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Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing - Wikipedia EMDR

Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing - Wikipedia 

Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing

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"EMDR" redirects here. For the materials characterisation technique, see Electrically detected magnetic resonance.

Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) is a form of psychotherapy in which the person being treated is asked to recall distressing images; the therapist then directs the patient in one type of bilateral stimulation, such as side-to-side eye rapid movement or hand tapping.[1] EMDR was developed by Francine Shapiro starting in 1988. According to the 2013 World Health Organization (WHO) practice guideline: "This therapy [EMDR] is based on the idea that negative thoughts, feelings and behaviours are the result of unprocessed memories. The treatment involves standardized procedures that include focusing simultaneously on (a) spontaneous associations of traumatic images, thoughts, emotions and bodily sensations and (b) bilateral stimulation that is most commonly in the form of repeated eye movements."[2]

EMDR is included in several evidence-based guidelines for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), with varying levels of recommendation and evidence (very low to moderate per WHO stress guidelines).[3][2][4] As of 2020, the American Psychological Association lists EMDR as an evidence-based treatment for PTSD[5] but stresses that "the available evidence can be interpreted in several ways" and notes there is debate about the precise mechanism by which EMDR appears to relieve PTSD symptoms with some evidence EMDR may simply be a variety of exposure therapy.[6] Even though EMDR is effective, critics call it a pseudoscience because only the desensitization component has scientific support.

Contents

  • 1History
  • 2Delivery
  • 3Medical uses
    • 3.1Trauma and PTSD
      • 3.1.1Evidence of effectiveness
      • 3.1.2Position statements
      • 3.1.3Children
    • 3.2Other conditions
      • 3.2.1Depression
      • 3.2.2Anxiety related disorders
      • 3.2.3Dissociative identity disorder
      • 3.2.4Other conditions
      • 3.2.5Reviews
  • 4Mechanism
    • 4.1Possible mechanisms
      • 4.1.1Incomplete processing of experiences in trauma
      • 4.1.2EMDR allowing correct processing of memories
      • 4.1.3Proposed mechanisms by which EMDR achieves efficacy
    • 4.2Bilateral stimulation, including eye movement
  • 5Criticisms
    • 5.1Effectiveness and theoretical basis
    • 5.2Pseudoscience
    • 5.3Excessive training
  • 6References

History[edit]

Exposure therapy began in the 1950s, when South African psychologists and psychiatrists used it to reduce pathological fears.[7] They then brought their methods to England in the Maudsley Hospital training program.[7] Since the 1950s several sorts of exposure therapy have been developed, including systematic desensitization, flooding, implosive therapy, prolonged exposure therapy, in vivo exposure therapy, and imaginal exposure therapy.[7]

EMDR therapy was first developed by American psychologist Francine Shapiro after noticing, in 1987,[8] that eye movements appeared to decrease the negative emotion associated with her own distressing memories.[9][10][11] She then conducted a scientific study with trauma victims in 1988 and the research was published in the Journal of Traumatic Stress in 1989.[12] Her hypothesis was that when a traumatic or distressing experience occurs, it may overwhelm normal coping mechanisms, with the memory and associated stimuli being inadequately processed and stored in an isolated memory network.[13]

Shapiro noted that, when she was experiencing a disturbing thought, her eyes were involuntarily moving rapidly. She further noted that her anxiety was reduced when she brought her eye movements under voluntary control while thinking a traumatic thought.[14] Shapiro developed EMDR therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). She speculated that traumatic events "upset the excitatory/inhibitory balance in the brain, causing a pathological change in the neural elements".[14]

Delivery[edit]

EMDR consists of eight essential phases. The first phase includes history taking and treatment planning. The second phase includes preparation. The third phase is an assessment phase followed by the fourth phase of desensitisation. Phases 5 & 6 involve installing positive cognitions and body scan. The last phase is the reevaluation phase [2]EMDR is typically undertaken in a series of sessions with a trained therapist.[15]The number of sessions can vary depending on the progress made. A typical EMDR therapy session lasts from 60-90 minutes.[16]

Medical uses[edit]

Trauma and PTSD[edit]

The person being treated is asked to recall an image, phrase and emotions which represents a level of distress related to a trigger while generating one of several types of bilateral sensory input, such as side-to-side eye movements or hand tapping.[1][3] The 2013 World Health Organization practice guideline says that "Like cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) with a trauma focus, EMDR aims to reduce subjective distress and strengthen adaptive beliefs related to the traumatic event. Unlike CBT with a trauma focus, EMDR does not involve (a) detailed descriptions of the event, (b) direct challenging of beliefs, (c) extended exposure, or (d) homework."[2]

Evidence of effectiveness[edit]

While multiple meta-analyses have found EMDR to be as effective as trauma focused cognitive behavioral therapy for the treatment of PTSD, these findings have been regarded as tentative given the low numbers in the studies, high risk rates of researcher bias, and high dropout rates.[17][18][19]

  • A 2020 systematic review and meta-analysis was the "first systematic review of randomized trials examining the effects of EMDR for any mental health problem." The authors raised concerns about bias in previous studies, concluding:

Despite these limitations, the results of this meta-analysis aid us in concluding that EMDR may be effective in the treatment of PTSD in the short term and possibly have comparable effects as other treatments. However, the quality of studies is too low to draw definite conclusions. Further, it is evident that the long-term effects of EMDR are unclear and that there is certainly not enough evidence to advise its use in patients with mental health problems other than PTSD.[19]

  • A 2013 systematic review examined 15 clinical trials of EMDR with and without the eye movements, finding that the effect size was larger when eye movements were used.[20][17] Again, interpretation of this meta-analysis was tentative. Lee and Cuijpers (2013) stated that "the quality of included studies was not optimal. This may have distorted the outcomes of the studies and our meta-analysis. Apart from ensuring adequate checks on treatment quality, there were other serious methodological problems with the studies in the therapy context."[17] A meta-analysis in 2020, could not confirm the results of this 2013 study, due to "differences in inclusion criteria."[19]
  • A Cochrane systematic review comparing EMDR with other psychotherapies in the treatment of Chronic PTSD, found EMDR to be just as effective as Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavior Therapy (TF-CBT) and more effective than the other non-TF-CBT psychotherapies.[18][21] Caution was urged interpreting the results due to low numbers in included studies, risk of researcher bias, high drop out rates, and overall "very low" quality of evidence for the comparisons with other psychotherapies.[18]
  • A 2010 meta-analysis concluded that all "bona fide" treatments were equally effective, but there was some debate regarding the study's selection of which treatments were "bona fide".[22]
  • A 2009 review of rape treatment outcomes concluded that EMDR had some efficacy.[23] Another 2009 review concluded EMDR to be of similar efficacy to other exposure therapies and more effective than SSRIs, problem-centered therapy, or "treatment as usual".[24]
  • Two meta-analyses in 2006 found EMDR to be at least equivalent in effect size to specific exposure therapies.[17][25]
  • A 2005 and a 2006 meta-analysis each suggested that traditional exposure therapy and EMDR have equivalent effects immediately after treatment and at follow-up.[26][25]
  • A 2002 meta-analysis concluded that EMDR is not as effective, or as long lasting, as traditional exposure therapy.[27]
  • A 1998 meta-analysis found that EMDR was as effective as exposure therapy and SSRIs.[28]

Some smaller studies have produced positive results.[29]

Position statements[edit]

The 2009 International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies practice guidelines categorized EMDR as an evidence-based level A treatment for PTSD in adults.[30] Other guidelines recommending EMDR therapy – as well as CBT and exposure therapy – for treating trauma have included NICE starting in 2005,[31][4][32] Australian Centre for Posttraumatic Mental Health in 2007,[33] the Dutch National Steering Committee Guidelines Mental Health and Care in 2003,[34] the American Psychiatric Association in 2004,[35] the Departments of Veterans Affairs and Defense in 2010,[36] SAMHSA in 2011,[37] the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies in 2009,[38] and the World Health Organization in 2013 (only for PTSD, not for acute stress treatment).[2] The American Psychological Association "conditionally recommends" EMDR for the treatment of PTSD.[39]

Children[edit]

EMDR is included in a 2009 practice guideline for helping children who have experienced trauma.[40] EMDR is often cited as a component in the treatment of complex post-traumatic stress disorder.[41][42]

A 2017 meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials in children and adolescents with PTSD found that EMDR was at least as efficacious as cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), and superior to waitlist or placebo.[43]

Other conditions[edit]

Several small studies have indicated EMDR efficacy for other mental health conditions,[44] but more research is needed.[19]

Depression[edit]

Studies have indicated EMDR effectiveness in depression.[45][46] A 2019 review found that "Although the selected studies are few and with different methodological critical issues, the findings reported by the different authors suggest in a preliminary way that EMDR can be a useful treatment for depression."[47]

Anxiety related disorders[edit]

Small studies have found EMDR to be effective with GAD,[48] OCD,[44] other anxiety disorders,[49] and distress due to body image issues.[50]

Dissociative identity disorder[edit]

EMDR has been found to cause strong effects on DID patients, causing recommendation for adjusted use.[51][52]

Other conditions[edit]

EMDR may have application for psychosis when co-morbid with trauma,[44] Other studies have investigated EMDR therapy’s efficacy with borderline personality disorder,[53] and somatic disorders such as phantom limb pain.[54][55] EMDR has also been found to improve stress management symptoms.[56] EMDR has been found to reduce suicide ideation,[57] and help low self-esteem.[58] Other studies focus on effectiveness in substance craving[59] and pain management.[60] EMDR may help people with autism who suffer from exposure to distressing events.[61]

Reviews[edit]

  • A 2021 major review that included RCT's, group studies and case studies that specifically did not focus on the use of EMDR in the treatment of trauma or PTSD, found that EMDR may be beneficial in at least fourteen conditions that included: addictions, somatoform disorders, sexual dysfunction, eating disorders, disorders of adult personality, mood disorders, reaction to severe stress, anxiety disorders, performance anxiety, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD), pain, neurodegenerative disorders, mental disorders of childhood and adolescence, and sleep. The authors concluded that "Results shed light on several aspects that support the interest of its practice in mental health care. Despite the clear need for more rigorous research, our review also demonstrated that EMDR has translational interests. The fact that this therapy could be helpful in non-pathological situations (e.g., performance) broadens the scope of its benefits and invites for interdisciplinary research. Also, because of its potential advantages, we believe that EMDR could be considered in major crisis situations, such as to alleviate the imminent and disproportionate mental health sequelae of a world pandemic(...)" .[62]
  • A 2020 systematic review and meta-analysis was the "first systematic review of randomized trials examining the effects of EMDR for any mental health problem." The authors concluded: "it is evident that the long-term effects of EMDR are unclear, and... there is certainly not enough evidence to advise its use in patients with mental health problems other than PTSD."[19]
  • A 2013 overall literature review covered research up to that time.[63][specify]

Mechanism[edit]

Possible mechanisms[edit]

Incomplete processing of experiences in trauma[edit]

Many proposals of EMDR efficacy share an assumption that, as Shapiro posited, when a traumatic or very negative event occurs, information processing of the experience in memory may be incomplete. The trauma causes a disruption of normal adaptive information processing, which results in unprocessed information being dysfunctionally held in memory networks.[64] According to the 2013 World Health Organization practice guideline: "This therapy [EMDR] is based on the idea that negative thoughts, feelings and behaviours are the result of unprocessed memories."[2]

EMDR allowing correct processing of memories[edit]

EMDR is posited to help in the correct processing of the components of the contributing distressing memories.[65][66] EMDR may allow the client to access and reprocess negative memories (leading to decreased psychological arousal associated with the memory).[67] This is sometimes known as the Adaptive Information Processing (AIP) model.[68][69][unreliable medical source]

Proposed mechanisms by which EMDR achieves efficacy[edit]

The mechanism by which EMDR achieves efficacy is unknown, with no definitive finding. Several possible mechanisms have been posited;

  • EMDR impacts working memory.[70] By having the patient perform a bilateral stimulation task while retrieving memories of trauma, the amount of information they can retrieve about the trauma is limited, and thus the resulting negative emotions are less intense.[71] This is seen by some as causing a distancing effect which enables the client to 'stand back' from the trauma. The client is enabled to re-evaluate the trauma and their understanding of it, and thus process it correctly, because they can re-experience it whilst not feeling overwhelmed by it.[44]
  • EMDR enables ‘dual attention’ (recalling the trauma whilst keeping ‘one foot in the present’ assisted by bilateral stimulation). This allows the brain to access the dysfunctionally stored experience and stimulate the innate processing system, allowing it to transform the information to an adaptive resolution.[44]
  • Connectivity among several brain regions has been found to be changed by bilateral eye movement and by EMDR. In one 15 person study, EMDR was found to lead to reduced connectivity between some brain areas.[72] These changes may cause EMDRs efficacy.[73][74]
  • EMDR efficacy has been linked to the Zeigarnik effect (i.e. better memory for interrupted rather than completed tasks).[75]
  • Horizontal eye movement triggers an evolutionary 'orienting response' in the brain, used in scanning the environment for threats and opportunities.[76]
  • EMDR gives an effect similar to the effects of sleep,[77] and posit that traumatic experiences are processed during sleep.
  • Trauma can be overcome or mastered, and EMDR facilitates a form of mindfulness or other form of mastery over the trauma.[44]

A 2013 meta-analysis focused on two mechanisms: (1) taxing working memory and (2) orienting response/REM sleep.[17]

It may be that several mechanisms are at work in EMDR.[44]

Bilateral stimulation, including eye movement[edit]

Bilateral stimulation is a generalization of the left and right repetitive eye movement technique first used by Shapiro. Alternative stimuli include auditory stimuli that alternate between left and right speakers or headphones, and physical stimuli such as tapping of the therapist's hands.[78] Research has attempted to correlate other types of rhythmic side-to-side stimuli, such as sound and touch, with mood, memory and cerebral hemispheric interaction.

Research results and opinions have been mixed on the effectiveness and importance of the technique;

  • 2020 research showed that bilateral alternating stimulation caused a significant increase in connectivity between several areas of the brain, including the two superior temporal gyri, the precuneus, the middle frontal gyrus and a set of structures involved in multisensory integration, executive control, emotional processing, salience and memory.[79]
  • A 2020 review questioned the consistency and generalizability of the technique.[80]
  • A 2013 meta-study found the effect size of eye movement was large and significant, with the strongest effect size difference being for vividness measures.[17][44]
  • A 2012 review found that the evidence provided support for the contention that eye movements are essential to this therapy and that a theoretical rationale exists for their use.[76]
  • A 2002 review reported that the eye movement is irrelevant, and that the effectiveness of EMDR was solely due to its having properties similar to CBT, such as desensitization and exposure.[81]
  • A 2001 meta-analysis suggested that EMDR with the eye movements was no more efficacious than EMDR without the eye movements (Davidson & Parker, 2001).[20][82][83]
  • A 2000 review found that the eye movements did not play a central role, and that the mechanisms of eye movements were speculative.[84]
  • A small 1996 study found that the eye movements employed in EMDR did not add to its effectiveness.[85]

Francine Shapiro noticed that eye movements appeared to decrease the negative emotion associated with her own distressing memories.[86][87][88] Bilateral stimulation seems to cause dissipation of emotions.[89][90]

Criticisms[edit]

EMDR has historically been controversial within the psychological community.[91][92]

Effectiveness and theoretical basis[edit]

Concerns have included questions about its effectiveness and the importance of the eye movement component of EMDR. In 2012, Hal Arkowitz, and Scott Lilienfeld summed up the state of the research at the time, saying that while EMDR is better than no treatment and probably better than merely talking to a supportive listener,

Yet not a shred of good evidence exists that EMDR is superior to exposure-based treatments that behavior and cognitive-behavior therapists have been administering routinely for decades. Paraphrasing British writer and critic Samuel Johnson, Harvard University psychologist Richard McNally nicely summed up the case for EMDR: "What is effective in EMDR is not new, and what is new is not effective."[93]

Client perceptions of effectiveness are also mixed.[94]

Pseudoscience[edit]

Skeptics of the therapy argued that EMDR is a pseudoscience, because the underlying theory is unfalsifiable. Also, the results of the therapy are non-specific, especially if the eye movement component is irrelevant to the results. What remains is a broadly therapeutic interaction and deceptive marketing.[84][27] According to Yale neurologist and skeptic Steven Novella:

[T]he false specificity of these treatments is a massive clinical distraction. Time and effort are wasted clinically in studying, perfecting, and using these methods, rather than focusing on the components of the interaction that actually work.[95]

Excessive training[edit]

Shapiro has been criticized for repeatedly increasing the length and expense of training and certification, allegedly in response to the results of controlled trials that cast doubt on EMDR's efficacy.[96][84] This included requiring the completion of an EMDR training program in order to be qualified to administer EMDR properly, after researchers using the initial written instructions found no difference between no-eye-movement control groups and EMDR-as-written experimental groups. Further changes in training requirements and/or the definition of EMDR included requiring level II training when researchers with level I training still found no difference between eye-movement experimental groups and no-eye-movement controls and deeming "alternate forms of bilateral stimulation" (such as finger-tapping) as variants of EMDR by the time a study found no difference between EMDR and a finger-tapping control group.[96] Such changes in definition and training for EMDR have been described as "ad hoc moves [made] when confronted by embarrassing data".[97]

References[edit]

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  47. ^ Malandrone, Francesca; Carletto, Sara; Hase, Michael; Hofmann, Arne; Ostacoli, Luca (1 November 2019). "A Brief Narrative Summary of Randomized Controlled Trials Investigating EMDR Treatment of Patients With Depression". Journal of EMDR Practice and Research. 13 (4): 302–306. doi:10.1891/1933-3196.13.4.302. S2CID 212874892.
  48. ^ Gauvreau, Philippe; Bouchard, Stéphane (March 2008). "Preliminary Evidence for the Efficacy of EMDR in Treating Generalized Anxiety Disorder". Journal of EMDR Practice and Research. 2 (1): 26–40. doi:10.1891/1933-3196.2.1.26. S2CID 145460514.
  49. ^ Faretta, Elisa; Farra, Mariella Dal (1 November 2019). "Efficacy of EMDR Therapy for Anxiety Disorders". Journal of EMDR Practice and Research. 13 (4): 325–332. doi:10.1891/1933-3196.13.4.325. S2CID 213886603.
  50. ^ Markus, Wiebren; de Weert – van Oene, Gerdien H.; Woud, Marcella L.; Becker, Eni S.; DeJong, Cornelis A. J. (1 September 2016). "Are addiction-related memories malleable by working memory competition? Transient effects on memory vividness and nicotine craving in a randomized lab experiment". Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. 52: 83–91. doi:10.1016/j.jbtep.2016.03.007. PMID 27038191.
  51. ^ Recommended Guidelines: A General Guide to EMDR’s Use in the Dissociative Disorders (authored by the EMDR Dissociative Disorders Task Force and published in Shapiro, 1995, 2001)
  52. ^ p159, Guidelines for Treating Dissociative Identity Disorder in Adults, Third Revision, International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation Available online: 03 Mar 2011
  53. ^ Brown, Susan; Shapiro, Francine (October 2006). "EMDR in the Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder". Clinical Case Studies. 5 (5): 403–420. doi:10.1177/1534650104271773. S2CID 143299210.
  54. ^ De Roos C, Veenstra AC, De Jongh A, den Hollander-Gijsman ME, van der Wee NJ, Zitman FG, van Rood YR (2010). "Treatment of chronic phantom limb pain using a trauma-focused psychological approach". Pain Research & Management. 15 (2): 65–71. doi:10.1155/2010/981634. PMC 2886995. PMID 20458374.
  55. ^ Wilensky M (2006). "Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) as a treatment for phantom limb pain"(PDF). Journal of Brief Therapy. 5 (1): 31–44.
  56. ^ Wilson, Sandra A.; Tinker, Robert H.; Becker, Lee A.; Logan, Carol R. (2001). International Journal of Stress Management. 8(3): 179–200. doi:10.1023/A:1011366408693. S2CID 142177247. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  57. ^ Fereidouni, Zhila; Behnammoghadam, Mohammad; Jahanfar, Abdolhadi; Dehghan, Azizallah (August 2019). "The Effect of Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) on the severity of suicidal thoughts in patients with major depressive disorder: a randomized controlled trial". Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment. 15: 2459–2466. doi:10.2147/NDT.S210757. PMC 6717728. PMID 31695382.
  58. ^ Griffioen, Brecht T.; van der Vegt, Anna A.; de Groot, Izaäk W.; de Jongh, Ad (8 November 2017). "The Effect of EMDR and CBT on Low Self-esteem in a General Psychiatric Population: A Randomized Controlled Trial". Frontiers in Psychology. 8: 1910. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01910. PMC 5682328. PMID 29167649.
  59. ^ Markus, Wiebren; de Weert – van Oene, Gerdien H.; Woud, Marcella L.; Becker, Eni S.; DeJong, Cornelis A. J. (1 September 2016). "Are addiction-related memories malleable by working memory competition? Transient effects on memory vividness and nicotine craving in a randomized lab experiment". Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. 52: 83–91. doi:10.1016/j.jbtep.2016.03.007. PMID 27038191.
  60. ^ Tesarz, Jonas; Wicking, Manon; Bernardy, Kathrin; Seidler, Günter H. (1 November 2019). "EMDR Therapy's Efficacy in the Treatment of Pain". Journal of EMDR Practice and Research. 13 (4): 337–344. doi:10.1891/1933-3196.13.4.337. S2CID 213240106.
  61. ^ Lobregt-van Buuren, Ella; Sizoo, Bram; Mevissen, Liesbeth; de Jongh, Ad (25 July 2018). "Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) Therapy as a Feasible and Potential Effective Treatment for Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and a History of Adverse Events". Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders. 49 (1): 151–164. doi:10.1007/s10803-018-3687-6. PMID 30047096. S2CID 51718529.
  62. ^ Scelles, Charles; Bulnes, Luis Carlo. (20 September 2021). "EMDR as a treatment option for conditions other than PTSD: A Systematic Review". Frontiers in Psychology. 12: 644369. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2021.644369. CC-BY icon.svg Text was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  63. ^ Valiente-Gómez, Alicia; Moreno-Alcázar, Ana; Treen, Devi; Cedrón, Carlos; Colom, Francesc; Pérez, Víctor; Amann, Benedikt L. (26 September 2017). "EMDR beyond PTSD: A Systematic Literature Review". Frontiers in Psychology. 8: 1668. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01668. PMC 5623122. PMID 29018388.
  64. ^ Solomon, Roger M.; Shapiro, Francine (November 2008). "EMDR and the Adaptive Information Processing ModelPotential Mechanisms of Change". Journal of EMDR Practice and Research. 2 (4): 315–325. doi:10.1891/1933-3196.2.4.315. S2CID 7109228.
  65. ^ "Theory - EMDR Institute - EYE MOVEMENT DESENSITIZATION AND REPROCESSING THERAPY".
  66. ^ "Mel B is watching flashing lights to help with trauma. But does EMDR therapy really work?". 10 September 2018.
  67. ^ Boccia, Maddalena; Piccardi, Laura; Cordellieri, Pierluigi; Guariglia, Cecilia; Giannini, Anna Maria (21 April 2015). "EMDR therapy for PTSD after motor vehicle accidents: meta-analytic evidence for specific treatment". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 9: 213. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2015.00213. PMC 4404810. PMID 25954183.
  68. ^ Shapiro, Francine (October 2007). "EMDR, Adaptive Information Processing, and Case Conceptualization". Journal of EMDR Practice and Research. 1 (2): 68–87. doi:10.1891/1933-3196.1.2.68. S2CID 145457423.
  69. ^ Hase M, Balmaceda UM, Ostacoli L, Liebermann P, Hofmann A (2017-09-21). "The AIP Model of EMDR Therapy and Pathogenic Memories". Frontiers in Psychology. 8: 1578. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01578. PMC 5613256. PMID 28983265.
  70. ^ van den Hout, Marcel A.; Engelhard, Iris M.; Beetsma, Daniel; Slofstra, Christien; Hornsveld, Hellen; Houtveen, Jan; Leer, Arne (1 December 2011). "EMDR and mindfulness. Eye movements and attentional breathing tax working memory and reduce vividness and emotionality of aversive ideation". Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. 42 (4): 423–431. doi:10.1016/j.jbtep.2011.03.004. PMID 21570931.
  71. ^ Chen, Ling; Zhang, Guiqing; Hu, Min; Liang, Xia (June 2015). "Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing Versus Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Adult Posttraumatic Stress Disorder". The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 203 (6): 443–451. doi:10.1097/NMD.0000000000000306. PMID 25974059. S2CID 34850645.
  72. ^ Verger, A.; Rousseau, P. F.; Malbos, E.; Chawki, M. B.; Nicolas, F.; Lançon, C.; Khalfa, S.; Guedj, E. (2020). "Involvement of the cerebellum in EMDR efficiency: a metabolic connectivity PET study in PTSD". European Journal of Psychotraumatology. 11(1). doi:10.1080/20008198.2020.1767986. PMC 7473141. PMID 33029312.
  73. ^ Rousseau, Pierre-François; Boukezzi, Sarah; Garcia, René; Chaminade, Thierry; Khalfa, Stéphanie (August 2020). "Cracking the EMDR code: Recruitment of sensory, memory and emotional networks during bilateral alternating auditory stimulation". Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry. 54 (8): 818–831. doi:10.1177/0004867420913623. PMID 32271126. S2CID 215598663.
  74. ^ Verger, A.; Rousseau, P. F.; Malbos, E.; Chawki, M. B.; Nicolas, F.; Lançon, C.; Khalfa, S.; Guedj, E. (2020-12-31). "Involvement of the cerebellum in EMDR efficiency: a metabolic connectivity PET study in PTSD". European Journal of Psychotraumatology. 11 (1): 1767986. doi:10.1080/20008198.2020.1767986. PMC 7473141. PMID 33029312.
  75. ^ Fox, Jeremy G. (2020-08-01). "Recovery, Interrupted: The Zeigarnik Effect in EMDR Therapy and the Adaptive Information Processing Model". Journal of EMDR Practice and Research. 14 (3): 175–185. doi:10.1891/EMDR-D-20-00011. S2CID 221190511.
  76. ^ Jump up to:a b Jeffries, Fiona W.; Davis, Paul (29 October 2012). "What is the Role of Eye Movements in Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)? A Review". Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy. 41 (3): 290–300. doi:10.1017/S1352465812000793. PMID 23102050. S2CID 33309479.
  77. ^ A slowing of brain waves has been seen during bilateral stimulation (eye movement), somewhat similar to what occurs during sleep.Pagani, Marco; Amann, Benedikt L.; Landin-Romero, Ramon; Carletto, Sara (7 November 2017). "Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing and Slow Wave Sleep: A Putative Mechanism of Action". Frontiers in Psychology. 8: 1935. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01935. PMC 5681964. PMID 29163309.[unreliable medical source] A possibly related finding is that brain waves during EMDR treatment shows changes in brain activity, specifically the limbic system showed its highest level of activity prior to commencing EMDR treatment.Pagani M, Di Lorenzo G, Verardo AR, Nicolais G, Monaco L, Lauretti G, Russo R, Niolu C, Ammaniti M, Fernandez I, Siracusano A (2012-09-26). "Neurobiological correlates of EMDR monitoring – an EEG study". PLOS ONE. 7 (9): e45753. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...745753P. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0045753. PMC 3458957. PMID 23049852.[unreliable medical source]
  78. ^ Rodenburg, Roos; Benjamin, Anja; de Roos, Carlijn; Meijer, Ann Marie; Stams, Geert Jan (November 2009). "Efficacy of EMDR in children: A meta-analysis". Clinical Psychology Review. 29 (7): 599–606. doi:10.1016/j.cpr.2009.06.008. PMID 19616353.
  79. ^ Rousseau, Pierre-François; Boukezzi, Sarah; Garcia, René; Chaminade, Thierry; Khalfa, Stéphanie (August 2020). "Cracking the EMDR code: Recruitment of sensory, memory and emotional networks during bilateral alternating auditory stimulation". Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry. 54 (8): 818–831. doi:10.1177/0004867420913623. PMID 32271126. S2CID 215598663.
  80. ^ Roberts, Brady R. T.; Fernandes, Myra A.; MacLeod, Colin M.; Manelis, Anna (27 January 2020). "Re-evaluating whether bilateral eye movements influence memory retrieval". PLOS ONE. 15 (1): e0227790. Bibcode:2020PLoSO..1527790R. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0227790. PMC 6984731. PMID 31986171. No evidence of a SIRE effect was found: Bayesian statistical analyses demonstrated significant evidence for a null effect. Taken together, these experiments suggest that the SIRE effect is inconsistent. The current experiments call into question the generalizability of the SIRE effect and suggest that its presence is very sensitive to experimental design. Future work should further assess the robustness of the effect before exploring related theories or underlying mechanisms.
  81. ^ Salkovskis P (February 2002). "Review: eye movement desensitization and reprocessing is not better than exposure therapies for anxiety or trauma". Evidence-Based Mental Health. 5 (1): 13. doi:10.1136/ebmh.5.1.13. PMID 11915816.
  82. ^ Davidson, Paul R.; Parker, Kevin C. H. (2001). "Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR): A meta-analysis". Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. 69 (2): 305–316. doi:10.1037//0022-006x.69.2.305. PMID 11393607. S2CID 8526886.
  83. ^ McNally, Richard J (November 1999). "On Eye Movements and Animal Magnetism". Journal of Anxiety Disorders. 13 (6): 617–620. doi:10.1016/S0887-6185(99)00020-1.
  84. ^ Jump up to:a b c Herbert JD, Lilienfeld SO, Lohr JM, Montgomery RW, O'Donohue WT, Rosen GM, Tolin DF (November 2000). "Science and pseudoscience in the development of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing: implications for clinical psychology". Clinical Psychology Review. 20 (8): 945–71. doi:10.1016/s0272-7358(99)00017-3. PMID 11098395.
  85. ^ Pitman, Roger K; Orr, Scott P; Altman, Bruce; Longpre, Ronald E; Poiré, Roger E; Macklin, Michael L (November 1996). "Emotional processing during eye movement desensitization and reprocessing therapy of vietnam veterans with chronic posttraumatic stress disorder". Comprehensive Psychiatry. 37 (6): 419–429. doi:10.1016/s0010-440x(96)90025-5. PMID 8932966.
  86. ^ Shapiro, F. (1989). Efficacy of the eye movement desensitization procedure in the treatment of traumatic memories. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 2, 199-223.
  87. ^ Shapiro, F. & Forrest, M. (1997). EMDR The Breakthrough Therapy for Overcoming Anxiety, Stress and Trauma. New York: Basic Books
  88. ^ "History of EMDR - EMDR Institute - EYE MOVEMENT DESENSITIZATION AND REPROCESSING THERAPY".
  89. ^ Armstrong, Michael S; Vaughan, Kevin (March 1996). "An orienting response model of eye movement desensitization". Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. 27 (1): 21–32. doi:10.1016/0005-7916(95)00056-9. PMID 8814518.
  90. ^ Shapiro; "FS: It’s been demonstrated in about 16 randomized controlled trials now that the eye movement also rapidly causes the vividness to shift and emotion to decrease." https://www.psychotherapy.net/interview/francine-shapiro-emdr#section-eye-movement
  91. ^ McNally, Richard J. (1999). "Research on eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) as a treatment for PTSD". PTSD Research Quarterly. 10 (1): 1–7.
  92. ^ Sikes, Charlotte; Sikes, Victoria (2003). "EMDR: Why the controversy?". Traumatology. 9 (3): 169–182. doi:10.1177/153476560300900304.
  93. ^ Arkowitz, Hal; Lilienfeld, Scott (August 1, 2012). "EMDR: Taking a Closer Look Can moving your eyes back and forth help to ease anxiety?". Scientific American. Archived from the original on March 6, 2014. Retrieved 12 August 2020. So, now to the bottom line: EMDR ameliorates symptoms of traumatic anxiety better than doing nothing and probably better than talking to a supportive listener. Yet not a shred of good evidence exists that EMDR is superior to exposure-based treatments that behavior and cognitive-behavior therapists have been administering routinely for decades. Paraphrasing British writer and critic Samuel Johnson, Harvard University psychologist Richard McNally nicely summed up the case for EMDR: 'What is effective in EMDR is not new, and what is new is not effective.'
  94. ^ Shipley, Gemma; Wilde, Sarah; Hudson, Mark (April 2021). "What do clients say about their experiences of Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing therapy? A systematic review of the literature". European Journal of Trauma & Dissociation: 100226. doi:10.1016/j.ejtd.2021.100226. S2CID 235544895.
  95. ^ Novella, Steven (March 30, 2011). "EMDR and Acupuncture – Selling Non-specific Effects". Science Based Medicine. Society for SBM. Retrieved 12 July 2020.
  96. ^ Jump up to:a b Rosen, Gerald M; Mcnally, Richard J; Lilienfeld, Scott O (1999). "Eye Movement Magic: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing". Skeptic. 7 (4).
  97. ^ McNally, R. J. (2003). "The demise of pseudoscience". The Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice. 2 (2): 97–101.


EMDR [일어한역]

위키 백과 사전 「위키 페디아 (Wikipedia)」
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EMDR (, Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing)은 안구 운동에 의한 탈 감작과 재생 법 의 약어로 [1] , 프랑 장면 샤피로 ( 영어 버전 ) 에 의해 개발 된 심리 . 비교적 새로운 치료 기법이며, 특히 외상 후 스트레스 장애 (PTSD)에 대한 유효성 알려져있다 [2] . 또한 발안 원래는 EMD (Eye Movement Desensitization)라고하며, 1990 년 에 EMDR로 명명되었다.

목차

  • 1의료 적응
  • 2기법
  • 3관련 항목
  • 4출처
  • 5자조 문학
  • 6외부 링크

의료 적응 [ 편집 ]

PTSD를 시작으로 공황 장애 , 공포증 , 강박 장애 등의 적용도보고 된 심리 치료이다 [3] .

개발 초기 1989 년에도 EMD (Eye Movement Desensitization)의 무작위 비교 시험 에 의한 효과를보고 [4] 이 이루어 EMDR되어 [3] 그 후에도 여러 가지 EMDR의 효과에 대한 연구가 반복 이루어왔다. 국제 트라우마 틱 스트레스 학회는 2000 년 에 EMDR 사용 외상 치료로 인정했다.

2000 년대에는 영국, 호주 등의 PTSD의 진료 지침에서 EMDR은 외상 에 초점 된 인지 행동 치료 (CBT)와 함께 근거가있는 치료법으로 권장되었다 [5] . 2011 년 영국 국립 의료 기술 평가기구 (NICE)의 임상 가이드 라인 에서는 PSTD 치료에 CBT 및 EMDR을 권장하고있다 [2] .

2018 년, PTSD 환자에 대한 CBT와 EMDR의 효과를 비교 한 무작위 비교 시험 (RCT)의 메타 분석 논문 발표되고있다. 그 결과에 따르면 11 건의 RCT (n = 547)의 메타 분석에서 PTSD의 개선에서 EMDR은 CBT보다 우수했다 [SDM (95 % CI) = -0.43 (-0.73 --- 0.12) , p = 0.006]. 한편, 3 개월의 후속으로 4 개의 RCT (n = 186)의 메타 분석에서는 양자에 통계적으로 유의 한 차이는 보이지 않았다 [SDM (95 % CI) = -0.21 (-0.50- 0.08), p = 0.15]. EMDR은 불안 증상의 완화에서 CBT보다 우수했다 [SDM (95 % CI) = -0.71 (-1.21 --- 0.21), p = 0.005]. 불행히도 우울증 증상의 완화에서 CBT와 EMDR의 차이는 없었다 [SDM (95 % CI) = -0.21 (-0.44-0.02), p = 0.08]. [6] .

기법 [ 편집 ]

좌우로 흔들릴 치료사의 손가락을 눈으로 쫓으면서 과거의 충격적인 경험을 회상하는 절차를 이용한다. 정규의 방법은 평가 및 일지 기록 등 8 단계로 구성되어 있으며, 안구 운동 개입이 이루어지는 그 중 제 4-6 단계이다. 또한, 상기 된 기억뿐만 아니라 신체 감각이나 자기 부정적인지 등도 안구 운동에 의한 탈 감작의 대상이된다.

최근에는 손가락을 좌우 방향으로 흔들어 추종시키는 데 반드시 고집하지 않고, 의뢰인의 특성 ( 시각 장애인 , ADHD 아동 등)에 맞게 연구도 제안되고있다. 아이의 트라우마에 대한 심리 치료 인 나비 포옹도 EMDR의 변법이다.

치료 효과가生起하는 메커니즘에 대해서는 여러 설이 있고, 또한 해명의 개발이다. 외상 경험에 대한 뇌의 처리 과정이 촉진되는라고도, REM 수면 이나 정위 반사 등 생리적 과정과의 관련도 논의되고있다. 마인드 풀 네스 이나 리 프레이밍 등 인지 행동 치료 적인 기법, 행동 치료 의 노출, 정신 분석 의 자유 연상 등 유사한 요소도 관련되어 있다고 여겨져왔다 [7] .

2018 년의 조사에서는 그 메커니즘을 탐구 한 연구가 32이고, 그 중에서도 27 연구가 워킹 메모리 를 검토하고있다 [3] .

샤피로는 안구 운동을 통제하기위한 괴로운 기억에 대한 불안을 감소시키는 것을 공원을 걷고있을 때 우연히 발견했다 [3] .

관련 항목 [ 편집 ]

  • 이치 ​​마사야
  • 신령 사냥 / GHOST HOUND - WOWOW 에서 방송 된 텔레비전 애니메이션. 제 2 화에 EMDR이 시행되는 장면이있다.

출처 [ 편집 ]

  1. ^ 이치 마사야 "안구 운동에 의한 탈 감작과 재 처리법 (EMDR) 급성 스트레스 장애 (ASD)를 보여 한신 아와 지 대지진 이재민에 적용" "생체 연구」제 24 권 0 1997 년 38 -44 쪽, doi : 10.20595 / jjbf.24.0_38 .
  2. ^ a b 영국 국립 의료 기술 평가기구 (2011-05).CG123 Common mental health disorders : Identification and pathways to care(Report) .
  3. ^ a b c d Landin-Romero, Ramon; Moreno-Alcazar, Ana; Pagani, Marco; Amann, Benedikt L. (2018). "How Does Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing Therapy Work ? A Systematic Review on Suggested Mechanisms of Action" . Frontiers in Psychology 9 . doi : 10.3389 / fpsyg.2018.01395 . PMC  6106867 . PMID  30166975 .
  4. ^ Shapiro, Francine (1989). "Efficacy of the eye movement desensitization procedure in the treatment of traumatic memories " Journal of Traumatic Stress 2 (2) : 199-223. doi : 10.1002 / jts.2490020207 .
  5. ^ 아스카 우물 소망 " 증거 기반 PTSD 치료 ( PDF )」 「정신 신經學雜誌」제 110 권 제 3 호, 2008 년 3 월 25 일, 244-249 쪽.
  6. ^ Khan, Ali M; Dar, Sabrina; Ahmed, Rizwan; Bachu, Ramya; Adnan, Mahwish; Kotapati, Vijaya Padma (2018). "Cognitive Behavioral Therapy versus Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing in Patients with Post -traumatic Stress Disorder : Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Randomized Clinical Trials " . Cureus . doi : 10.7759 / cureus.3250 . PMC  6217870 . PMID 30416901 . 
  7. ^ 샤피로 F. "EMDR 외상 기억을 처리하는 심리 치료」, 이치 마사야 감역, 두 병 사, 2004 년

자조 문헌 [ 편집 ]

  • 프랑 장면 샤피로의 이치 마사야 번역 "과거를 제대로 과거로 : EMDR 기법 트라우마에서 해방되는 방법"두 병 사, 2017 년

외부 링크 [ 편집 ]

  • EMDR 협회
  • 일본 EMDR 협회
======
https://youtu.be/L6UvKhLYf7w



Jamie Marich
13.3K subscribers

Watch master EMDR clinician and trainer Dr. Jamie Marich work with a single incident trauma case using Phases 1-8 of the standard EMDR therapy protocol. Excellent example of working with abreaction and a future template contained in this demonstration.

===

Chapters

These chapters are auto-generated

This is a demonstration that can help existing EMDR therapists in their learning. The demonstration can also be useful in preparing potential clients for what to expect.

0:17

Dr. Jamie Marich

0:33

Assisted by Madelyn

0:38

General orientation to idea of minimal detail required in EMDR therapy

2:06

Addressing goals in client history can help guide the larger process of EMDR therapy

4:00

Leading a mindful breath strategy in preparation can help with attuning to client

5:56

Begin orienting client to language of "what are you noticing now?" in Preparation

6:43

Testing distance

7:56

Testing speed

8:12

Offer horizontal verus diagonal option

8:22

Offering options regarding eyes closed or open

8:45

Beginning the Light Stream visualization exercise

9:00

Explaining how the resource can be used in EMDR therapy

12:40

Developing "stop sign" or other signal for pausing

13:51

Do a "test set" of faster stimulation BEFORE moving into Phase 3

14:49

Assessment

15:51

Negative Cognition

16:46

Validity of Cognition (Voc) Rating

17:28

Emotions

18:20

Subjective Units of Distress (SUDs) Rating

18:38

Body Sensations

18:58

Phase 4: Desensitization

19:23

Common point of clarification needed for many clients

20:47

"Are you okay to keep going?" may work as a safety check at first sign of abreaction

23:24

Can use the finger flicker technique if client shows difficulty tracking

24:42

"Keep noticing" used as a simple coaching statement during a longer set in an abreaction

26:03

Inviting a "pause" (not a stop) as a grounding break to reattune with breath

26:50

Responding to client's request for a pause/anchoring breath

28:34

Reinforcing idea of "going with" somatic responses as part of the reprocessing

42:24

Checking back in with target

43:07

Installation statement

47:47

Phase 6: Body Scan

49:43

Body Scan Statement

51:32

Moving to future template; can be done in same session if there is sufficient time

52:24

Working with intention is a way to stay in "present prong" if future seems overwhelming

54:19

Closure

56:40

Reevaluation

57:41
Posted by Sejin at October 22, 2021
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Labels: "Body keeps", C. S. Lewis, emdr, John O'Donohue, mindfulness, Steve Taylor, 트라우마

The Sword and the Shield: The Revolutionary Lives of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. - Friends Journal

The Sword and the Shield: The Revolutionary Lives of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. - Friends Journal:








The Sword and the Shield: The Revolutionary Lives of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr.


Reviewed by J. E. McNeil

October 1, 2021

By Peniel E. Joseph. Basic Books, 2020. 384 pages. $30/hardcover; $18.99/paperback; $19.99/eBook.
Buy from QuakerBooks

Living through a historic era is no guarantee of understanding it. In 2000, when I first read Martin Luther King Jr.’s April 4, 1967 “Beyond Vietnam” speech given at Riverside Church in New York City, I saw a side of King I had never seen before: radical, antiwar, and anti-capitalism.

Peniel E. Joseph’s dual biography of Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X throws light on the real men and their relationship, which shaped their legacies of continuing struggles after their martyrdom. The book opens at a critical point for the United States, the Civil Rights Movement, and for the lives of Martin and Malcolm. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was on the Senate floor, supported by Republicans and opposed by filibusters by Southern Democrats. Both Martin and Malcolm came to lobby for its passage. Martin was still on a crest from his “I Have a Dream” speech at the March on Washington the summer before and was afforded some insider privilege. Malcolm, recently having split from the Nation of Islam, which forbade political activities among its members, sought political leverage and stature as a leader of a large number of Blacks around the country and the world. Malcolm met Martin in the hall after Martin’s press conference—the only time they ever met.


The initial awkwardness of their meeting gave way to a rapport aided by a mutual understanding of black culture, their shared role as political leaders who doubled as preachers, and the rhythms of a common love for black humanity and yearning for black citizenship. Martin and Malcolm would never develop a personal friendship, but their political visions would grow closer together throughout their lives. . . . [T]heir relationship, even in that short meeting, defies the myths about their politics and activism.

The myth of Malcolm as the “evil twin” of Martin, the nonviolent advocate of racial equality with no economic component, endures. So does the myth of Malcolm as an “any means necessary” advocate for Black nationalism with no willingness to compromise.

Joseph tells their individual stories and their story together. They met by proxy over the years through Friend Bayard Rustin; Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) leader James Farmer; John Lewis, Julian Bond, and Stokely Carmichael of Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC); and others. Through these proxy debates and public pronouncements, “they were each building—both consciously and unconsciously—a public persona that served as a response to the other.” In the meanwhile, the predominately White press repeatedly ignored Martin’s more “radical pronouncements in [his] discussion . . . in favor of a more polished narrative of quietly determined moral leadership.” And they repeatedly framed Malcolm as only saying radical, militant things.

Showing a more complete story of each of these men, this account neither views Martin through rose-colored glasses nor Malcolm through a glass darkly. The homophobia of the Civil Rights Movements (since there was not just one movement) is touched on lightly in regards to Rustin. The sexism of both Martin and Malcolm is touched on in some depth, including Malcolm’s shifting attitude toward women in the last year of his life through his connections with SNCC. It’s a narrative of maneuvering, rivalry, and brotherhood, and a recasting of stories we think we know by heart. We are given peeks at the stories of Rustin, Ella Baker, Coretta Scott King, and others rising in prominence (or working behind the scenes) at the time. When King was in jail in 1964 in Selma, Malcolm came to speak.


Sitting on the dais next to Coretta, Malcom relayed a message that caught her off guard. “Mrs. King, . . . I want [Martin] to know that I didn’t come [to Selma] to make his job more difficult. I thought that if the white people understood what the alternative was that they would be willing to listen to Dr. King.”

There are minor factual lapses in the book—Fellowship of Reconciliation was founded in 1915 during World War One rather than World War Two. The Quaker faith of Bayard Rustin is ignored as it is in so many civil rights histories now that Rustin himself is no longer ignored for being gay. But these are small things. I would welcome future work from Joseph, exploring the stories of Rustin and Baker, other civil rights heroes who have been given little attention. With his generally accurate pen, Joseph could do some of the lesser-known figures justice, and readers real benefit.

Both leaders were assassinated, but the reaction was different. Though philosophically they had become very close—albeit approaching their positions from different directions—in death they were both simplified beyond recognition. The creation of the King holiday may have solidified Martin as a “founding father” and racial equality as a fundamental right, but Martin’s and Malcolm’s fight for economic justice was lost.

Martin and Malcolm “sought a moral and political reckoning with America’s long history of racial and economic injustice”—a reckoning that has yet to come. This book helps reframe the discussion and look toward the solution.

J. E. McNeil is a sixth-generation Southerner who grew up in Texas during the 1950s and ’60s. A particular point of pride for her is that in 1979 her late brother, Malcolm Bruce McNeil, helped draft the very first bill to make Juneteenth an official holiday while working for Al Edwards, the Texas State Representative from Houston.

Issue: October 2021
Quaker Book Reviews


==

MACOLM VS MARTIN
OCT 8, 2020 

Written by Jonathan Gordon


They didn’t hold high public office, they didn’t fight wars and they didn’t possess vast wealth and riches, and yet Dr Martin Luther King Jr and Malcolm X still managed to become two of the most iconic figures of the 20th century.

Rising to prominence at the height of the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s, each became equally revered and reviled by different parts of the United States. Both would ultimately come to be the de facto leader of their groups and each would meet an untimely and violent end at the hands of assailants whose identities and motives continue to be hotly debated.


In Dr King’s role as first president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and Malcolm X’s position as a minister and leading national spokesperson for the Nation of Islam (NOI), these two men often appeared to offer two conflicting arguments and approaches to the challenge of achieving racial justice and equality in America. What’s more, each existed in the public eye to a far greater and wider extent than any of their contemporaries fighting for African American rights and representation, and as a result each has developed their own legend. What we hope to do as we explore the lives of these two men is to find what linked them more than divided them and bring back some of the humanity of the men behind the myths. To that end we could think of no one better to guide us through this journey than the author of The Sword And The Shield: The Revolutionary Lives Of Malcolm X And Martin Luther King Jr, Dr Peniel E Joseph.

“The mythology around both men frames them as opposites,” he explains. “It frames Malcolm as Dr King’s evil twin. It frames Dr King as this saint who would just give everybody a hug if he was alive right now and that really takes away from understanding the depth and breadth of their political power, their political radicalism and their evolution over time.”

We’ll take a closer look at that evolution and convergence of ideas as we progress, but first it’s interesting to consider where each man came from and how that might have informed his world view. “Martin Luther King Jr is raised in an upper-middle class, elite household in Atlanta, Georgia,” Joseph tells us. “His father is a preacher, his mother is present in his life and it’s a very comfortable upbringing. Malcolm X is raised in Omaha and in Lansing, Michigan on farms, so he’s a country boy. His father is murdered by white supremacists when he’s six years old and his mother is put in a psychiatric facility, so he’s a foster child by the time he’s in elementary school. And then he becomes a hustler in Boston and Harlem as a teenager and he’s finally arrested for theft and spends seven years in prison. When Malcolm is in prison, Dr King is at Morehouse College, the most prestigious, historically black, all-men’s college that you could go to then or now. He goes and gets a theological degree at seminary school – Crozer Theological Seminary in Chester, Pennsylvania – and then gets a PhD at Boston University.”
“ THE MYTHOLOGY AROUND BOTH MEN FRAMES THEM AS OPPOSITES”

The strong religious upbringing of King clearly had a massive influence on his life, becoming a preacher himself as well as a political activist and integrating his faith deep into his speeches. Meanwhile, Malcolm’s tough upbringing and the tragedies he endured help to explain the righteous anger and pain he expressed as a minister for the NOI. However, Joseph does point out one curious similarity in their upbringing: “They’re both impacted by the movie Gone With The Wind. It premieres in Atlanta when Dr King is ten years old. Malcolm is 14 years old and sees that movie in Mason, Michigan, and talks about squirming in the movie theatre at all the racial stereotypes that the movie’s filled with. It’s filled with black women who are servants who are getting slapped in the face by white women who are masters, and it’s this sepia-toned, nostalgic vision of racial slavery. So that’s similar.”

It was during his time in prison for burglary that the then-Malcolm Little was introduced to Islam by some of his siblings and he joined the NOI. Its leader Elijah Muhammad took a personal interest in him, with letters being sent between them, before he was released in 1952. He abandoned his ‘slave name’ of Little and became Malcolm X, a minister in the NOI advocating for black separatism (which was the policy of the organisation), first in Chicago and later in Harlem, New York, which would become his base for years to come. The formative years of each man’s life are ultimately what frames them as polarised voices in a similar struggle.

“Malcolm X is really black America’s prosecuting attorney and he is going to be charging white America with a series of crimes against black humanity,” explains Joseph. “I argue in The Sword And The Shield that in a way his life’s work boils down to radical black dignity, and what he means by black dignity is really black people having the political self-determination to decide their own political futures and fates. They define racism and they define anti-racism and what social justice looks like for themselves. It’s connected to the United States, but globally it’s also connected to African decolonisation, African independence, Third World independence, Middle East politics, all of it.” Radical black dignity is also, importantly, about building up a black cultural identity that is independent of white America and building self-worth, which is a big part of where ideas like Black Power would later come from.

King naturally comes to things from a different direction. “Martin Luther King Jr is really the defence attorney,” says Joseph. “He defends black lives to white people and white lives to black people. He’s really advocating for radical black citizenship and his notion of citizenship is going to get more expansive over time; it’s going to be more than just voting rights and ending segregation. It’s going to become about ending poverty, food justice, health care, a living wage, universal basic income for everyone.” So radical black citizenship is about outward expression, about African Americans having an impact on the social systems that are in place, becoming engaged and demanding to be heard.

“True peace is not merely the absence of tension; it is the presence of justice”
17 September 1958
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere”
16 April 1963
“This is no time to engage in the luxury of cooling off or to take the tranquilising drug of gradualism”
16 April 1963
“True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar. It comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring”
4 April 1967

“ THEIR DIFFERENCES REALLY BECOME DIFFERENCES OF TACTICS RATHER THAN GOALS ”

These two approaches, one that builds personal identity and another that looks to express that identity and have it recognised by a system that’s set up to ignore black voices, seem more complementary than adversarial when we look at them from a slight remove. “Their differences really become differences of tactics rather than goals,” says Joseph. “They’re both going to come to see that you need dignity and citizenship and those goals are going to converge over time, but it’s the tactics and how we get to those goals.”

Famously, though, they did not always see eye to eye. Malcolm X in particular took aim at King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference on multiple occasions (likely because he was a high-profile target and Malcolm was nothing if not media savvy). Malcolm regularly referred to King as an ‘Uncle Tom’, implying that his nonviolent strategy was either too accommodating to white America or even saying he was being subsidised by white America to keep African Americans defenceless. King for his part warned, “Fiery, demagogic oratory in the black ghettos, urging Negroes to arm themselves and prepare to engage in violence, as [Malcolm X] has done, can reap nothing but grief.”


And yet despite the animosity between the two men publicly, Malcolm X continually attempted to reach out to King over the years. He sent articles and NOI reading materials and invited him to speeches and meetings. On 31 July 1963, Malcolm X even publicly called for unity. “If capitalistic Kennedy and communistic Khrushchev can find something in common on which to form a United Front despite their tremendous ideological differences, it is a disgrace for Negro leaders not to be able to submerge our ‘minor’ differences in order to seek a common solution to a common problem posed by a Common Enemy,” he wrote, inviting Civil Rights leaders to join him in Harlem to speak at a rally. But they did not attend, perhaps because shortly after they would be attending the March on Washington and they were deep in planning. The slight was taken, though, with Malcolm dismissing the August 1963 event the ‘Farce on Washington’.

Despite the rhetoric, Joseph thinks Malcolm was still learning much from King’s activities. “Dr King is the person who helps mobilise Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963 and King is going to be facing German Shepherds and fire hoses and it’s going to be a big, global media spectacle,” he says. “King writes his famous Letter From Birmingham Jail during that period. Malcolm is in Washington DC for most of that spring as temporary head of Mosque No. 4 there and he’s really going to be influenced by King’s mobilisations – his ability to mobilise large numbers of people – even as he’s critical of King because of the nonviolence and the fact that so many kids and women are being brutalised.”

The really big shift in world view for Malcolm X comes the following year as he gradually breaks away from Elijah Muhammad (who was mired in allegations of extramarital affairs) and the NOI and seeks to define his own path forward. “By 1964 in ‘The Ballot Or The Bullet’ speech, you see Malcolm X talking about voting rights as part of black liberation and freedom. You see him in an interview with Robert Penn Warren saying that he and Dr King have the same goal, which is human dignity, but they have different ways of getting there,” explains Joseph.

“We are nonviolent with people who are nonviolent with us”
1963
“We didn’t land on Plymouth Rock, Plymouth Rock landed on us”
29 March 1964
“We can never get Civil Rights in America until our human rights are first restored”
25 August 1964
“You can’t separate peace from freedom because no one can be at peace unless he has his freedom”
4 April 1967

It’s around this time that Malcolm X left the United States for several months, travelling to Egypt, Lebanon, Liberia, Senegal, Nigeria, Ghana and Saudi Arabia, including taking his pilgrimage to Mecca where he received his new Islamic name, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz. The trip made a big impression on him, and he spoke subsequently about how seeing Muslims of so many different ethnic and cultural backgrounds worshipping together opened his eyes to the real possibility of racial integration and peace.

“ KING BECOMES THIS VERY PROPHETIC, RADICAL FIGURE AFTER MALCOLM’S ASSASSINATION ”

All of this actually took place not long after the two men had met for what would be the first and only time. In the midst of the passing of the Civil Rights Act, as it was being filibustered on the Senate floor, Dr Martin Luther King Jr and Malcolm X crossed paths on Capitol Hill. “They both come and are talking to reporters and doing press conferences in support of the Civil Rights Act,” says Joseph. “They’re both coming there for the same reason. People are surprised that Malcolm is there and he’s watching the Senate and he’s doing his interviews and there’s a point where Malcolm is in the same room as Dr King and on the couch while Dr King is doing his press conference and they meet afterwards, exchanging pleasantries.” It was a moment captured by only a couple of photos, catching them mid-conversation with Malcolm recorded as saying, “I’m throwing myself into the heart of the Civil Rights struggle.”

Malcolm X continued to make overtures to King in the months that followed, offering him protection in St Augustine, Florida, that spring as protestors fought for desegregation of its beaches and playgrounds and later in Selma, Alabama, as King’s attention turned to voting rights where he felt he had a role to play. “I think Malcolm gave King more room to operate and I think Malcolm knew this,” says Joseph. “When he visits Selma shortly before his own death, he’s trying to visit Dr King in February of 1965 in Alabama but King is jailed and he gets to visit Coretta Scott King gives a speech and visits some of the student organisers. He tells Coretta Scott King that he’s only there to support her husband and he wants people to know that if her husband’s advocacy of voting rights is not accomplished that there are other alternative forces out there that are going to be led by him. So he definitely offers King more strategic leeway.”

Whether or not the two men could have ultimately found a way to coordinate their approaches in a less ad hoc fashion we will never know because on 21 February 1965, just days before the Selma to Montgomery marches were about to be attempted by King’s movement, Malcolm X was assassinated in New York. The exact details remain disputed, but we do know that he was about to speak at the Audubon Ballroom, where he was expected to announce plans for voter registration drives, denounce police brutality and call for the UN to speak up on human rights violations in America. As he began to speak a scuffle broke out, likely as a distraction, and a man approached the stage with a shotgun, shooting him. Two more men rushed the stage with pistols and shot him again as he lay on the floor. The impact of his death would be felt throughout the movement, and quite profoundly by King.


“One of the surprising things is that we don’t discuss the way in which the person who is most radicalised by Malcolm’s assassination is Martin Luther King Jr,” Joseph explains. “He breaks with Lyndon Johnson on 4 April 1967 with the Riverside Church speech in New York, where he says that the United States is the greatest purveyor of violence in the world. Malcolm had always talked about racial slavery and how racial slavery had shaped the present and King talks about that much more after 1965. He’s in Marks, Mississippi, helping to lead the Poor People’s Campaign and he’s in tears because there’s so much poverty there. He says that what the people in Marks, Mississippi, are experiencing is a crime and they’re going to go to Washington DC. Malcolm had always said that black poverty, racial segregation and violence were crimes, but Martin Luther King starts speaking in that language.”

As King turns his attention to economic inequality through the mid- to late-1960s, he digs deeper and deeper into the wider historic inequalities and injustices of America. “He becomes this very prophetic, radical figure after Malcolm’s assassination and he’s much more interested in race and blackness too,” says Joseph. “There’s a speech he makes in 1967 where he says they even tell you ‘A white lie is better than a black lie’. He gets into it in a granular way; and this is King, not Malcolm. It’s Dr King who says that the halls of the US Congress are ‘running wild with racism’. King is testifying before the Kerner Commission, the president’s riot commission, and talking about the depth and breadth of white racism. He speaks to the American Psychological Association in September 1967 and says that white people in the United States are producing chaos, blame black people for the chaos and say there would be peace if not for the chaos that they produce. He’s really much more candid and much more blunt, much more radical, much more revolutionary and there are no more meetings with the president of the United States.”

It is perhaps because they evolved and were willing to learn from one another that each has remained as relevant today as they were in the 1960s. “Even in this year of 2020 with George Floyd and Black Lives Matter and these global protest movements, the only way to understand these movements is to understand Malcolm and Martin who were talking about so much of these issues of police brutality and the criminal justice system, racial segregation and poverty and state-sanctioned violence,” says Joseph.

Which is why, adds Joseph, that getting beyond the mythology of these men is so important. “What did they actually do? What did they think? What were the networks that they connected with? Because both of them are in these really important networks with people like Bayard Rustin, who was the organiser of the March on Washington; James Baldwin; Ella Baker, who founded the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee; Fannie Lou Hamer, who Malcolm meets up with as a voting rights activist. They connect so many different networks. Globally too: Malcolm in Cairo with [Ghanaian president, Kwame] Nkrumah, Malcolm in Tanzania. Martin Luther King is a Nobel Peace Prize winner and spends a month in India. Both Malcolm and King know Nkrumah, Malcolm from Harlem and King in Ghana having met him in 1957. They’re extraordinary figures. Malcolm is the person who politicises Muhammad Ali. So they are these global revolutionary figures and they are subversive. They are trying to transform the status quo and unless we really watch that through line and follow them we can get stuck with them as these icons where we don’t understand they are both the sword and the shield.”



“ IT’S DR KING WHO SAYS THAT THE HALLS OF THE US CONGRESS ARE ‘RUNNING WILD WITH RACISM’ ”

At this point it seems clear that each man was somewhat more complex, multifaceted and evolving than the monolithic figures that are often depicted. The question that hangs around them, though, is could either of them have achieved as much as they did if the other hadn’t been there challenging them? “I think they both need each other,” concludes Joseph. “They both have misapprehensions about each other and they make mistakes about each other. King thinks Malcolm is this narrow, anti-white black nationalist. Malcolm thinks King is this bourgeois, reform-minded Uncle Tom when they start out. Neither of them are those things, so they both needed the other.”

What’s more, the contributions of each remain important to this day. “Dr King is this major global political mobiliser and the way in which he frames this idea of racial justice globally is very important, and the numbers he attracts are very important,” says Joseph. Meanwhile Malcolm has perhaps given us much of the vocabulary around racial justice even in the 21st century: “Malcolm is the first modern activist who is really saying black lives matter in a really deep and definitive way and becomes the avatar of the Black Power movement.” ■

Related Interests
Malcolm X
Martin Luther King Jr.
March On Washington For Jobs And Freedom
Public Sphere



FROM THIS ISSUE
No. 96
All About History

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