Sometimes (often) I find myself getting caught up in these battles, and then I set myself to worrying that mindfulness is making my anxiety worse or that I'm not practicing correctly or whatever. I notice tiny little anxious thoughts arise that I may not have been aware or before but now they are directly in the centre of my attention and I can't escape them.
I'm finding this experience to be comparable to something called a 'herxheimer' or 'die-off' reaction people often experience when treating certain pathologies or undergoing an alternative detox therapy. The herxheimer reaction is essentially the process of your illness getting worse before it gets better. It is likely caused either by the toxins let off by dying pathogens, or by the ensuing inflammation. The process can be excruciating and people will often experience what is referred to as a 'healing crisis' where they will want to abandon what they are doing due to fear and suffering.
The process of beginning mindfulness in the context of crisis is somewhat akin to that reaction. Can anybody resonate with this idea?
I think that question is something of a cry for reassurance, because really I already know the answer myself. Moreover, in a resource that Vixinne pointed me towards the other day, and for which I am eternally grateful, Vinny Ferraro offers an encouraging and insightful quote from the Arch Bishop Fennelon:
“As the light increases, we see ourselves to be worse than we thought. We are amazed at our former blindness as we see issuing forth from the depths of our heart a whole swarm of shameful feelings, like filthy reptiles crawling from a hidden cave. We never could have believed that we had harboured such things, and we stand aghast as we watch them gradually appear. But we must neither be amazed nor disheartened. We are not worse than we were; on the contrary, we are better. While our faults diminish, the light by which we see them waxes brighter and we are filled with horror. Bear in mind, for your comfort, that we only perceive our malady when the cure begins.”
~ Archbishop François Fénelon
The above talk can be found at the following link. Clicking on it should start automatically downloading the talk if you wish to listen to it: http://www.audiodharma.org/teacher/52/t ... dgment.mp3
Cheesus