I agree that the journalistic content of the article is terrible (assassin is a word with a precise meaning that just doesn't fit here) and it is all too tempting and easy to look for reasons that make killers other rather than just like us but for circumstance and when they are like us (the same nationality, religion, ethnicity) it can hit hard.
When I lived in a dharma centre the resident teacher actually made us all aware that people with mental health issues often seek out Buddhist centres as a means of support and help. She made it clear that it could be very tempting to believe that we could heal such people but aside from offering friendship, anything else was to be left to mental health professionals. Some folk were even advised to avoid meditation until they had sought professional help. Mindfulness and other meditation may be good for mild to moderate anxiety, depression and other issues but suggesting that a severely depressed or psychotic person sit with their mind is bad medicine.
I imagine that most teachers are aware of the need to refer mentally unwell people to outside help but wonder if some sanghas do bite off more than they can chew? Not suggesting that this was the case here but the incidence of mental illness in Buddhist sanghas is not something I have ever seen written about. As well as the danger of thinking that dharma alone can effect a cure, mental health problems can cause feelings of isolation in a group setting too. Several people here have written about how they can feel cut off from discussions at times and that would doubtless be greatly heightened in cases of already existing anxiety or paranoia.
Anyway, this was just something that this article brought up in me and I would like to see a greater awareness of as people who are suffering will often gravitate towards meditation and Buddhism and few of us are qualified to deal with that. If someone had spotted that this guy needed help, maybe he could have been pointed in the right direction. Or maybe he already was and the PTSD was just too great.
Great sadness for him and all the victims.
Gassho
Andy
When I lived in a dharma centre the resident teacher actually made us all aware that people with mental health issues often seek out Buddhist centres as a means of support and help. She made it clear that it could be very tempting to believe that we could heal such people but aside from offering friendship, anything else was to be left to mental health professionals. Some folk were even advised to avoid meditation until they had sought professional help. Mindfulness and other meditation may be good for mild to moderate anxiety, depression and other issues but suggesting that a severely depressed or psychotic person sit with their mind is bad medicine.
I imagine that most teachers are aware of the need to refer mentally unwell people to outside help but wonder if some sanghas do bite off more than they can chew? Not suggesting that this was the case here but the incidence of mental illness in Buddhist sanghas is not something I have ever seen written about. As well as the danger of thinking that dharma alone can effect a cure, mental health problems can cause feelings of isolation in a group setting too. Several people here have written about how they can feel cut off from discussions at times and that would doubtless be greatly heightened in cases of already existing anxiety or paranoia.
Anyway, this was just something that this article brought up in me and I would like to see a greater awareness of as people who are suffering will often gravitate towards meditation and Buddhism and few of us are qualified to deal with that. If someone had spotted that this guy needed help, maybe he could have been pointed in the right direction. Or maybe he already was and the PTSD was just too great.
Great sadness for him and all the victims.
Gassho
Andy
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