A Soul-Centered
— Model of Therapy
Social Work Today
By Estella Norwood Evans, MSW, CSW, ACSW
Vol. 4 No. 2 p. 26
For centuries, acknowledgment of the sacred, the divine,
spirituality, and organized religion have been cornerstones in the
helping tradition of many cultural and ethnic groups, including African
Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans, and immigrant groups such
as Haitians and West Indians. Indeed, for many historically oppressed
and disenfranchised groups in America, it is the embrace of a transcendental
“higher being,” belief in the interceptive powers of ancestors
and related psychic and spiritual forces that has consistently sustained
their health and well-being during periods of intense maltreatment,
genocide attempts, and related crimes against humanity. International
groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), Al-Anon, Narcotics Anonymous,
and Gamblers Anonymous have historically based their therapeutic “step
approaches” to health and wellness on the fundamental acknowledgement
of and submission to the power of a higher being.
Martin and Martin (2002) succinctly and correctly
assert: “In the Black helping tradition, spirituality is defined
as the sense of the sacred and divine. Spirituality gave Black people
the strength to go on when there were threats to their very existence,
self-worth, and dignity when oppressive forces were seeking to strip
them of their humanity, hope when there seemed to be none, a way when
there was no way, and even joy when confronted by nothing but a daily
rhythm of hardship, frustration, and pain. In the face of the most
demoralizing circumstances, spirituality gave Black people both courage
and encouragement, and even in the midst of suffering and death, it
gave them a will to live and the determination to make life worth
living” (p. 1).
In New York City’s historic Harlem Sugar Hill
and East Harlem districts, respectively, John L. Bolling, MD, and
his collaborator, Gilberto Alvarez, MSW, CSW, are engaged in cutting-edge,
innovative psychotherapy and community interventions where the soul
is the major focus of therapeutic intervention. Indeed, for these
professional mental health practitioners and their colleagues at the
Mandala Center Institute, the concept of the “soul” is
the organizing paradigm for health and wellness.
The Mandala Center Institute
Bolling is the founder and current director of the Mandala Center
Institute located in the heart of New York’s Harlem on West
138th Street. Not only is Bolling the Institute’s founder, but
he is also the driving force, major public advocate, and seminal voice
communicating the history, mission, goals, and objectives of this
unique spiritual health and wellness center to diverse constitutes
throughout the country. Bolling, an African American, graduated from
Howard University’s medical school in 1966 and was a Josiah
Mercy Fellow in child psychiatry at New York University-Bellevue Hospital
Center. For the past 30 years, he has served the New York City community
as a clinician and psychiatric director of several mental health clinics.
The lion’s share of Bolling’s research and medical practice
has focused on the self-concept and identity of black children and
the soul-centered approach to integrating spirituality and psychotherapy.
Alvarez, Bolling’s colleague since the 1970s,
is of Puerto Rican descent and a major player in the history and current
functioning of the Mandala Center Institute. He holds an MSW degree
in bilingual studies in alcohol and substance abuse from Rutgers University.
He is an accomplished drummer and actively integrates his musical
training and expertise into his soul-centered workshops, family, group,
and individual treatment sessions conducted at his East Harlem office,
at the Mandala Center, and in workshops and educational sessions throughout
the country. Alvarez found a natural affinity for the soul-focused
nature of his current mental health work given the spiritual-based
nature of AA, Al-Anon, and other chemical dependency programs he was
trained to work with as a professional social worker.
The interdisciplinary mental health team of the Mandala
Center Institute workshop facilitators, consultants, and co-facilitators
consists of child and adult psychiatrists, MSW social workers, MDiv
pastoral counselors, PhD educational psychologists, PhD clinical psychologists,
and MA counseling psychologists. Bolling says that the major purpose
of the Mandala Center Institute is to help clients on the way to inner
self-discovery and self-fulfillment utilizing the soul-centered, psycho-spiritual
integrative model. The Mandala soul-centered model grew out of a need
to employ new and holistic psychotherapeutic healing approaches in
mental health service delivery to nonmainstream populations regardless
of sex, race, gender, or socioeconomic status.
The center provides literature; soul-centered art
works; drumming workshops and other forms of musical intervention;
online discussion forums; workshops; individual, family, and group
counseling; and training of professional, paraprofessional, and lay
groups and places special emphasis on self-help techniques. Workshops
offered by the Mandala Center include Rites-Of-Passage in the African
American Community, America’s Soul at the Crossroads, The Integration
of Religion and Spirituality in the Therapeutic Healing Process, The
Unrecognized Crisis of Black Women, The Resolving Crisis of the Black
Male, The Pathology of Racial Integration, and Black Male-Female Relationships.
The Mandala soul-centered cultural model of therapy
evolved out of an effort to integrate many years of multicultural
research, education, insight, and observation into a workable multicultural
model. The model is based on the concept of the “magic circle”
of the Mandala as a symbol of the soul. As such, there is an open-systems,
stage-related, ever-evolving process of inner psychospiritual development.
What is the Soul?
In his groundbreaking book The Heart of Soul, Bolling describes the
soul as an invisible, multidimensional multiaxial reality being connected
to a common center or heart—the heart of soul (p. 1). Cognition
or “knowing” is the major function of the soul. This multidimensional,
multiaxial nature of the soul can be likened to the multifaceted nature
of a gemstone. Even though each facet of the gem has its own uniqueness
and sparkle, its essence is its central sparkle of heart, which is
the culmination of the collective sparkle, contributed by all of the
facets. The Mandala soul-centered model is an attempt to create a
paradigm shift in mental health service delivery by providing an integrative
psychology between traditional Africentric spiritual beliefs and traditional
Western fields of psychology and religion. The soul is the organ of
knowing for both the external and internal worlds and is not restricted
or bound to the body (p. 8).
Bolling points out that the Mandala soul-centered
model is designed to incorporate components of inner, cultural, ethnic,
and spiritual development that are often missing from Eurocentric.
“The traditional Eurocentric models of psychology are often
devoid of cultural-ethnic-spiritual considerations, which are of importance
when working with individuals within the ‘Soul-Culture.’
As a consequence, ethnic cultural groups outside of the mainstream
often find that they are unable to relate to the approaches of traditional
Western psychology,” says Bolling. A resulting negative consequence
is that critical cultural-ethnic-spiritual issues of these groups
out of the mainstream frequently go unaddressed and unassisted.
Bolling explains that even though psychology, from
its inception, was the study of the soul, the seat of cognition shifted
to mental-rational-intellectual (left-side) brain processes. Essentially,
the left side of the brain helps humans validate experiences using
the five senses: sight, touch, taste, smell, and hearing. This shift
of the seat of cognition has serious consequences for therapeutic
healing interventions and bicognitive learning processes for those
both within and outside of the mainstream. Bolling asserts that the
soul can be understood as our “sixth sense” and is a critically
important right-side-of-the-brain mode of cognition. His concept of
the soul strongly emphasizes right-brain processes that include emotions,
intuition, and the more “feminine” aspects of personality.
The Art of The Spiritual Healing
In the Africentric worldview of soul, the soul symbolizes itself through
a variety of symbolic modalities such as music, rhythm, dreams, inner
voices, art, diseases, visitations from the ancestors, slips of the
tongue, slips of the pen, and synchronicities (Bolling, 1990). Bolling
says, “With the soul connecting the visible material world and
the invisible spiritual world, we live not only the symbols we encounter
consciously from our daily encounters with our environment, but we
also live the unconscious memories and symbols from our ancestral
past. Many readers will undoubtedly interpret this as a Jungian psychological
perspective of the collective unconscious.” Bolling quickly
points out that his concept of the soul is eclectic and incorporates
not only the works of Jung, but also W.E.B. DuBois, the psychological
literature of Greg Goddeck, Perl’s Gestalt therapy, and other
cultural, historical, and psychological writers.
Bolling incorporates the use of African statues, pictures,
and artwork, as well as music and dance, into his soul-focused psychotherapeutic
interventions. His methodologies also include dream analysis and self-help
techniques such as asking clients to place a container of water in
a particular room to draw in unwanted spiritual forces and referring
them to botanicas to purchase candles, statues, and other spiritual
healing resources. Bolling frequently utilizes the consultative services
of a Cuban spiritualist in his psychiatric practice. She is a woman
in her 60s whom he has known and worked with for many years. Because
of the woman’s limited English, Alvarez is often called upon
to interpret during these sessions. Bolling also readily shares his
personal dreams, intuitions, spiritual insights, and synchronicities
with his clients as important components of the therapeutic healing
process and their soul development. He views such personal sharing
with his clients as important factors in trust building and role modeling
and as powerful venues for helping clients to encounter their own
souls as “teacher, guide, best friend, mother, father, spouse,
lover, confidante, judge, limit-setter, visionary, and much more”
(Bolling, 1990, p. 7).
Soul Work
Bolling’s emphasis on soul-work is heavily influenced by the
value-laden, negative experiences of his African American, African
Caribbean, and Hispanic clients whom he frequently witnessed during
his clinical psychiatric training. He says, “On many occasions,
I would often defend many of the experiences of black and Hispanic
children as being cultural experiences as opposed to pathological
experiences. The intuitive-spiritual experiences that these children
were having could not be understood within this ego-centered model
of psychiatry, devoid of a soul. For instance, one of the frequent
presenting complaints of many of the children—African American,
African Caribbean, and Hispanic—was the experience of an inner
voice telling them things to do. This was often accompanied by visual
experiences of dead relatives, such as grandparents or other loved
ones, many of whom had died before these children were born.”
Bolling emphasizes that such intuitive-spiritual experiences always
ultimately ended up being misdiagnosed and mismanaged in the psychiatric
clinics.
He was firmly convinced that many of the African American
and Hispanic children being treated by himself and his white colleagues
were presenting with “spiritual” as opposed to “clinical”
issues. It was this misdiagnosis of African American, African Caribbean,
and Hispanic youths that led to Bolling’s early research into
black identity formation in black children and ultimately his work
on the culture of the soul as it relates to mental health and wholeness.
He credits much of his current psychiatric insights and successes
to regular consultation with his Cuban spiritualist of many years
and the spirit of his great-great Irish and Indian grandfather who
regularly communicates with him, thereby providing the source for
many of his ideas, theoretical insights, and treatment strategies.
Bolling and his colleagues at the Mandala Center Institute
are not alone in incorporating the soul into the therapeutic healing
process. Historically, spiritualists, shamen, traditional African
tribal healers, Native American spiritual healers, and Chinese Qi
Gong energy healers have focused on “the life force,”
“spirit,” or “soul” in preventing illness
and restoring wellness. Within contemporary society, professionals
practicing various forms of integrative medicine, complementary health
approaches, shamanic psychotherapy—including the ancient Hawaiian
shamanistic science of Huna—and Reiki energy work also focus
on the soul in working with clients.
Bolling says that while many other traditions and
helping professionals have historically focused on the soul in their
work, he is one of the few practicing African American psychiatrists
to do so.
Therapeutic Models of Intervention
Bolling and his colleagues at the Mandala Center Institute specifically
target their mental health services to poor, marginalized, vulnerable,
and at-risk populations. The center’s emphasis on community-based
and self-help techniques and interventions has resulted in greater
access to mental health services for these groups. Bolling says that
his clients range in age from 3 to 93. Referrals to the center are
varied and include self-referrals, referrals from family members and
friends, referrals from social workers and other professional healthcare
providers, and “word of mouth” knowledge of the center’s
Africentric, soul-centered treatment interventions.
The need for a mental health model emphasizing holistic
health, community group sharing, and self-help is underscored by the
fact that in Africentric culture, the self was traditionally never
seen as individual. The larger self is always located in and identified
with the collective group or clan. Alvarez provides a poignant example
illustrating this principal from his experience in Ghana, West Africa:
“A child whose mother was dying was sitting inside of a circle
composed of family, friends, and community members, publicly grieving
his loss. Those around the circle were not only witnesses to the child’s
grief but were active participants in his mourning. The drummers provided
powerful solace for the collective depression associated with their
collective loss.”
Alvarez credits his witness to this moving event as
a major factor for his own paradigm shift away from the more individualistic
focus of many traditional mental health models to community-based
and self-help therapeutic models of intervention. Alvarez grew up
with a deep appreciation for the significance of religion and spirituality
in the helping process, as his mother was a practicing spiritualist.
He felt an immediate need to professionally collaborate with Bolling
after meeting him, since he quickly recognized that they were engaged
in very similar spiritually based mental health work. He described
his philosophy of healing as one that focuses on self-help and is
short-term and spiritually-based. Building trust and helping clients
“let go” and close doors to fears and anxiety feature
prominent in his therapeutic interventions that include drumming workshops,
self-help techniques, individual and family sessions, community-based
interventions, and the use of literature designed to help clients
get in touch with their “inner-child.” Alvarez describes
his mental health work as a process of facilitation with clients and
succinctly sums up his approach with the following statement: “If
you don’t have a guide, you will need a lifetime for a two-day
trip.”
Bolling uses a holistic approach to mental health
and wellness in his work with clients. In addition to self-help strategies
and Africentric treatment strategies, Bolling utilizes many of the
traditional psychiatric techniques he was trained to use at New York
University-Bellevue Hospital Center and St. Elizabeth’s Hospital
in Washington, DC. He occasionally prescribes psychotropic medication
for his clients, but does so only after a comprehensive assessment
validates that medication is warranted. For example, he explains that
he trains his staff and colleagues to differentiate between “spiritual”
voices and “pathological auditory hallucinations” to ensure
accurate diagnosis and treatment planning with clients.
Future Directions
Although Bolling and Alvarez’s current clients, workshops, lectures,
and consultative assignments keep them and their colleagues at the
Mandala Center Institute busy, it is clear that the center has both
charted and uncharted growth areas. Alvarez identifies soul-focused
individual, family, group, and community interventions targeted at
ethnic and minority lesbian, gay, transsexual, and transgendered groups
as important areas to expand the work of the center. These individuals
and groups frequently experience compounded discrimination, stigma,
isolation, and oppression as a result of their sexual orientation,
which place them at risk for increased mental health challenges. He
feels that extending greater mental health service to these groups
is important, and he is hopeful that the center will be able to do
so in the very near future.
Further information about the work of the Mandala
Center Institute and the soul-centered integrative model of therapy
can be obtained from the center’s Web site at www.mandalarisingpress.com,
Alvarez at gilberto.alvarez@att.net,
and Bolling at jlbolling@mail.arczip.com.
— Estella Norwood Evans, MSW, CSW, ACSW,
is immediate past director of the Greater Rochester Collaborative
MSW Program and professor of social work, Nazareth College of Rochester,
NY.
References
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