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Mad in America: Rethinking Mental Health

Rani Bora - Innate Health and Resilience, How It Differs to Mainstream Psychiatric Treatment

Mad in America: Rethinking Mental Health

Mad in America

Mental Health, Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.7212 Ratings

🗓️ 19 August 2017

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, we interview Dr. Rani Bora. 

Dr. Bora is a qualified Psychiatrist and Mental Health and Resilience Coach. She has studied a number of approaches to mental well-being – both traditional and non-traditional, and she focuses on holistic approaches to supporting people with their mental wellness.

Since deepening her own understanding of the paradigm of 'Innate Health and Resilience', she has committed herself to sharing this understanding in her coaching and training and has witnessed remarkable transformation in individuals whom she has supported.

In this interview we discuss Dr. Bora's background in psychiatry, how she came to move away from more traditional psychiatric approaches and the concept of innate health and resilience.

In this episode, we discuss:

How Dr. Bora graduated from medical school in 1997 and became interested in connecting with people leading to specialising in psychiatry

That Rani found working in India as a psychiatrist very different compared to the UK and there were very few community services with most services delivered in a hospital setting

That after working in the UK, Dr. Bora became interested in self help and personal development

That this led to training in parallel both as a psychiatrist and as a life coach studying Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP), Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) and Narrative Coaching

That Rani came to see that using tools and techniques as a quick fix can be problematic, because difficulties can re-surface once people stop using the tools and techniques

That Innate health and resilience (also known as the three principles) is a new paradigm pointing to the health and wellbeing within all and how the mind works

That the three principles are mind, thought and consciousness

That Rani sees medication and mindfulness as tools but they don't really address the root cause of emotional distress

That having an understanding about how the mind works can help people to heal from emotional difficulties or trauma

That people are more resourceful than they think they are and Rani helps people to discover that resourcefulness within themselves

Rani's mentor, US Psychiatrist Dr. Bill Pettit, reminds us that a diagnosis doesn't define a person, only describes symptoms

That people experiencing mental health difficulties are not different to the rest of society, but medicine quite often labels and separates

Rani believes that "you cannot fail at being yourself"

That if people accept themselves with their perceived flaws and limitations and realise that these individual differences

are what make us unique and human, it means less judgement and self criticism

That Rani feels that we focus too much on what is lacking in people and on diseases and symptoms

That we also focus too much on mental illness rather than mental health

That Rani does work with clients who expect medication, but that she often finds other ways to work with people

That Rani wants to know the outcome people are looking for and often finds that the medical model has its limitation in helping people with their real needs in life

That Rani would like the research to focus more on empowering people and what helps people recover

That Rani feels that it's very important that we also focus on the health of those in the medical community who are supporting others, as the lack of resources can be associated with enormous strain and stress

That Rani would like people to reflect on the fact that they are not broken, even given what happened in the past or what diagnoses they have

There is something at the core of who we are that cannot be damaged by our experiences

To get in touch with us email: podcasts@madinamerica.com

© Mad in America 2017

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Mad in America podcast, your source for science, psychiatry and social justice.

0:13.0

Hello, this is James, and welcome to episode nine of the Madden America podcast.

0:18.0

This week we interview Dr. Rani Bora.

0:23.5

Dr. Bora is a qualified psychiatrist and mental health and resilience coach. She has studied a number of approaches to mental well-being,

0:28.6

both traditional and non-traditional, and she focuses on holistic approaches to supporting people

0:33.7

with their mental wellness. Since deepening her own understanding of the paradigm of innate health and resilience,

0:39.8

she has committed herself to sharing this understanding in her coaching and training,

0:43.9

and has witnessed remarkable transformation in individuals whom she has supported.

0:48.4

In this interview, we discussed Dr. Borra's background in psychiatry,

0:52.2

how she came to move away from more traditional

0:54.4

psychiatric approaches and the concept of innate health and resilience. Dr. Bora, thank you so

1:00.1

much for talking with me today. I just wanted to start really by asking you about your own

1:04.6

background and what it was that led you towards psychiatry. Thank you, James. I am originally from India and I graduated from medical school

1:15.3

in 1997. And then I did various different placements in different medical areas and I got

1:26.1

attracted to a psychiatry because I always wanted to listen to people.

1:31.3

I wanted to spend time with people, connect to people. And this is why when the opportunity

1:37.0

came up for me to do post-gradation in psychiatry, I took it up. And that was back in India.

1:42.9

And then 2001, I came to the UK and I continued my post-graduation in psychiatry and back in

1:55.0

2011 I worked as a rehabilitation psychiatrist and had community patients and also an inpatient unit.

2:06.1

And I just wondered, Ronnie, what the differences were between working as a psychiatrist in India compared to the UK?

2:12.5

Well, back then it was very different. I don't know if there has been some advances now, possibly some advances. I didn't

2:20.1

complete my whole post-gradation there. I just did a few months before I decided I don't want to do

...

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