action or work
seems also to have to be effectuated for a healing process to
appear. To this evidence both the therapists and the patients
seem to agree. Even the pilgrim who goes to the miraculous source
has to dive in the pool. Usually however this spiritual activity
may be more discrete and silent, as spiritual tools are, such
as prayer or positive suggestions [28].
- This work or these techniques to be followed have also to obey
some rules. For that reason discipline must also be taken into
consideration for a healing process to take place. In the Sahaj
Marg tradition, love and discipline are often presented as closely
related and both necessary for our evolution, hence for healing
us. Regarding this point, Chariji defined an immoral society as
a society full of love but without discipline. Of course the kind
of love mentioned here is not the universal one, whereas the words
of Saint Augustine: "Love and do what pleases you" refer
to universal love. As a consequence the prescription of Saint
Augustine remains dangerous for everybody who has not yet become
love himself or herself. That is to say that therapists are not
allowed to love and do what pleases them....
- Now, if disciplined actions are also necessary for a healing
process to start, what is the backing, what is behind them? Here
the scriptures and our own experience give us the answer: it is
faith on one side and will on the other. As far as faith is concerned,
we all know its healing virtue, as explicitly fed back by Jesus:
"your faith has saved you", to the woman whose first
action was to touch his dress. When I was preparing this talk
the discussion of saint Paul came also frequently to my mind about
the faith without the work or the work without faith and also
the suggestion of Saint James that both were necessary. A further
question arises: can we have faith without love?
- Much could also be said about the will, considered by Chariji
and his Master Babuji (Shri Ram Chandra of Shahajanpur) in some
of their talks as the most essential or divine attribute when
certain conditions are fulfilled. A divine will beyond love, even
beyond a love refined to such an extent that it is called "loveless
love" [29]. We shall however limit
our thoughts about this very effective ingredient, especially
when it is itself particularly refined, by just mentioning its
capacity for starting an action in the form of a sankalpa
[f10] .
- Let us now go on by means of other questions regarding a few
more ingredients for a healing process to take place:
In what kind of inner condition must be the person through whom
the healing is channeled? Do we all agree that he or she should
be blank, open, disponible, ideally in a state of balance and
vacuum, without personal desire, so that the divine may flow through
an ego-less channel?
Being in such a "centered and virgin openness", has
the healer also to feel the suffering of the person requesting
help in order to be efficient? In other words, how sensitive and
compassionate must we be? Is it necessary to be a medium to facilitate
a healing process? Does it help the therapist who feels the suffering
of his patients, to work inside himself on and with this suffering,
in order to be effective, as some therapists do?
- Shall we admit that there are different kinds of healings and
different ways of healing, and also different ways of feeling
in oneself what works and how it works? The only things that appear
clear to me regarding this last point are that a healing process
may take place:
- whether the true spiritual therapist is aware or completely
unaware of the effect of his presence and/or his action;
- whether the therapist is suffering or not, in other words
more or less deeply or acutely feeling the kind of problem his
patient has, through a phenomenon resembling that of resonance.
On the contrary, it seems obvious that the therapist will always
be paralyzed or hampered or at least disturbed if he is significantly
affected by the suffering of the one seeking help through him.
These questions and suggestions, I am sure, are nothing new.
In different traditions and their scriptures we find many words
from various Saints or sages for guiding us or showing us that
several spiritual aspects must be taken into consideration regarding
this phenomenon of healing. Perhaps the differences in their wording
that we may find are related to the different kinds of healing,
requested in a particular situation, and/or to the different levels
of consciousness of the authors of the words passed on to us.
Nevertheless, if time has come again for truly holistic care,
I am sure that it will be based on such teachings and inevitably
be connected to an activated or reactivated spiritual source,
that will help us on towards a true healing. In that sense, true
healing would take place only when our ego and our divine Self
have reconciled.
I would now rapidly conclude with two statements and one maxim
from Babuji (or Shri Ram Chandra), the master of Chariji, that
are significant to many of us and that I would like to share with
you in today's context, dedicated to Love and healing:
"Everybody can be won by love; even the ferocious animals
are tamed by this very instrument" [30].
"Love is opening yourself to Reality or Divinity" [31].
And last but not least his ninth maxim goes like this: "Mould
your living so as to rouse a feeling of love and piety in others"
[5].
Footnotes:
[1] For simplicity's sake, I propose to define
a samskara as a sort of programme or a sort of blocked memory, situated
in our causal body and made up of impressions of the same nature
that we have stored up in the course of successive incarnations.
This is due to the lack of the possibility of cleaning them or of
actualizing them sufficiently. In the traditional Indian philosophy,
the actualization of a samskara is bhog. It does not concern only
suffering. As a matter of fact, these phenomena are in themselves
neither agreeable or desagreeable: it is we ourselves who tint them
with pleasure or suffering because of the attachments and emotional
reactions produced during the actualization of our samskaras. Indeed,
if we make an element of fundamental theory out of the notion of
samskara, we admit ipso facto that samskaras determine our karma.
That is, they determine our repeated joys and difficulties, our
habits, our recurring choices, our attractions, the elementary features
of our character, and our symptoms. As Ram Chandra puts it: "suffering
and disease are the boons of Nature in disguise which helps deliverance
from the effects of samskaras". 
[2] Informal conversation, Madras, February 1995.
[3] Informal conversation, Madras, July 1990. 
[4] A transition may be considered as a stable
change, as described by R. Fivaz, E. Fivaz and L. Kaufmann, according
to the theory of Nobel Prize I. Prigogine [11]. 
[5] The natural consequences of such a training
will be the ideal state of desirelesness, purity and sahaj samadhi
(a continuous meditative state). 
[6] I have given this name "syntopic"
to significant and successive events, which happen at different
times but in the same involuntarily and unexpectedly chosen place.
Subjectively it is as if the first event happening in the particular
and significant place is announcing the next one(s) at a subliminal
level, before being fully discovered later on. As far as I understand,
the attraction force of universal love plays a predominant role
in the appearance of the phenomena of synchronicity and syntopicity.

[7] I consider this minimum interference as a basic
principle for a spiritual psychology, as described in a special
chapter of "Psychology and its role in Spirituality" [16],
and as presented in a two-day seminar called "Basic Principles
for Spiritual Therapies" (Information: Catherine Wulliemier,
CH-1082 Corcelles-le-Jorat, Phone: 41 21 903 22 70. Fax: 41 21 903
23 74). 
[8] Speech delivered in Barcelona, December 95
(not yet published).
[9] The main reason for such a usual lack of success
by means of a conventional psychotherapeutic process could be that
character transformation requires a great amount of love, faith
and will, three ingredients that are not explicitely and not effectively
cultivated in the clasical psychotherapeutic tradition [16]. 
[10] An act of will. 
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