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Slide 1:“Caring for the Spiritual Lives of Seniors” Spirituality and Aging Seminar
Sponsored by
The RBJ Schlegel-UW Spirituality and Aging Program
Conrad Grebel University
University of Waterloo
Slide 2:A Tale of 3 casesJohn R, Harold Dunn, Marie
Slide 3:Tasks for our discussion today
Slide 4:Let’s define our terms
Slide 5:Aging
Slide 6:Freud and Ellis Reduce Religion to Emotion Freud:
“religion is an illusion and it derives its strength from the fact that it falls in with our instinctual desires. (Totem and Taboo (1913) and Moses and Monotheism (1938), )
Ellis saw religion as a form of oppression
“Religiosity, to a large degree, essentially masochism; a form of mental sickness.”
“Obviously, the sane and effective psychotherapist should not—as many contemporary psychoanalytic Jungian, client-centered, and existentialist therapists have contended he should—go along with the patients’ religious orientation and try to help these patients live successfully with their religions, for this is equivalent to trying to help them live successfully with their emotional illness. ”(The Case Against Religion, Albert Ellis)
Slide 7:What do you think? Some Options
Religion/spirituality is pathology
See DSM IV V62.89 Religious or Spiritual Problem
Religion/spirituality is ignored as either irrelevant or the domain of some other professional
Religion/spirituality is integrated into a whole person view of the client and human nature in general
Religion/spirituality are the widow through which the client is seen and all things understood
Slide 8:Jung & Frankl Only two paradigms offer philosophical openings for spiritual care
Carl Jung – Soul
Viktor Frankl – Noëtic aspect of the person
Slide 9:DSM IV V62.89 Religious or Spiritual Problem
This category can be used when the focus of clinical attention is a religious or spiritual problem. Examples include distressing experiences that involve loss or questioning of faith, problems associated with conversion to a new faith, or questioning of spiritual values that may not necessarily be related to an organized church or religious institution.
Slide 10:Wholism includes the SPIRITUAL Wholism is both the parts..and the process!
Spiritual elements can be:
behaviors
feelings
beliefs
Where does the Soul Fit?
Slide 11:Definitions Religiosity: An approach to the measurement of religious variables that reflects adherence to institutional (orthodox)beliefs and practices. (Payne, Religiosity in Mangen & Peterson Social roles and Social Participation, University of Minnesota Press. 1982.)
Spiritual Well-Being “The affirmation of life in a relationship with God, self, community and environment that nurture and celebrates wholeness.”
National Interfaith Coalition on Aging, (informal brochure) 1975. As cited in James A. Thorson and Thomas C. Cook, Jr., Spiritual Well-Being of the Elderly, Springfield: Charles C. Thomas 1980, xiii.
Slide 12:Koenig Definition of Religion Religion: Religion is an organized system of beliefs, practices, rituals, and symbols designed (a) to facilitate closeness to the sacred or transcendent (God, higher power, or ultimate truth/reality) and (b) to foster an understanding of one’s relationship and responsibility to others in living together in a community
Koenig, Harold G., Michael E. McCullough, and David B. Larson. Handbook of Religion and Health. London: Oxford University Press, 2001. 18.
Slide 13:Koenig Definition of Spirituality Spirituality: Spirituality is the personal quest for understanding answers to ultimate questions about life, about meaning, and about relationship to the sacred or transcendent, which may (or may not)lead to or arise from the development of religious rituals and the formation of community. Koenig, Harold G., Michael E. McCullough, and David B. Larson. Handbook of Religion and Health. London: Oxford University Press, 2001. 18.
Slide 14:Faith Pannenberg believes that “faith has an ‘absurd’ character, lacking any foundations or support in our common human outlook whatever.”
Fowler believes that faith grows as people integrate the story of their particular faith into their “evolving ways of experiencing self, others, and the world.”
More meaningful among the sons and daughters of Abraham. Less useful for other world traditions.
Slide 15:Relationship with the divine How do I know God?
Through scripture
Through the people in my world
Through God’s voice, however I understand that.
Mystical traditions vs. intellectual traditions
Knowledge of the spiritual is the road out of the suffering of life in Hinduism.
Slide 16:Lets think together about the locations of our work
Slide 17:Home and Congregation Needs
Seniors want to grow in their faith
Maintain Self
Continue to participate in their own way
Interventions
Religious Education Groups
References during general preaching
Pastoral Care
Slide 18:Spiritual Crisis Needs
Connections with others
To be walked with
Interventions
Pastoral visitation
Support groups, possibly by using preexisting groups in the congregation
Ministry of presence
Slide 19:Entrance into Long Term Care Needs
3 groups
Persons with Dementia
Persons physically frail
Persons who choose to move to LTC
Family Support
Emotional support for the transition
Interventions
Oral Histories
Roles in pastoral leadership
Slide 20:Long Term Care Needs
Counseling
Worship
Connections with community
Interdisciplinary team work
Staff support
Interventions
Worship
Counseling
A ministry of presence
Slide 21:One Example of an approach The work of Viktor Frankl, Logotherapy and the work of Carl Jung both offer philosophical basis for combining psychology and religion
Wholistic psychology, while less well defined also offers a path for our discussion.
Slide 22:
Slide 23:Putting it together
Slide 25:Existential Assumptions
Slide 26:Wholistic [Westburg]
Not Holistic,
(Adler)
Slide 27:Human Freedom Viktor Frankl once said, “when I stood at the door of the box car and the sign read “Auschwitz,” I knew that the world could take anything away from me except for my right to choose how I will perceive the world.
Slide 28:Freedom must be in tension with Responsibility
Slide 30:Transcendent Symbols
Slide 31:Transcendence is the basis for meaning M.A.D.D. Mothers Against Drunk Driving
Slide 33:Religion or Theology Man’s Search for Ultimate Meaning
Slide 35:Logotherapy: End Stage From Memory to Meaning
To the story teller, it is only
a memory
Until it is told, then it is a story
Stories can be shared
Stories are the energy offered to individuals and groups to become symbols
Symbols offer meaning to both individuals and to groups
A story never ends as long as it is still told!
Survivor responsibility is to tell their story – V. Frankl
Slide 36:Frankl’s grandchildren Katharina and Alexander Vesely continue his work
Slide 37:Real Cases
Slide 38:Techniques Paradoxical Intention: the social worker encourages the patient to intend or wish for, even if only for a second, precisely what they fear. Forces client to confront their own fears.
Dereflection: The therapist diverts the patients away from their problems toward something else meaningful in the world. It is not use telling some patients to stop thinking about something, better to substitute something.
Slide 39:A Tale of 3 casesJohn R, Harold Dunn, Marie