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If you have had a Near-Death or Similar Experience: Experiencer's Guide to Psychotherapy - A Final Note


 

 

 

 

This page is also available as a brochure (PDF) suitable for printing and distribution, though generally this page is kept more up-to-date.  (If you have trouble reading the PDF file, the Adobe Acrobat Reader is available for free download.)


An extraordinary experience, one that doesn't fit our usual understanding of reality, such as a near-death experience (NDE), can be difficult to explain to family and friends.  While some people are comfortable having such experiences, others undergo a range of post-traumatic effects.  Troublesome symptoms like feeling preoccupied with the experience, intrusive thoughts and memories, vivid dreams—possibly nightmares, and difficulty concentrating are the mind's natural ways of dealing with an experience that is not clearly understood.  Even positive aftereffects can be unsettling, such as a heightened sense of meaning or connectedness to persons, literature, or events that had previously seemed commonplace; a sense of deepened spiritual or religious meaning; strong empathic sensations; or psychic experiences.  When others do not share or even understand an extraordinary experience and its aftermath, those who've had such experiences—experiencers—may wonder, "Am I `going crazy'?"

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A FINAL NOTE

Seeking psychotherapeutic help may feel a little overwhelming at first, particularly if you already are experiencing many pressures in your life.  However, you can use this to your advantage, because a therapist who can help you feel comfortable under these circumstances is likely to be useful to you in the long run.  Remember that there are many therapists out there, and you have choice.  Choosing someone with whom you feel comfortable discussing difficult issues is the most important aspect of building a therapeutic relationship.  Keep in mind that you are the consumer, and the therapist is working for you.


With acknowledgment to PEER (The Program for Extraordinary Experience Research, Cambridge, MA) for their permission to adapt their document, and to Jack Engler, Ph.D., and Daniel Goleman, Ph.D., for their work, The Consumer's Guide to Psychotherapy.  (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992), on which that document was based.  The Engler and Goleman book is an excellent reference for more detailed information on finding a therapist and on the psychotherapeutic process.

Other potentially useful books include:

  • Beutler, L. E. & Shurkin, J. H. (2000).  A consumer's guide to psychotherapy.  Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
  • Ehrenberg, O., Ehrenberg, M., & Ehrenberg, J. (1994).  The psychotherapy maze: A consumer's guide to getting in and out of therapy.  Northvale NJ: Jason Aronson.
  • Pies, R. W. (1996).  A consumer's guide to choosing the right therapist.  Northvale NJ: Jason Aronson.

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