dc.description.abstract | Aims: To describe lived experiences of spirituality from
the perspective of people who have been subject to inpatient psychiatric care and to interpret these experiences
from an understanding of health as dialectical.<p>
<p>Methods: After approval from a regional ethical board,
eleven participants were recruited from two organisations
for people with mental health problems. Participants
were asked to narrate about spiritual experiences and
occasions where such experiences had come close. The
transcribed interviews were analysed by means of a phenomenological hermeneutical approach.<p>
<p>Findings: A structural analysis of the text resulted in
three themes; perceiving the presence of something extra
mundane, making sense of reality and struggling for
acceptance. The comprehensive understanding highlights
spiritual experiences as going beyond religion, even
though religious experiences appear as part of it. These
experiences can indeed be a resource contributing to
experiences of hope, connectedness, meaning and coherence in life. However, they can also give rise to doubt,
anxiety and feelings of loneliness and hopelessness.
Rather than understanding spiritual experiences as being
either ‘good’ or ‘bad’, we could approach spirituality as
something that is always present in alternate and interrelated forms. Metaphorically, this could be understood
as a ‘near-life experience’, summarising participants’
experiences related to their struggle with issues related to
suffering and health which are simultaneously present.<p>
<p>Conclusions: If psychiatric nurses could approach this
complexity and, without being judgemental, explore
seemingly positive and negative experiences of spirituality as dialectically related to each other, rather than
viewing them as either resources or problems, this could
contribute to insiderness care and hopefully also support
people who struggle with these experiences to seek help
when needed. | en_US |