Behavioral sciences (Basel, Switzerland)
August 31, 2021
Sherry-Anne Muscat, Geralyn Dorothy Wright, Kristy Bergeron et al.
5 citations
Pairing ketamine therapy with culturally attuned trauma-informed psychotherapy in a collaborative cross-cultural partnership may improve treatment effectiveness and quality of life for Indigenous people. Decolonizing Indigenous health requires equal partnership between government and communities, built on a holistic foundation of mind, body, social, and spiritual balance within the context of colonialism. Ketamine, a fast-acting antidepressant taking effect within 4 hours even in acute suicidality, engages multiple systems damaged by intergenerational complex developmental trauma. Its brief alteration of waking consciousness is familiar in many Indigenous healing cultures, making it a potential core treatment modality around which culturally engaged approaches can be organized.
Military psychology : the official journal of the Division of Military Psychology, American Psychological Association
January 1, 2020
Genine P. Smith, Glenn Hartelius
5 citations
A novel therapeutic approach conceptualizes PTSD-related flashback triggers as the activation of latent dissociative structures called dissociated ego states (DES), which are fractured aspects of self beyond cognitive control. Using mindful attention, therapists can engage these states without emotional dysregulation, recovering dissociated cognitive resources and deactivating the structure, without requiring exposure to traumatic memories. A 9-step intervention is described with a case example of a Vietnam veteran who had PTSD symptoms for 49 years; significant gains were maintained at 21 months follow-up. This mindfulness-based approach targeting dissociated ego states may offer rapid, durable relief from chronic PTSD symptoms and potentially reduce treatment costs.
International Journal of Transpersonal Studies
January 1, 2015
Glenn Hartelius
5 citations
No Summary
International Journal of Transpersonal Studies
February 20, 2024
Glenn Hartelius
1 citation
The term 'nondual states' is often used in psychology and New Age contexts to describe experiences where the sense of self is softened or expanded. This paper argues that such usage is incompatible with the original meaning in Advaita Vedanta, where nonduality is a metaphysical concept about the nature of reality, not a description of a mental state. The author contends that applying the term to psychological states lacks the precision needed for a scientific construct and improperly inserts New Age metaphysical ideas into psychology. The argument is grounded in the author's study under a lineage-holding teacher of Advaita Vedanta.
International Journal of Transpersonal Studies
December 31, 2024
Glenn Hartelius
Advaita Vedanta, often cited as a source for nondual theories of consciousness that posit a pure, featureless awareness underlying mental experience, is frequently misrepresented. These interpretations deviate from both its traditional lineage-based teachings and scientific standards, creating compromises that lack traditional fidelity and psychological rigor. For meaningful dialogue between psychology and Advaita Vedanta, a clear distinction must be made between the sensate phenomenology of experience and the spiritual interpretations that may be implicit in experiential descriptions.