IMAGERY: Using the Mind's Eye in Healing
Statesman Journal, Salem, OR May 7, 2000
Toni GilbertC
When he came to see me about his symptoms, fifty-year-old Martin was having trouble with
headaches, stomach and intestinal upset. He also had a seizure disorder and was experiencing
the dizziness he usually felt prior to each seizure. Needless to say, he was anxious.
Martin told me that he was self-employed and was "stressed out" about his business. I
listened to Martin's symptoms and suggested that he would benefit from work with "imagery."
What is imagery? It is a way that your mind stores, codes and expresses information.
Imagery consists of thoughts that you can smell, hear, see and taste. It is an inner
representation of your experience (or your fantasy). Imagery manifests as your dreams,
daydreams, memories, plans or possibilities, and projections. It has been called the
language of the arts, emotions, and the deeper self.
Guided imagery is a natural therapy. A therapist uses a hypnotic induction to place the
client's mind in a state of relaxation. The therapist then verbally guides the client to
access the unconscious mind for valuable information and insights on the nature of an
illness. This information can then be used to assist in the client's healing.
Martin and I discussed the use and benefits of guided imagery. We decided to use a
technique known as "dialogue with an inner healer."
The guided imagery session with Martin began with the induction of a state of relaxation
and focused attention-like "dreaming" while awake. When Martin was ready, he was asked
to picture, in his imagination, a scene where he felt safe and comfortable, and to
describe the details of that scene. He described a forest scene with tall trees, ferns,
small animals and the smells of the forest. When he had looked around and experienced
the scene for a few minutes, he was asked to invite an inner healer to appear. In his
mind's eye a wolf appeared on a ridge overlooking a valley. The wolf was friendly and
communicated that he was there to help. Martin described the wolf as "very healthy,
relaxed and calm." After a few moments spent getting to know the wolf, I asked Martin
if he wanted to become the wolf (a technique known as evocative imagery). He thought
that was OK since, in the imagination, anything can happen. So, in his mind he became
the wolf and at once experienced the feeling of "being" the wolf. He said he could
feel in his own body the calmness and confidence the wolf felt, how the wolf viewed
the world as it truly was, not hurrying to make something happen in it. Martin gradually
took on the persona of the wolf and could feel himself calming down.
Martin has continued to use the image of the wolf in his life. He resolved to check in
with his wolf every day, by closing his eyes and imagining the wolf with him or himself
as the wolf. Martin applied the experience of the wolf to himself, thus gaining the wolf's
feelings of relaxation, confidence and calm. Over two years later, Martin is mostly symptom
free and feels he has incorporated the essence of the wolf into his own personality. He
still visits his wolf in his imagination nearly every day.
A Half Century of Imagery
As early as the 1950s, researchers and clinicians in China, Japan, Europe, and the United
States began to explore the role of imagery as an important factor in health and illness,
life and death. During the past thirty years, findings from basic stress research,
biofeedback instrumentation, the clinical use of relaxation, and the emerging field of
psychoneuroimmunology, have cumulatively built up a large body of knowledge indicating
that psychological factors (the mind) can and do significantly affect the physiology of
the body. Guided imagery is one modality that research has shown facilitates the mind-body
connection in healing. No physical ailment is beyond this mind-body approach.
Simply put, your mind can affect the healthy functioning, or dis-functioning, of your
body. When you imagine, or "image," scenes, you experience them in your mind, and your
body responds as though it was actually happening. What you imagine can and does affect
your hormonal secretions, the functioning of your various systems, your very heartbeat.
For example, when you're hungry, you begin to salivate at the thought of food; you blush
as you think about an embarrassing moment; your body responds to a sexual fantasy. In the
same way, visualizing certain images (for example, Martin's wolf) can help you through
some difficult emotional or stressful times.
Positive emotions, thoughts, and images have specific biochemical correlates that influence
how the body works. Imagining the immune system functioning to perfection can counteract a
life-threatening disease. By focusing attention on, and consciously directing imagination
and emotions to different areas of the body, it is possible to actually alter the quality
of blood flow, dilating or constricting blood vessels.
Guided imagery has proven especially useful for surgical patients: In a double-blind study
of 130 patients at the Cleveland Clinic, subjects who listened to guided-imagery tapes for
three days prior to, and six days following surgery, rated their anxiety levels as
significantly lower than a control group. The first group described their pain to be half
as severe, used 37 percent less pain medication, and were released from the hospital
almost two days sooner than the control group.
A popular physician, Harvard educated Andrew Weil, lists guided imagery as one of the ten
things you can do to have a successful surgery outcome. He advises anyone who is preparing
for surgery to practice guided imagery regularly. He suggests it is best to work with a
guided imagery therapist who can help you develop your own personal imagery. If this kind
of help is not available, audio tapes, such as those cited in the above study, can be
purchased.
The Power of Imagery
The images of our imagination are potent because they have been created from the depths of
our emotions. These images come from the same place as our dreams and, because they are
formed by feelings, they evoke feelings. These symbols represent emotional energy and the
spirit of the figure represented (i.e. a wise person, mother, father, animal or plant,
etc.). The images can calm and reassure us; they can give us emotional strength as well
as affect our body processes.
The use of imagery may be the most ancient healing technique used our primitive ancestors.
The earliest records of such techniques are found in Babylonia and Summaria. These ancient
people, and some Indian tribes such as the Canadian Eskimo and the Navahos of the American
Southwest, held a common view that included a rich fabric of imaginary figures. In Egypt,
the physician-priest would initiate healing ceremonies. He would perform rituals using
herbs, healing symbols, and incantations consisting of both prayers and imagery.
Paracelsus, a physician of the Renaissance, said "The spirit is the master, imagination
the tool, and the body the plastic material… The power of the imagination is a great
factor in medicine. It may produce disease in man and in animals, and it may cure them…"
Our ancestors believed that our images come from our deepest self and that they have much
to teach us. We may be wise to heed our ancestral teachings. In working with images, it
is most important to do the things that help you understand and believe in your self,
in your own power to heal.
SOURCES FOR PRACTITIONERS, AUDIO TAPES AND BOOKS
Beyond Ordinary Nursing: (650) 570-6157
Academy for Guided Imagery: (800) 726-2070
Dr. Andrew Weil: (800) 523-3296
Toni GilbertC, is a certified holistic nurse with an education in psychology
and transpersonal studies. Toni teaches at Chemeketa Community College, and has a private
practice in which she offers an array of healing arts techniques to enhance wellness and
prevent illness. These techniques complement traditional medical treatment of disease and
injury by adding a holistic psychological and spiritual component. She can be reached at
(541) 327-7749; tgilbert@dnc.net and a web site www.tonigilbert.com.