MINDFULNESS-BASED
STRESS REDUCTION (MBSR)
back to
Meditation Programs
The
Stress Reduction Clinic of the Mindfulness Center offers
a Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction Program. It provides a rigorous and
systematic training in mindfulness, in order to address various physical
and psychological symptoms and conditions by teaching participants to take
charge of their health and well-being.
The
MBSR program is
designed to familiarize us with mindfulness in a practical and highly
participatory fashion. Mindfulness does not have to be acquired. It is
already dormant deep within us, buried under years of mindlessness
practice, which has left us unaware, forgetful, living mechanically, and
alienated from ourselves. All we really need to do is stop practicing
mindlessness. This requires great rigor, patience, and commitment.
Mindfulness can then flourish and be released as a resource that can be
put in the service of learning, growing, and healing.
Pain
is unavoidable, but suffering is optional.
Pain is an inevitable part of life, but we don’t have to make it worse
with a clouded mind that is riddled by reflexes and habitual ways of
creating distorted realities we then mistake for facts. Not only do we not
have to make pain worse than it already is, but we can make it tolerable;
so tolerable in fact, that it ceases to make our lives miserable, and even
contributes to our sense of being deeply alive. It is through mindfulness
that we achieve that, and stopping mindless patterns requires us to learn
and practice certain attentional training techniques that eventually allow
us to live more peaceful and satisfying lives. Cultivating a
non-judgmental attitude, we focus on developing our ability to concentrate
and expand our awareness beyond customary day-to-day consciousness.
Eventually, this allows us to extricate ourselves from being on automatic
pilot, and develop clear view of all aspects of experience as events in
the field of awareness. When we realize that in spite of being real, our
experiences are not facts, we gain unprecedented perspective, clarity of
vision and freedom of action. Deep relaxation, inner calmness and serenity
set in, paving the way for organismic regeneration and a reduction of
suffering.
In
the course of this introductory program we learn techniques of observation
that allow us to gradually awaken to the intricacies of organismic
processes. Through gradual development of an expanded kind of awareness we
are not accustomed to, we foster fundamental changes in the way we relate
to our experiences and act in the world. Using a variety of formal
meditation practices, we have to commit ourselves to practicing formal
mindfulness meditation for about one hour a day, and let its spirit spill
over into our daily lives through a range of informal practices. We
visit all our senses one by one, deeply immersing ourselves into the flow
of present moments as they inexorably unfold from previous moments,
following an unknown destiny of change. Lying, standing, walking, moving,
eating, sitting and breathing will be vehicles to enter deeply into the
many layers of being as the mind/body organisms that we are. The
formal practices thus include stopping, paying attention to the breath,
mindful action, the body-scan, flowing movement meditation, sitting and
walking meditations, as well as other awareness exercises. At the center
of it all will be awareness, that most elusive and yet powerful of human
attributes, without which there would be no knowing, no healing, and no
love as we know it.
We
dive into the present moment, both conceptually and experientially,
discovering how the verbal/emotional cascade of reactions and reflexes
removes us from direct experience, and prevents us from being there where
life happens, from being present during the only time we ever have, the
present moment. We explore and train attention, following the scent of
pure awareness; just sensing, just seeing, just hearing, just feeling,
just knowing, without adornment, without the complication of
self-reference, without an observer, without an object, just,
just....being....here and now.
On
this journey, we come to inquire into themes that are fundamental to
understanding why and how habits of mind keep us largely unaware and in an
automatic pilot mode. Beginners are predictably vulnerable to the habitual
reflex of doubt, which surfaces as the question “Why should I practice
non-doing, when I have better things to do?” or “Isn’t this a waste
of my time?” To know why we practice non-doing and be able to understand
the rationale behind it, is an important way of keeping the practice alive
when we are assaulted by doubt and old habits.
Therefore,
we interweave themes that highlight the background mechanisms that make
our organism what it is, as well as cultural and philosophical issues,
with the therapeutic practice of mindfulness. We
explore the full spectrum of mindfulness applications: How human
consciousness is a double-edged sword that simultaneously follows habitual
reflex patterns and yet contains the seed for its own transformation. We
delve into the seven fundamental attitudinal foundations of mindfulness
and explore such themes as ‘doing versus being; the automatic pilot
mode; learning to deal with obstacles; being present; the wandering mind
and bare attention; allowing and letting be; thoughts are not facts; and
acting in self-care’. Since we cannot escape the reality of being
story-telling animals, we explore the interface between mindfulness
meditation and language by contemplating psychological development and the
narrative mind in intimacy and conflict resolution. Through the
examination of stress we come to understand the mechanisms, by which
mindlessness leads to illness. Learning to appreciate mindfulness within a
medical context opens the way to taking charge for one’s life and health
and developing the notion of a participatory medicine. Because mindfulness
touches upon deep existential issues that cannot be ignored, the theme of
mindfulness and spirituality is an important part of what rounds up this
program.
We
put particular emphasis on one of the problems that most frequently arises
in the course of practice: The sense of failure to practice. There is no growth without respectful and caring attention to the
hindrances we are bound to encounter along the way, without
learning to live alongside the
damaged aspects of ourselves,
without responding to our own fragility in ever more gentle and
caring ways, including dealing
with the apparent failure of practice.
Once
the program is completed, different follow-up options are
available to those interested in deepening their experience of
mindfulness. These include the
Mindfulness
Intensive,
the
Mindfulness Yoga, the
mindfulness meditation enrichment group (click on
Mindfulness
Community)
and individual sessions with
Dr. Treyvaud booked in advance as needed. These sessions provide an
individual opportunity to discuss and work through issues that arise from
one's mindfulness practice.
This
12-week, 15-session program is offered 3 times per year (fall, winter and
spring).
The
sessions are covered by OHIP. There
is a $ 350.0 fee to cover operating costs and program materials,
which include 6 guided meditation CDs, and a 200-plus-pages work binder.
Note: All participants who are not
regular patients of Dr. Treyvaud have to go through an individual
assessment with Dr. Treyvaud prior to joining the program. It is therefore
advised to apply well in advance of the program one intends to join.
The
program includes:
- An
individual assessment prior to joining the program to establish
individual needs and medical indications
- 12
weekly 3.25 hour sessions
- One
all-day weekend session
- Individual
sessions with Dr. Treyvaud booked as needed during the program to
address special needs and situations that may arise from the work in
the group.
- An
individual evaluation interview following completion of the program if
applicable
If
the need arises during the program, participants can book individual
sessions with Dr. Treyvaud. These are opportunities
to discuss and work through issues individually that may arise from the
mindfulness practice, and that for time or personal reasons cannot be
addressed in the group.
Towards
the end of the introductory program, participants are automatically
informed of the various available follow-up options.
For
exact dates of all programs please click on
Upcoming
dates at a glance
or contact us at (905) 338-1386.
Note: When the number of applicants
far exceeds the available spaces in a group, a parallel group is put in
place at another time to be announced.
Fall
cycle:
. 12 Mondays or Tuesdays, starting from either the third or fourth Monday
or Tuesday in
September or the first Monday or Tuesday in October to the middle of December.
. 1 Friday after the 8th session.
Winter
cycle:
· 12 Mondays or Tuesdays, beginning on the first Monday or Tuesday in January to the end of
March.
· 1 Friday after the 8th session.
Spring
cycle:
· 12 Mondays or Tuesdays, beginning on the first Monday or Tuesday in April to the end of
June.
· 1 Friday after the 8th session.
Mondays 2:00 pm - 5:20 pm
Tuesdays 4:45 pm - 8:05 pm
Friday session 8:30 am - 4:30 pm
The
sessions are held in Dr. Treyvaud’s office.
|
Sign-up procedure:
1.
Participants who are a
patient of Dr. Treyvaud, or who have seen Dr. Treyvaud in the
past:
Send in a cheque payable to Dr. Treyvaud,
accompanied by your name, address, phone number, and e-mail if
applicable. Upon receipt, we will contact you to confirm your
booking and give you all the introductory information you
need. An individual assessment appointment with Dr. Treyvaud
prior to taking the program may be needed in certain
circumstances.
2.
Participants who have
never seen Dr. Treyvaud before:
Ask your doctor to fax a
referral to (905) 842– 0453, then call yourself to
book an individual assessment appointment with Dr. Treyvaud.
If you cannot get a doctor’s referral, you can book without
one. The individual assessment is mandatory.
Fees:
All fees throughout this
website are in Canadian Dollars
|
|
|
"We
shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time…"
- T.S. Eliot
|
|