
During my first experience of what I now understand was mystical psychosis, a friend at the time would like to say something like, “It’s called ‘insanity’ because you go in-to-sanity,” and I appreciated that because it was a kind of anchor, an affirmation that the experience I was having might be positive.
Since then I have had two similar experiences, each of increasing intensity and both tipping from what Stan Grof calls “spiritual emergence” into “spiritual emergency”. I wrote about the second episode in a post called “Psychosis or Spiritual Awakening”, and I have since learnt that I am far from the only one who believes in the potentially positive transformation that can occur if a person is appropriately supported through the expansion of consciousness that psychosis can sometimes be.
Enter the documentary Crazy Wise, whose short blurb (trailer below) reads:
Crazy … or wise? The traditional wisdom of indigenous cultures often contradicts modern views about a mental health crisis. Is it a ‘calling’ to grow or just a ‘broken brain’? The documentary Crazy Wise explores what can be learned from people around the world who have turned their psychological crisis into a positive transformative experience.
As a survivor of our lagging mental-health system who has experienced profound insight through episodic psychosis, I very much value the message of this documentary. One distinction I like to make is that if, in modern Western psychology, psychosis is ‘a break from reality’ and, in ancient Eastern psychology, reality is an illusion, then psychosis is a break from illusion. Apart from that, I will let the filmmakers do the rest of the talking:
During a quarter-century documenting indigenous cultures, human-rights photographer and filmmaker Phil Borges often saw these cultures identify “psychotic” symptoms as an indicator of shamanic potential. He was intrigued by how differently psychosis is defined and treated in the West.
Through interviews with renowned mental health professionals including Gabor Mate, MD, Robert Whitaker, and Roshi Joan Halifax, PhD, Phil explores the growing severity of the mental health crisis in America dominated by biomedical psychiatry. He discovers a growing movement of professionals and psychiatric survivors who demand alternative treatments that focus on recovery, nurturing social connections, and finding meaning.
Crazy Wise follows two young Americans diagnosed with “mental illness.” Adam, 27, suffers devastating side effects from medications before embracing meditation in hopes of recovery. Ekhaya, 32, survives childhood molestation and several suicide attempts before spiritual training to become a traditional South African healer gives her suffering meaning and brings a deeper purpose to her life.
Crazy Wise doesn’t aim to over-romanticize indigenous wisdom, or completely condemn Western treatment. Not every indigenous person who has a crisis becomes a shaman. And many individuals benefit from Western medications.
However, indigenous peoples’ acceptance of non-ordinary states of consciousness, along with rituals and metaphors that form deep connections to nature, to each other, and to ancestors, is something we can learn from.
Crazy Wise adds a voice to the growing conversation that believes a psychological crisis can be an opportunity for growth and potentially transformational, not a disease with no cure.
It really is a fantastic film, very moving and inspirational. There is a new paradigm of integrative psychological awareness emerging, and these documentaries are helping to spread the word.
If you experience or have experienced acute psychological distress, have a look at this documentary and please know there is an alternative to what the medical-system narrative might believe is the only truth about your “symptoms”.
Reach out to me if you need support, or check out the Spiritual Emergence Network (SEN) of Australia, who have peer-support workers operating in Brisbane at least, and other parts of Australia. There is also a US-based SEN, and hopefully these links will get you started if you’re investigating this for yourself or someone you know from other parts of the globe.
It is great when thoughts you have kept to yourself for so long, out of shame or fear of ridicule, loop back to you from someone you know understands through their own experience. So often in these cases, it only takes a subtle shift in perspective to change a self-imposed taboo into a source of meaningful connection and inner strength. I am yet to watch the documentary, but even the description and commentary in this article allowed my to witness my own subtle, momentary shift in my inner dialogue from “sick in the head” to “sick of hiding what is in my head” and while this may only be a step in the right direction, it is often that first step which changes the long term trajectory of the effect of how we speak to ourselves about ourselves. Thanks Bodhi, and not just for the recommendation of an enlightening piece of film-making.
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It is such an incredible honour to witness this moment of shift, and to feel that my sharing has in some way helped to catalyse that. There is definitely a new dialogue emerging that can help us interpret our inner experience in ways that are empowering rather than pathologising. Reading over the above post I saw that I wrote, “There is a new paradigm of integrative psychological awareness emerging”, but of course it has always been present and is still active in many of the remaining traditional societies around the world.
What I mean was it’s emerging in the West, and beginning to influence mainstream ideology. This is about more than American soccer mums microdosing psilocybin with their CEO husbands. It’s about a whole paradigm shift that is beginning to recognise the multi-dimensional nature of reality and how our narrow-minded consumerist worldview is harming ourselves and the planet. I think these moments of shift like you are experiencing are microcosmic instances of that macrocosmic reconfiguration. It makes my heart bounce with joy to know that we are a part of this, and thank you for commenting because it helps me feel these ideas are reaching people.
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