What is IFS and Why it is one of the coolest psychotechnologies out there ✨
Imagination is a powerful and underrated tool for self-discovery, healing, and growth.
Internal Family Systems (IFS) is a therapeutic framework that leverages the power of imagination to help you narratively explore your mind and do a lot of untangling + unburdening.
The main idea behind IFS is the Multiplicity of the Mind — that we are not really a single cohesive self, but more like a dynamic amalgam of many parts. We speak for our many parts all the time. ("A part of me would really like to..." etc)
IFS sees our family of parts being organized around one objective — avoiding pain. And there's no such thing as a "bad" part. Even the "worst" of your parts (that make you self-loathe, anxious, depressed, addicted, violent, judgmental) are just trying to protect you from pain.
You, as the "Self", hold the power to unburden the pain of your parts, resolve conflicts and bring harmony to your inner family. The more we unconditionally show up for our parts, the more they start letting go and trusting the Self
Some people are put off by the parts framework and imaginal stuff because it seems fake and made up. Are parts real? Probably not. Doesn't matter.
Your unconscious is "real" though. See IFS as a "way of looking" that animates the unconscious and allows you to interact with it.
Also, the thing is, IFS will all feel very abstract and made up. Until you meet an exiled part. And then that part shows you memories from your childhood, brings up all kind of repressed feelings. That's when it gets very much concrete and you see the transformative power of IFS.
Once you know your parts and have the ability to interact with any part (emotion) that comes up, you'll develop rich emotional awareness in your day-to-day life. Over time, IFS will help you fall in love with all your emotions and bring a beautiful fluidity to your inner life.
Self-love is so important, but "just love yourself" is not a useful prescription.
IFS makes self-love feasible. It gives us a practical affordance to understand and love all aspects of ourselves, especially the disturbing bits that are difficult to accept. 🥰
IFS can help you experientially realize that you (and others) are inherently good. And that's a big deal. Being out of touch with our inherent goodness holds us back in every area of our life. We carry a lot of shame and overcompensate so much to feel good about ourselves.
IFS is also such a powerful exploration and communication tool for relationships. By getting familiar with each other's parts, you can understand and relate to each other on a very deep level. And you can non-antagonistically navigate conflicts by dialoguing from Self.
IFS seamlessly integrates the somatic dimension (super important) and is synergistic with many other healing modalities (Focusing, IPF, MDMA etc).
All in all, IFS is mind-blowing and makes therapy feel like a video game.
This Tim Ferriss podcast with Richard Schwartz is my go-to IFS primer recommendation. They give an overview of IFS, and then do a brilliant live demo on the show where Tim Ferriss explores his childhood abuse. Very emotionally moving.
How to Have an Almost-Psychedelic IFS Experience — PART I 🧵
Some key directions and advice for deep transformative explorations (Art by DALL·E)
CREATING A GOOD CONTAINER
First thing, for the session to unfold freely and smoothly, we need a good safe container — ideal internal and external conditions (set and setting) that facilitate high quality of attention + expression.
To set this up, we seek…
- A quiet space where you can express without inhibitions and stay uninterrupted. Somewhere you feel safe enough to cry, shout or move your body (if needed).
- Sincere intent. If you do the process in a half-hearted manner, you won’t be able to truly connect with your parts.
For me, the "strategically reckless" approach to anything involves creating a robust baseline safety (physical, emotional, social, financial) and then throwing myself into the deep end more intensely and frequently.
Approaching psychedelics, I created safety through — cautiousness and low-dose experiments, harm reduction, building relationships and support systems, focusing on physical health, prioritizing healing first, etc
This then allows me to be more reckless with my experiments (higher doses, combining substances, frequent journeys) and go for far tail results.
Nassim is right here. But I feel that wild success can be potentially engineered by Strategic Recklessness™
Combining LSD (enhanced creativity and imaginal powers) and MDMA (radical love and emotional safety) to heal complex trauma (#cPTSD) ft. Ideal Parent Figure Protocol
Thread / Trip Report (25 odd tweets)
You know how we have these negative incident traumas that cause us to develop fear-based emotional learnings etc. These events are tangible and specific, and hence somewhat straightforward to process + resolve.
But then there's complex trauma, which is not about a single big incident or even a few big incidents. Rather it's the accumulation of a series of incidents over many years. And often it's not even about something that happened, but things that did NOT happen.
1. First, we need to challenge the Single state fallacy — "the erroneous assumption that all worthwhile mental processes occur in our usual awake mindbody state"
Altered states allow us to access novel kinds of perceptions, emotions and cognition — new ways of using our minds
2. The risks associated with drugs are not zero. But the perceived risk is much higher than the actual risk.
You can further minimize the risk significantly by taking a systemic approach.
Been thinking about what could be the potential mechanisms through which classic psychedelics have a healing impact.
Hypothesis — Mystical experiences viscerally contradict some of our deepest held beliefs and trigger memory reconsolidation
(cont...)
If you're not familiar, the idea behind memory reconsolidation goes something like this —
Emotional issues arise from certain beliefs/schemas we formed in response to external challenges. We can update these schemas through a process called memory reconsolidation wherein...
...we identify some experience which directly contradicts the emotional learning from the original memory, allowing us to update the problematic belief.