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T O P I C    R E V I E W
marsha Posted - 04/24/2013 : 14:33:57
After spending a week in severe pain I finally gave in and went to my general care physician . He gave me a prescription for Ultram. I took one this morning. Never again..did not help the pain and made me paranoid .
During this terrible day I spent a good deal of time searching my brain for that magic thing that happened , for the lightbulb moment to set me free from almost 7 years of constant severe 24/7 pain.
And then I realizes that it might not be WHAT HAPPENED but WHAT DIDN'T HAPPEN.
Of course like most of us on this forum I have had some pretty traumatic things happen.my mother had borderline personality disorder and my dad was petrified of her.
WHAT DIDN'T HAPPEN is the soothing, understanding,support,holding caring and love.
The only thing I could do was bury my feelings, good bad and terrifying .
If anyone tried to comfort me now I am sure I would explode and disappear. 65 years of repression.BOOM!!!!!
Maybe for some it is what failed to happen.
Marsha
20   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Ace1 Posted - 04/30/2013 : 19:08:51
Ok let me illustrate, let's say I was driving to work, I had made myself so excited about it for so long that I went into fight or flight automatically when driving to work. I started to do that into everything so I was in pain all the time. As I started to get better, I got the pain when driving to work, but not driving the same road to somewhere else. If it was conditioning to the road, i should get it the same in both stuations. I had to stop that intensity about me to get better. The reason I was conditioned to have symptoms in these situations, is because I acted too intense in these situations for too long. So, i became automatically intense out of habit. No fear was involved in my case. I never thought being fast or intense was bad, so how would that lead to conditioning, unless those behaviors themselves were causative. I was so used to doing things in a certain way, that it was natural and as I developed pain, those bad habits of rush and intensity only intensified and fed the cause if my pain. Disney land is something that I did rarely so I couldn't be conditioned to it. Your saying I could be conditioned to the rush its self, but I never feared the rush or anticipated it like drinking milk or going through a tunnel, so I doubt I could have been conditioned to the rush.
balto Posted - 04/30/2013 : 18:20:13
quote:
Originally posted by Ace1

in my case though none of my fear was conscious and chosen, it was all secondary to my behavior.



I think in your above case if you have no fear then your symptoms are all due to conditioning.
You don't fear coffee and yet coffee trigger your panic attack.
You're having fun running from rides to rides at Disneyland, you don't fear running but yet running ("rush") would trigger symptoms.
Your milk would cause stomach discomfort (there is no rushing here)
The sight of your mother in-law's house can cause back pain.
Many things we do while calm and relax can cause symptoms to appear. Our mind were condition to produce symptoms due to conditioning or expectation or perception.

------------------------
No, I don't know everything. I'm just here to share my experience.
tennis tom Posted - 04/30/2013 : 18:13:09
If you are in doubt or confused by posts at this message board that contradict Dr. Sarno, then reread HIS books. Unfortunately, he's never visited here to clarify his theory, which is beautifully simple, until muddled up by psychobabble. I would advise reading his latest book, which will have his most up to date clinical research findings in it. If you think you know better then the Good Doctor, cure yourself your way, write a book, announce it here and you'll probably sell at least twenty copies.

G'luck!
tt/lsmft

==================================================

DR. SARNO'S 12 DAILY REMINDERS:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0dKBFwGR0g

TAKE THE HOLMES-RAHE STRESS TEST
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holmes_and_Rahe_stress_scale

Some of my favorite excerpts from _THE DIVIDED MIND_ :
http://www.tmshelp.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=2605

==================================================

"It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." Jiddu Krishnamurti

"Pain is inevitable; suffering is optional." Author Unknown

"Happy People Are Happy Putters." Frank Nobilo, Golf Analyst

"Be careful about reading health books. You may die of a misprint." Mark Twain and Balto

"The hot-dog is the noblest of dogs; it feeds the hand that bites it." Dr. Laurence Johnston Peter

"...the human emotional system was not designed to endure the mental rigors of a tennis match." Dr. Allen Fox
======================================================

"If it ends with "itis" or "algia" or "syndrome" and doctors can't figure out what causes it, then it might be TMS." Dave the Mod =================================================

TMS PRACTITIONERS:
John Sarno, MD
400 E 34th St, New York, NY 10016
(212) 263-6035


Here's the TMS practitioners list from the TMS Help Forum:
http://www.tmshelp.com/links.htm

Here's a list of TMS practitioners from the TMS Wiki:
http://tmswiki.org/ppd/Find_a_TMS_Doctor_or_Therapist


Here's a map of TMS practitioners from the old Tarpit Yoga site, (click on the map by state for listings).:
http://www.tarpityoga.com/2007_08_01_archive.html
Ace1 Posted - 04/30/2013 : 17:10:46
Hi balto, but for some they continue to behave in the intense way and rushed way which makes the fear perpetuate (you are continuing the fight or flight mode). In this case the fear is an equivalent. In the case where someone is just temporarily under a significant situation, then they got tms, then the situation goes away but now they are afraid bc of their symptoms only, then the fear is a conscious fear and not an equivalent and must be overcome to get better. in my case though none of my fear was conscious and chosen, it was all secondary to my behavior.
pspa123 Posted - 04/30/2013 : 16:54:13
Balto you are right there is doubtless lots of common ground. But i remember when i would ask more focused questions and get polar opposite answers it would frustrate me and i would feel i was the problem and just wasnt understanding. But now i see the answers were in fact polar opposite. Go with what resonates the most i guess.
balto Posted - 04/30/2013 : 16:44:33
quote:
Originally posted by pspa123

Interesting that in the thread just under this one as I post, Dave advises:

"I suggest to re-read The Mindbody Connnection and keep diving deeper into the sources of repressed rage."

The debate goes on. I had a great deal of difficulty with the conflicting advice when I first came to this forum looking for direction, and I can appreciate how it could be hard for others in that position.



Hi pspa, some people told me the same thing. It was very confusing for them to read all the different approach and theories on what caused tms/anxiety. But they also told me it helped them "think" and help them realize that not everything is structural and conventional medicine is not the answer for all their ills.
Now they just have to sort out what mind body approach is best for them or make the most sense to them. My thought is it doesn't matter what they believe in, as long as they believe it is tms/anxiety, they are half way there.

------------------------
No, I don't know everything. I'm just here to share my experience.
pspa123 Posted - 04/30/2013 : 15:20:29
Interesting that in the thread just under this one as I post, Dave advises:

"I suggest to re-read The Mindbody Connnection and keep diving deeper into the sources of repressed rage."

The debate goes on. I had a great deal of difficulty with the conflicting advice when I first came to this forum looking for direction, and I can appreciate how it could be hard for others in that position.
balto Posted - 04/30/2013 : 14:51:34
quote:
Originally posted by Ace1

Art I agree with you 100% about that unconscious rage theory. It doesn't make sense and slowed my recovery. There are other points in healing back pain that dr sarno states that make total sense though, like the one i stated before. Ok may I plant a different take on your drive. You were trying so hard to keep up with the car in front of you (intensity), while probably wanting to get this long ride over with (being in a rush). You may have done this event with too much importance than what is needed. The anxiety came about ( along with the pain) bc of these reasons (the basic cause). So as you can see there was no fear initially or anxiety it was the intensity and impatience that lead to the anxiety or fear that lead to the symptoms. Does this make sense?



Hi Ace1. My thought is that "intensity" to keep up with the car in front, that "rush" mentality created stress and our mind view those stress as a sign of danger. It will create "fight or flight" respond which in sensitive people like us will at time create symptoms. Those symptoms will go away once the "danger" has passed. If the symptoms don't go away it is because the mind still see "danger" which in this case it is fear of the symptoms.

------------------------
No, I don't know everything. I'm just here to share my experience.
Ace1 Posted - 04/30/2013 : 08:24:15
Art I agree with you 100% about that unconscious rage theory. It doesn't make sense and slowed my recovery. There are other points in healing back pain that dr sarno states that make total sense though, like the one i stated before. Ok may I plant a different take on your drive. You were trying so hard to keep up with the car in front of you (intensity), while probably wanting to get this long ride over with (being in a rush). You may have done this event with too much importance than what is needed. The anxiety came about ( along with the pain) bc of these reasons (the basic cause). So as you can see there was no fear initially or anxiety it was the intensity and impatience that lead to the anxiety or fear that lead to the symptoms. Does this make sense?
art Posted - 04/30/2013 : 06:39:30
quote:
Originally posted by Ace1

Hi art, thank you for your great advice. Yes fear definetly is a factor. In my case though my fear was also a tms equivalent. Do you remember in healing back pain, dr sarno said he is beginning to think anger is more important than anxiety in the generation of tms? I think he meant that because fear is an equivalent of tms a lot of times and was a result of the anger/intensity. Now obviously, one does not want to consciously worry about their symptoms or be constantly afraid of certain things in ones life. I think that is a different kind of fear than the one that there is no reason for and definetly can start and perpetuate tms.



Hey Ace,
Frustrating to the point of TMS inducing that I had a long reply to the above as the topic interests me, and somehow managed to delete instead of send. IN brief, I wanted to ask how you make the distinction between fear as a tms equivalent, and fear as a primary response...

I also had a few paragraphs about my take on Sarno's unconscious rage hypothesis (untestable and not very useful it seems to me, given that EVERYONE can be said to be having unconscious rage...essentially ALL THE TIME if you buy the Freudian "id" notion.

The connection between anxiety and pain for me is quite strong. Here's a very recent example. Yesterday I was driving from a funeral service at a synagogue to the grave site. It was a long journey....perhaps 25 miles....and the pain I've been having off and on in my right knee ebbed and flowed in beautiful synchronicity with my anxiety levels in the funeral procession as I tried to keep up with the car ahead of me in the midst of difficult and chaotic traffic conditions.

This kind of thing happens to me all the time. IN this regard I'd say I'm pretty fortunate. I long ago discarded all ideas of unconscious rage as unnecessary and confusing.
Ace1 Posted - 04/29/2013 : 09:07:46
Hi art, thank you for your great advice. Yes fear definetly is a factor. In my case though my fear was also a tms equivalent. Do you remember in healing back pain, dr sarno said he is beginning to think anger is more important than anxiety in the generation of tms? I think he meant that because fear is an equivalent of tms a lot of times and was a result of the anger/intensity. Now obviously, one does not want to consciously worry about their symptoms or be constantly afraid of certain things in ones life. I think that is a different kind of fear than the one that there is no reason for and definetly can start and perpetuate tms.
art Posted - 04/29/2013 : 04:03:47
Marsha,

Ace's advice is excellent. I'd only add that in my case anxiety/fear/worry are the main culprits.


That your symptoms move around is classic TMS.


My guess is that despite Sarno's diagnosis, you still have major doubts. Those doubts lead to fear and worry. Fear and worry lead to perpetuation of symptoms...

Great advice about letting your body be your coach. Make note of the way your pain moves around, and ebbs and flows. Chances are you can become quite good at seeing cause and effect correlations...

ONce you establish these connections, it becomes much easier to see how you can have a positive effect on your pain by the simple but not always easy) expedient of altering your thought patterns...

TMS results from a vicious, negative cycle. Recovery is just the opposite. Which is good news. Small results naturally lead onto bigger results as you begin to feel more and more encouraged that you can beat this thing...

Ace1 Posted - 04/28/2013 : 18:05:53
Ok well first you have to understand that this is a PROCESS and in no way will this take a short time but will take a considerable amount of time. This is really about retraining your mind not to strain with the things you taught it to strain with most of your life. Intense annoyance/anger and intense rush/focusing tend to be the biggest culprits. You have to use your body's symptoms as your coach, to let you know your straining or you will never get better. If your in pain all the time you have to use higher intensity as the sign. Anyone who trains to become an Olympic athlete starts at some point when they are not very good at all. Some maybe awful. That doesn't mean they can't become great or the best, but the worse you are at the start the longer it generally takes. Some have advocated that challenging pain and doing everything despite the pain will make the pain go away. This type of approach would have never worked for me. I do things with ease and when in pain try to see my mental strain, it may be obvious and if not I see how intense I'm being about what I'm doing at the time. I also definetly try not to force the affected body part to do better by straining into it more. I try to relax the affected body part as I use it as normal as I can. I used directed mind power to reprogram myself. This is all in my keys to healing. Good luck.
marsha Posted - 04/28/2013 : 13:16:36
My pain is in my legs, hip area, buttocks and lower back. Once in a while in my hands. I have been to see Dr. Sarno twice MRI reports in hand. he said TMS. One doc said Fibromilgia another stenosis another arthritis and hips. Pain moves around.. Been in pain off and on since I was 16.
Marsha
art Posted - 04/28/2013 : 11:49:54
Hi Marsha,
I don't have much more wisdom than that...at least generally speaking. It sounds like you have a full, well balanced life May I ask the nature of your pain. Sorry if I missed that///

Edit:Also, are you convinced your pain is psychosomatic?
marsha Posted - 04/28/2013 : 11:00:33
Hi Art,
I do know what you mean. I just don't know how to get there.
Maintaining a positive attitude is difficult with 24/7 pain. Severe pain wakes me in the middle of the night. I do take a break when the pain is overwhelming. I am very social, have company often, love to cook and am active in the community. Stony brook university is close by and I take classes there. Keeps my brain alive. I taught art for 30 years and continue to work on my own. I have sold many pieces.
My life is a good one. I have been married for almost 46 years to the same person who I still love. Our children are grown and have been on their own for over 20 plus years.
Most days I am positive and function fairly well. Severe leg pain keeps me from doing too much walking, but I try. BUT ther are those days when I say why me, how bad can this get. Or I can't take it anymore.
I have tried medication because I thought it might break the cycle of pain but I have negative reactions to meds. My belief is that TMS can cause those negative reactions.
So, thanks for your reply. If you have anything you think might assist in recovery I would be greatful.
Marsha
art Posted - 04/28/2013 : 10:14:10
quote:
Originally posted by marsha

Ace,
How do you change thinking when you are in constant pain?
Marsha



I'm not Ace, but I'll take a crack at it. What are your thoughts now when you're in pain? Likely, "I'm so miserable." "Oh God, how much longer must I stand this?" "My life is such ****." "I can't take it any longer"

Not making fun, so please don't misunderstand. These are the kinds of thoughts that come almost automatically to all of us...

Instead, do your best to focus on the positive to the very extent you can while understanding that pain is as much a part of life as the good stuff. For many, it's a good deal more.

I'm not just blowing steam here. I have chronic pain myself. I've learned to just get on with things, and not to think about it too much. If the pain is really so great that I can't do anything other than lay in bad and moan, then that's what I do. I'm no saint, that's for sure.

You've got to change your attitude, and cultivate a sense of acceptance leavened with hope. You beat TMS once, you can do it again. But you're in a different place now. You're older, perhaps sadder. You're going to have to go at this at a deeper, more fundamental level.

In short Marsha, you must find a way to change..
marsha Posted - 04/27/2013 : 21:07:47
Ace,
How do you change thinking when you are in constant pain?
Marsha
Ace1 Posted - 04/27/2013 : 17:43:46
Yes the changing of your thinking is critical. The real truth is this and as you heal ( if one does bc they are doing it right), you will find this to be the case. Reprogramming is the operative word. It is important to reverse the loss of mental control that many of us practiced leading to our illnesses.
plum Posted - 04/27/2013 : 17:22:11
Be happy.
Relax.
Enjoy life.

A bit of Bruce Lipton for y'all. (on why the genetic arguement is redundant).

http://m.youtube.com/#/watch?v=o1Tt0yGMm88&feature=youtube_gdata_player&desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3Do1Tt0yGMm88%26feature%3Dyoutube_gdata_player

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