Dr. Christiane Northrup’s, Women’s Health Wisdom Article

October 27th, 2005

The following article appeared originally in the September 2005 issue of Women’s Health Wisdom, Dr. Christiane Northrup’s monthly e-newsletter. Reprinted with permission from the author. © 2005 Christiane Northrup, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
Dear friend,
 
I first met Dr. Stanley Block in Portland, Maine when he was the Medical Director and Chief of Psychiatry at Jackson Brooke Institute, a mental health facility. We worked together in the 1980’s on several successful conferences on the mind-body connection in women’s health. Since then, Dr. Block and his wife, Carolyn, have written a new book called Come to Your Senses: Demystifying the Mind-Body Connection (Beyond Words Publishing, 2005), which describes how and why our thoughts and beliefs about ourselves orchestrate the biochemistry of our mind-body connection. His bridging technique allows anyone and everyone—almost instantly—to tap into the wisdom of the body and experience a more restful, stress-free life. He has successfully used “bridging” to treat everything from depression to alcoholism. Because of the profound simplicity and wisdom of Dr. Block’s bridging technique, I’ve asked him to share an overview with you that will allow you to apply his insights right now.
 
Bridging For Wellness
By Stanley H. Block, M.D. with Carolyn Bryant Block
 
All over the country, women and men are living healthier, happier, and more productive lives, using an elegantly simple technique called bridging. In minutes, bridging takes them from tension, anger, and worry to a harmonious, balanced mind-body state. You can go there, too. It may sound too good to be true, but bridging works because of one immutable fact: as a human being, you are always connected to your wellspring of beauty, strength, and wisdom. You can’t be separated from this source of goodness and healing any more than a ray of light can be separated from its source.
 
Why then, don’t you feel this beauty, strength, and wisdom 24/7? It’s because you, and everyone else, has a built-in system, called the Identity System (all the ideas we have about ourselves and what we should be doing or thinking–CN) that uproots you from experiencing this goodness by creating a cluttered mind and a body full of tension. The Identity System works by contracting your awareness of who you really are (your true self) to a self-limited version of who you think you are (your damaged self). When overactive, you become detached from natural functions such as hearing, seeing, thinking, remembering, and relating to others.
 
Your Identity System plays tapes over and over again on “Channel Me,” which reinforce the false existence of a damaged self. (“Channel Me” is Dr. Block’s name for the repetitive thoughts that we all tend to beat ourselves up with—or egg ourselves on with!–CN.) Helped along by two nemeses, the “Depressor” and the “Fixer,” the Identity System can turn a natural thought into one that generates stress, anxiety, and even fear. Take the natural thought: “I want to be a good mother.” When the Depressor is active, Channel Me might sound something like this: “My daughter is constantly fighting with her brother. Their bickering drives me crazy. Why don’t I have more patience? If I was a better parent, my children wouldn’t fight all the time.” Then the Fixer tries to repair the distress with “I need to be more patient. I should not overreact. I must try harder.” As you can see, both the Depressor and the Fixer reinforce the idea that something is inherently wrong with you. Something that, I assure you, is not true.
 
Fortunately, there is a way to rest your Identity System and immediately transform your life. It’s called bridging—connecting yourself, mind and body, to the sights, sounds, and sensations around you. It is simple, as Sally’s story shows.
 
Sally drives over two hours a day to and from her three children’s schools, lessons, and practices, as well as trips for shopping and other errands. Over the past six months, she became tense and irritable, especially while driving. Because of headaches and gastrointestinal disturbances, she saw her physician, who attributed her symptoms to stress and gave Sally a prescription. Unwilling to medicate herself for a problem she instinctively felt could be resolved more holistically, she refused the drugs.
 
Instead, a friend gave Sally our book Come to Your Senses: Demystifying the Mind-Body Connection. She read the book, followed its amazingly straightforward guidance, and found a new way to live, naturally. Within two weeks, her symptoms disappeared. How did Sally do it? In short, she simply learned to bridge. For example, when she gets trapped in traffic, she consciously engages her senses, focusing on how the steering wheel feels beneath her fingers, listening to the sound of the tires on the pavement, and experiencing the vibrations of the engine. As she pays attention to her driving, her self-induced tension and anxiety naturally melt away.
 
Sally has discovered that it is not traffic, the children’s behavior, or being late that causes her mind-body distress. It is her Identity System’s tapes, recordings her brain is dwelling on, that reinforce a sense that she is somehow damaged—in this case, she should be better able to cope with the world around her. Hers sound something like this: “How come I’m stuck in traffic? Why didn’t I go another way? This always happens to me; it’s too much.” These tapes were affecting her health and making her miserable.
 
Before she learned to bridge, Sally believed these tapes were natural, and just who she was. Now when a thought such as “It’s going to be a terrible day” pops into her head, Sally uses a tool called “thought labeling” and simply tells herself, ‘“I’m having the thought ‘It’s going to be a terrible day!’” She doesn’t have to replay stress-inducing thoughts such as “How come I’m stuck in traffic, Jack is having problems at school, why didn’t I go another way, this always happens to me, it’s too much…” To her delight, labeling her thoughts lets her relax. She enjoys driving, and at the end of her trip is ready for the rest of her day.
 
Susan came to a bridging workshop six months ago depressed, with little energy, and feeling that the demands of everyday life were too much. What had been easy to do a year ago was now painfully difficult. She spent a lot of time ruminating about past events. She had given up exercising, was gaining weight, and had difficulty sleeping. After picking up bridging tools at the workshop, her life changed, literally overnight. At bedtime, instead of mulling over the past or the day’s problems she now simply tunes into the clock ticking, fan sounds, and traffic noises. Lo and behold, she falls asleep rapidly.
 
She says, “I haven’t slept so well in ten years.” Whenever she awakens during the night, instead of playing her Channel Me tapes, she instead tunes into background sounds and gently rubs the blanket, experiencing the sensation on her fingers. She says, “It’s just like my son did when he was a baby.” As a child is soothed by the sensory comfort of a blanket, Susan is calmed and strengthened when she likewise tunes into her senses. This is the essence of bridging.
 
Susan continues to bridge upon awakening in the morning. She feels her eyelids open, experiences gravity’s pull on her body as she sits up, and then focuses her awareness on everything she touches. When she looks into the mirror and thinks, “Bad hair day,” she reminds herself, “It’s just a thought; what else is new?” She recognizes that in the past, thoughts such as these would activate her Identity System and generate what we call a “Depressor” tape: “I’m unattractive. How am I going to get through the day? Mother said I always look terrible in the morning.” Or, no less harmful, she would assume she was broken and play a “Fixer” tape: “I need more sleep. I need more exercise. I need a new hairdo.” She now knows that these tapes damage her by literally embodying her tension, making her physically ill and mentally depleted. (There’s a paradox here. It is human nature to want to improve ourselves and evolve to the next level in our lives. All too often, however, when our “Fixer” is in the driver’s seat, we fail to appreciate the beauty and perfection of the present moment. Instead we move blindly into fixing ourselves. On the other hand, self-improvement from a place of self-acceptance and appreciation can be empowering and stress-reducing.–CN)
 
Now, when Susan feels tense at work, she tunes into the computer hum or air conditioner noises and immediately feels refreshed. She is bridging from her damaged self to her true self. Bridging takes no time out of her busy life. In fact, she says she has more leisure time than before! She is more creative at work and her relationships have improved. With bridging, in a matter of weeks, Susan’s depression lifted. Her actions and reactions have totally changed. Six months after beginning bridging, she e-mailed me to say that her life was so much better because it is no longer ruled by her Depressor and Fixer.
 
To personally experience the power of bridging, try this exercise. Mull over an issue, a problem, a past event, or a person that is making you miserable. Really get into it, and experience the misery in every cell of your body. Now, try to hold onto that misery while you listen to any background sounds such as traffic, a refrigerator’s hum, or a fan’s whirr. See what happens. If you are tuned into the sound, you’ll notice that the misery melts away in seconds; bridging is taking you from a damaged self to your true self. You don’t have to stretch to get there because your wellspring of healing, strength, and wisdom is always with you. You just have to tap into it.
 
Bridging is simply coming to your senses—recognizing and resting your Identity System. When you do, your natural functioning flows. Thought labeling and mind-body mapping (described in our book) are techniques to recognize your Identity System. Since the Identity System can only function in darkness, your light of awareness is all it takes to rest it. Bridging works for everyone, but it does take practice and a “can-do” attitude. Start now and transform your life.

The mind/body connection is a powerful force, fully capable of altering your brain patterns and DNA. With care and intention, you can create the life you always wanted by respecting this awesome truth.

 

Warmly,

 

Christiane Northrup, M.D.


Christiane Northrup, MD, obstetrician/gynecologist, is internationally known for her visionary, empowering approach to women’s health and wellness. As a practicing physician for over 25 years, Dr. Northrup is a leading proponent of medicine and healing that acknowledges the unity of the mind and body, as well as the powerful role of the human spirit in creating health.

Learn more about her work or sign up for her E-newsletter at www.drnorthrup.com, the premier Website for women’s mind/body medicine and health.
 
 

PTSD Triggering

October 12th, 2005

Hi Dr. Block,
I have been reading your book and doing the exercises. I have PTSD. Recently, I was triggered by people yelling at a young child having a temper tantrum and screaming. I tried to feel my surroundings, but that caused extreme anxiety. I was crying silently because I felt trapped and extremely anxious. It took several hours for me to stop crying, long after the child had settled down and gone to bed.
I did mapping on this and watched how my thoughts spiraled me down, but couldn’t get rid of the feelings, especially the anxiety. I took it to my therapist, as well as your book, and she is going to get a copy as well and we are going to use this technique in therapy. But she, too, wanted me to ask you what to do when triggering occurs and is caused by the "background noise" and the trying to be in the present moment by tactile stimulation causes body memory flashbacks. I am far enough in my healing to know soon after the triggering occurs that the problem is a trigger, or memory, and not the present moment. But where to go from there is a quandry. Any suggestions?
 
 
Dear Friend,
Thank you so much for your vivid description of this most painful situation. Although not all have had this specific problem, all of us have had similar situations where our Identity System has paralyzed us and prevented us from living our life at its best.

Past traumas create two Identity System requirements: repeating the mind-body experiences of the trauma and numbing ourselves to the present moment. Both serve to freeze us in the hell of the trauma and perpetuate PTSD. Your body has the capacity to heal from trauma by Bridging to your wellspring of healing, power and wisdom. You do that by the bridging awareness practices described in the book or summarized on this web site and by befriending your Identity System by recognizing requirements, which trigger your Identity System and cause the symptoms you describe.  

Your true home is the present moment. By consistently returning to your body sensations and what you are seeing, touching, hearing and doing throughout the day, you weaken the grip the Identity System has on you. A strong daily Bridging practice will allow the natural healing to take place and will enable you to take the next crucial step of defusing the triggers.

The trigger is simply a requirement you are unaware of. Your requirements may be something like: People shouldn’t yell at children, kids shouldn’t have temper tantrums; I shouldn’t be upset by situations. When these are challenged, your Identity System goes into high gear and generates your symptoms. Mapping will allow you to become more intimate with how your Identity System works. By doing the mapping you will see that your light of awareness is all it takes to stop the downward spiral. Bridging and Mapping gives you choices. 

By being aware of your requirements, your true self will be hearing the “background noise” rather than your traumatized self. It is not the sound that is the problem it is the Identity System. Many PTSD sufferers have reported that with a strong Bridging Practice the triggering sounds or body sensations that previously triggered the downward spiral turn out to be soothing.
 
Best Regards,
Dr. Stan Block

Frequently Asked Questions

October 12th, 2005

1. Why does Bridging work?
A. When you shift your awareness to a sight, a sound, or a sensation of your body, you put the engine of your Identity System on idle. Bridging allows your natural functioning (i.e., living freely, with a resting Identity System) to flow. Bridging is living your life at its best-natural living…
Bridging practice has two wings. The first is the awareness practice that allows the Identity System to rest. You come back to the present moment and are aware of the sights, sounds, physical sensations, and thoughts washing over you, whether you are tense or relaxed, happy or miserable, clear or confused.
The second wing of Bridging is befriending your Identity System, which means recognizing and being familiar with its requirements and how they restrict your life. You do this through mind-body mapping. Awareness of your Identity System is all it takes to rest it.

2. How come I keep forgetting to Bridge?

A: You have a requirement of your Identity System that you are un-aware of (such as “Bridging should come natural.”) which activated your Identity System and you get stuck in Channel Me. You become so preoccupied with your tapes that you forget to Bridge.

3. Why do you call “it” the Identity System?
A: The Identity System creates a self-limited picture based upon who we think we are rather than the boundless experience who we really are. The Identity System, or I-System is made up of self-defeating thoughts, which paralyze our natural functions by creating a cluttered mind, a tense body and a contraction or our awareness. We call this universally present, built-in mechanism the Identity System because it is a system which works to reinforce a mold, a false vision of who we are, which stereotypes us and impairs how we act in every situation. This activity damages how we live our life.

4. What are requirements?
A: Requirements set up the mold that freezes us in a self-limited identity. They set up a series of demands of how we should be and how the world should be each moment. For example, I should be successful. When we have a thought to the contrary we are devastated rather than disappointed. The requirements always adversely influence your health and welfare. The requirements produce the fuel to keep your Identity System going.

5. I’m Bridging but I’m not satisfied with my life.
A: The reason that you are not satisfied is that you have a hidden requirement to “get” something (peace of mind, true love, better job) and when it’s not forthcoming, you feel damaged. Our goals are a natural part of functioning of our true self but when your I-System captures that thought and it becomes a requirement. Goals give us direction, requirements give us suffering.

6. Where do you bridge to, why does it work?
A: Actually you don’t go anywhere. Your source of healing, strength and wisdom is always with you.

7. Why don’t you have to work through past traumas?
A: Most conventional forms of psychotherapy use understanding, emotional experiencing and working through our past. I was an expert with these techniques and for over thirty years utilized them and taught them at medical schools from coast to coast. With the discovery of the Identity System and Bridging I have found working through your past is not necessary and can actually strengthen the Identity System’s damaged self. Remember the damaged self is a fiction of the I-System. Trying techniques to fix the Identity System, always fails. The bottom line is always natural, free functioning.

8. How can Bridging help my abusive husband who gets angry so easily?
A: The reason your husband is angry is that the requirements of his life are not being fulfilled and his damaged self is driving his rage. If he rests his Identity System and the motor of his rage will cease.

9. I’m Bridging, but had a relapse with alcohol.
A: People have reported to me that their ability to prevent relapses with Bridging is 100%. You may be doing your best at Bridging, but you have hidden requirements, such as “Abstinence should be easy with Bridging.” and when that requirement is challenged it ignites your Identity System and the damaged self drove your relapse.

10. Can Bridging help me make money?
A: People all over the country have found that when they manage their I System (recognize, become aware of and rest) every aspect of their life changes. Thousands have found that they become more successful and make more money.

11. Bridging is so simple, how can it solve my complicated problems?
A: Your question suggests that you are doubting you innate storehouse of power and wisdom, which is naturally released by resting your Identity System.

Letter From An I-System Trainer

August 7th, 2005

Dear Stan,

            Over two years have passed since you first came to the agency where I was working to present “Bridging the I-System” to our staff.  Since that time, I have had the privilege of having you lead two groups a week with me at that workplace and of studying extensively with you.  My own bridging awareness practice has changed my life and the course of my work.  By mapping, I quickly became aware of how my depressor and fixer were keeping me trapped in a vicious cycle that was damaging my physical health and keeping me stuck in my busy head.  Within a short time of beginning to bridge, a serious health problem that had plagued me for years simply disappeared.  Best of all, it has not returned! By learning to rest my I-System, I became more relaxed and able to enjoy whatever I was doing.

Teaching my clients to use these techniques has enabled many of them to find the inner peace I have found for myself.  Some of these are women I had worked with for several years using traditional therapy modalities. While true that they had made positive changes in their lives, they were still driven by their racing thoughts, which nothing had been able to stop.  As these clients began to do the maps outlined and to come back to their senses, they found peace and freedom to make better choices in their lives from their own innate wisdom and goodness.

One notable example is a wonderful woman who had been in an extremely violent marriage.  She had found the courage to leave, and her ex-husband moved far away.  However, he continued to call her constantly, blaming her for his rage and abusing her verbally.  She would begin to doubt her own judgment, feel guilty, and be distraught for days over his calls, even to the point of thinking she perhaps was to blame for his violence and sending him money. After changing our focus to her I-System driven reactions to him, she was able to stop taking his calls, believe in her own worth, and see that she never had to allow anyone to mistreat her again.  She has become more assertive and able to laugh and enjoy her life.  When she slides back, she sees that her I-System has been activated and can quickly get out of that pattern.  Watching this transformation in her has been one of the joys of my work.

Best Regards,

Theresa McCormick M.S. APRN, Psychotherapist, Salt Lake City MCCRep@acn.net

LIFE’S COMPASS

August 7th, 2005

 

Each moment brings with it a number of choices, a number of decisions. How do we choose what kind of life we should live? What guides us in this choosing? Some of us may have set moral, ethical, or legal standards to guide us. Others may look to memories of past experiences or the experiences of others documented in literature. Others may look to the holy words that have guided civilizations for millennia. The Ten Commandments can be seen as a recipe for moral behavior. In addition they can be seen as holistic laws akin to natural physical laws. Both laws state the truth of existence. For example, when we go too fast in our car around a sharp turn physical laws cause us to lose control and swerve off the road. With reduced speed physical laws allow us to maintain control and stay on the road. Similarly when we are tense, fatigued, anxious and self-preoccupied natural laws impair our thinking, decision-making and actions causing us to lose control of our life.

Lets say that I wanted to travel by car along I-5 from Los Angeles to San Francisco. The route is a fairly simple one. I would take I-5 north 385 miles arriving in San Francisco after six hours of driving. Now if I were completely “navigationally challenged” and chose to take I-5 south I would end up in Mexico not San Francisco and I’d be completely lost. The laws of physics would not allow me to end up in San Francisco by traveling on I-5 south from Los Angeles. Nowadays I could get a GPS (global positioning system) installed in my car and it would let me know when I stray off course.

Of course life is not as simple as going north or south on I-5. Human relationships are filled with so much complexity and unpredictability that we are often confused on which course of action to choose in particular situations. Relationships are essentially sequences of hundreds of interactions. A tone of voice, a body movement, a smile, a frown or a stare prompts different actions and reactions. Advice from self-help gurus cannot guide us in the moment-to-moment existence of our daily lives. Even though we may not be aware of it, we all have an inner navigational device. This device is called our I-System (Identity System) and lets us know when we are going off course. The I-System, a part of our own mind, gives us a signal every time we are failing to function naturally in accord with the truth of our existence. It is a compass uniquely tailored to our life.

This navigational signal occurs whenever we leave the lower natural functioning green loop and enter the red upper I-System loop illustrated in attached diagram. The reason why this signal is not readily apparent to us is that we have been spending almost all of our time in the I-System loop and we have come to falsely believe that our driven, tense, unmindful, self-centered state is who we really are. Thus we become insensitive to the clear signals of our body-mind. The I-System, by constricting our awareness, and creating fear and body tension has sold us a bill of goods—that we are only who we think we are (our false sense of identity) rather than who we really are (natural self). When we are living in the “red zone” we are reinforcing our false, incomplete and damaged self and our choices of actions are impaired. Our life continues to reinforce old story lines and behavioral patterns. We ignore cause and effect and end up suffering needlessly in an unsatisfactory life. The I-System is like the temperature gauge in our automobile, it lets us know when we are in the red zone and need to take corrective actions. If we don’t heed its signals we will damage ourselves and others.

We are hard wired with a guidance system that continually lets us know whether or not our life is holistically and harmoniously balanced physically, mentally and spiritually. Since the I-System is on so much of the time we’ve interpreted its activity as normal background noise rather than a vital signal that our natural functioning has been interrupted. To rest the I-System we come back to our senses (sights, sounds, body sensations). To do this we can use the always-available background sounds of life. Right now close your eyes and tune into whatever ambient sounds are available—traffic noise, refrigerator hum, rain falling, etc (white noise is better than music or talk). Observe what happens when thoughts enter your mind and then return to the sounds. When tuned into the background sounds we can observe a decrease in thoughts, a decrease in body tension and a deepening awareness of our overall calmness. This is what happens with a resting I-System. Every one of us has a capacity to rest their I-System in this way. Try this exercise again and again so this experience will be clear.

This exercise is part of what is called the Bridging Awareness Practice. When we “Bridge” throughout the day we will be functioning more and more naturally in the green zone. When situations arise that force us into the red zone it will be readily apparent. As our I-System rests throughout the day we will come to appreciate our life just as it is. Each experience, whether sunny or stormy, will preach the truth of our existence. With continual Bridging we can use our life compass to live our life at its best.


Disclaimer

All material provided on this web site is provided for educational purposes only. The ideas, techniques and suggestions are not intended as a substitute for expert medical or mental - health professional diagnosis, advice or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health care provider with any questions you have regarding a medical or mental health condition, and before undertaking any health care program. Dr. Stanley H. Block does not dispense medical or mental health advice or prescribe the use of any technique as a form of treatment for physical or mental problems without the advice of a physician or mental health professional, either directly or in-directly. In the event you use any of the information of this web site for yourself, neither Dr. Block, nor contributors to this web site accepts responsibility for your actions.

© 2005 Stanley H Block, M.D. All Rights Reserved