Categories
Featured

Does Pain Serve a Purpose?

[amazon_link asins=’0471740284,0446557684,B01N1QZCCH,B00JNVQ1BY,1583949623,1587799839,B00VTR6MNW,B072XNVLXR,B00JT86CV0′ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’987238cd-6136-11e7-87df-236a3d89cd1a’]

It’s a Warning System, Not a Character-Building Tool.

Remember the 1970s television series “Kung Fu”  Each episode opened with scenes of a stoic Shaolin monk, played by David Carradine, enduring excruciating physical challenges    walking over burning coals and lifting a hot cauldron with his forearms. Pain was portrayed as a critical part of the monk’s path to spiritual and personal growth.

CLICK & SEE

To be sure, individuals can gain confidence and pride by pushing themselves to complete marathons or other demanding physical challenges. But enduring pain or stress injuries on a regular basis serves no good purpose for the body or soul, researchers say.

“Good pain is the body’s warning system,” said Dr. Edward Covington, director of the Cleveland Clinic’s Chronic Pain Rehabilitation Program. “Intense nociceptic pain is the good pain. It’s the pain that warns you your appendix is about to rupture or someone has stepped on your foot.”

While many would consider a life without pain as a blessing, it is anything but that for those who suffer from a rare disorder that leaves them unable to feel pain. The condition   called congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis, and also known as CIPA   affects nerve endings. Because sufferers have no ability to sense pain, they are vulnerable to serious cuts, fractures and burns. Covington said this is a particularly difficult disorder to manage and can leave a person seriously compromised by injury by adolescence.

Most people are not disabled by nociceptic pain, which is pain caused by injury or trauma to the body’s tissues, but rather by chronic pain, Covington said. Indeed, about 70 million Americans are partially or completely disabled by chronic, debilitating pain, according to the National Pain Foundation. And despite advances in pain treatment, many people encourage themselves to dismiss or ignore pain.

“We have a tendency to think people who don’t complain about pain are macho, Clint Eastwood-types, and those who do complain are wimpy,” Covington said.

But research suggests otherwise. “There are a number of genetic differences in enzymes and in individuals’ opioid receptors that these ‘tough guys’ may simply not be experiencing pain,” Covington said.

‘Good Pain’ vs. ‘Bad Pain’

When treating pain, patients and their primary care doctors too often overlook the distinction between good pain and bad pain, many specialists say. Patients want to know exactly what’s causing their pain, and physicians often go looking for an underlying physical cause. But this is often the wrong approach. “In many cases, the pain itself is the disease,” Covington said.

“We need to recognize that all pain doesn’t have a somatic [bodily] origin,” said Dr. Todd Sitzman, medical director of The Center for Pain Medicine in Hattiesburg, Miss.

Like Covington, Sitzman recommends a multidisciplinary approach to pain management. Cognitive-behavioral therapy can have a great effect in pain management. Through therapy, Sitzman said, “patients can reduce their sense of suffering by changing maladaptive behaviors and learning new coping strategies.”

Patients may also need to change their diets, adopt or alter exercise regimes or address psychological problems to make real progress in alleviating chronic pain. But, he admits, “There are no magic potions.”

Pain as an Opportunity

Dave Markowitz, author of Perspectives: A Radical Approach to Healing, is on the other end of the healing spectrum. The son of a pharmacist, Markowitz decided to take a decidedly non-pharmaceutical route to addressing chronic pain, using everything from meditation to spiritual channeling with his clients.

Markowitz believes chronic pain can signal underlying emotional or spiritual concerns. He turned to alternative therapies when Western medicine failed to alleviate his pain. And as a man who actually has walked across a bed of hot coals, Markowitz has developed an interesting perspective on pain. “Any situation including pain can be a burden or an opportunity. Pain can be a friend, if we look at it as an opportunity,” he said.

For Markowitz, getting to the emotional root of pain can be the key to unlocking it. He said he had an extraordinarily successful session with a client who said she had suffered from sciatica for 40 years. With Markowitz’s help, the woman came to realize that her pain was associated with feelings of responsibility, tied to her relationship with her daughter. By the end of the session, Markowitz said, the woman said 80 percent of her pain was gone.

In diagnosing chronic pain, Markowitz said, patients and physicians can get “locked in” to a certain treatment plan. “There are people who really need medication. However, the pain doesn’t go away. It just gets blocked with the medication. I believe this can set off a chain reaction, and a downward spiral of ill-health.

“If someone’s experiencing pain for decades, it seems sensible that we should look at other types of treatment to address the pain,” he said.

Markowitz said he emphasizes personal empowerment, and that healing can come fairly quickly when a client is mentally ready. “The last thing I want is to see a client for six months,” he said.

High-Tech vs. Alternative Treatments

These sorts of nontraditional therapies are being embraced by more medical practitioners, but many people still believe a pill or injection is the only way to deal with serious pain.

“Americans have been seduced by technology. It’s exciting and sexy and incredibly profitable. But there is no treatment that is as effective as a multi-treatment rehab program,” said the Cleveland Clinic’s Covington.

“Cognitive therapies, for example, cost less and carry far less risk than surgery and pharmaceutical treatments, but tend to get short shrift and government and insurance companies often don’t cover it,” he said.

Covington believes that patients and doctors too often want quick and easy fixes to a problem. “You can write a prescription in 30 seconds and the patient can take a pill in 30 seconds. What we see happening is Americans spending more for health care, but they may be getting less health.”

Source:ABC News

According to me our human body is a super computer and whenever there is a trouble in any part of the body the computer gives a signal which is pain.In our house we have smoke detecter which starts whistling as and when there is smoke which may cause harm.Our normal duty is to find the cause of the smoke first,stop it and then of course we stop the whistling sound.If we are busy only to stop the whistling sound, the house may get burnt. Similarly whenever there is pain in any part of the body, we should first stop the cause of the pain instead of taking some painkeeler(which may have several bad side effects) and stop the pain.Alternative medicine always tries to see the cause of the pain and try to remove the cause and at the same time stops the pain.

Categories
Featured

Stop Anger from Taking Over

[amazon_link asins=’B00AY8Y3KG,B01A1RFQ0U,B009LKHBAM,8449319730,B018LU6TH8′ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’febba209-6135-11e7-a141-edf0ec843ee4′]

Anger is the emotion that seems to get people into the most trouble with teachers, parents, family, friends and police.
Too much anger fuels huge problems. Ever see someone having “road rage?” It’s scary to watch or experience and it’s very dangerous. Someone who gets that angry is out of control, is showing terrible judgment and is placing his own and other’s lives in great jeopardy.

CLICK & SEE

Anger occurs when frustration is high. In moderation it is fine. It warns us that something is wrong and needs to be addressed. It often arises from a sense of injustice, a feeling that something is very unfair. It is a great motivator: sometimes for the good, as when a person uses anger to take constructive action and does not lose control; and sometimes it’s bad, as when a driver loses control and acts with reckless hostility.

We all live in a frustrating world. We all need to learn how to control or direct the frustration, which can quickly turn into anger. Temper tantrums are only for very young children. When you feel yourself becoming too angry, or on the brink of acting on your anger, you might:
1. Try the old “count to ten” technique: it often works by delaying action.

2. Think about the fear or frustration that caused the other person to act in a way that upset you.

3 Try to feel empathy for the person rather than anger. Sometimes compassion calms hostility.

4. If you or someone (or something) you care about is being treated unfairly, try to offer a solution that makes the situation more fair.

Sometimes simply walking away is a great alternative to acting out your anger.
That takes a lot of poise and maturity—and it shows a lot of poise and maturity, too.
Anger doesn’t have to be a bad emotion. When kept in check, anger can inspire great writing, great athletic performance or great social progress. But restraint and good sense are the keys to having anger be constructive rather than destructive. It can be either.

Source:www.teengrowth.com

Categories
Positive thinking

A Warm Refuge

By the time we reach adulthood, many of us have had the good fortune to have at least one best friend. If we have moved around or changed our life situation repeatedly, we may be lucky enough to have had several. The best friend relationship is often our earliest intimate peer relationship, and it can be a source of great warmth and connection throughout our lives. The details of best friendship change as we grow up and grow older, but the heart of it remains the same. Our best friends are a warm refuge in which we feel free to be fully ourselves, to share our deepest secrets, to rest when we are tired, to celebrate when we are happy-a place in which we feel utterly welcome to give and receive that most precious of all gifts, love.

Most intimate relationships hit bumps from time to time, and one of the hallmarks of an enduring best friendship is its ability to ride out the turbulence and remain intact even as it faces changes. Our best friends are those who manage to love us through all of our transitions, as we do the same for them. We find ways to embrace and appreciate the differences that set us apart and offer love and support no matter what. We allow each other to be exactly as we are at a given moment, even as we allow each other to change over time. In this way, best friends sometimes feel like family. We know we will stick together regardless of where our individual paths lead.

We may be on the phone with our best friends every day, or we may not have spoken for a year, yet we know that our bond will be strong and immediate when we do connect. This bond ties us together even when we are apart and draws us blissfully back into the warm refuge of each other’s company when our paths bring us together again.

Source:Daily Om

Categories
Featured

Tips for Exercising in the Cold

[amazon_link asins=’B01K998LUW,B01LX9T134,B009R9OPSI,B016XKDZNO,B01LN7NMKI,B00SCFKG2M,B01FUDXQL6,B073PQFF3P,B00ZQU5NB0′ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’7819f51c-6134-11e7-aa24-eb26cf1fa6f0′]

When the temperature drops, you need to adjust your exercise program. Here are 3 ways to keep moving.Follow these tips to stay safe when it’s cold out:

1. Layer it on. The secret to exercising in cold weather is dressing properly, preferably in lightweight layers you can add or remove as needed and as weather conditions shift. A thermal layer next to your skin will wick moisture away. Add a wool layer for insulation, then one that resists wind and water, but “breathes” so that perspiration doesn’t build up. Clothes with zippers let you cool off during a workout as well as adjust to changes in the weather. A hat prevents loss of body heat through the top of your head. For warmth, mittens are better than gloves. On bitter, cold days, you should also cover up your face.

2. Drink plenty of fluids — you perspire exercising in the cold too. But don’t drink alcohol; it dilates your blood vessels, causing you to lose heat more rapidly.

3. Do your warmup, stretching, and cooldown inside. Start your workout facing into the wind so that you will work hardest when you are fresh and will avoid having it blow in your perspiring face and body on your return. Don’t stand around in your damp clothes afterward; go inside right away. Finally, when it’s icy underfoot, avoid the risk of a fall by working out indoors.

Source:Reader’s Digest.

Categories
Ailmemts & Remedies

Hepatitis

[amazon_link asins=’B00PKKR9NG,B003O1RCO4,B01MAZNANO,B00B1GO238,B009W6VCCI,156924541X,B06XRXVHT5,B001AG2QK0,0312263368′ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’1ec1f21f-6134-11e7-980d-9d01eb2e2ad6′]

[amazon_link asins=’B00157KNS6,B005FSN8YW,0323428037,1533230250,B06WLLZVLH,B00JECOAUG,142141757X,B005OK3HGK,0306824779′ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’f348a468-6133-11e7-9862-ab115b80ed70′]

Knowing the ABCs of this liver disorder can save your life. Though some hepatitis viruses cause an acute but temporary flulike illness, others can produce a chronic, festering liver infection. Natural therapies are designed to protect the liver and boost your immune system.
Symptoms:-

Fatigue.
Fever.
Loss of appetite.
Nausea and vomiting.
Aching muscles or joints.
Abdominal discomfort, pain, or swelling.
Jaundice (yellowish tinge of skin and whites of eyes).
Dark urine and pale stools.

When to Call Your Doctor :
If you think you have been exposed to hepatitis, either through contaminated food or water or by sexual contact with an infected person.
If you develop lingering flulike symptoms. During its acute phase, viral hepatitis so closely resembles the flu that it is frequently misdiagnosed.
If you develop jaundice or other symptoms of hepatitis.
Reminder: If you have a medical condition, talk to your doctor before taking supplements.

What It Is :
Hepatitis is an inflammation of the liver. Of the two forms — acute and chronic — the first is the easier to treat. Hepatitis can be caused by any of six viruses, called A, B, C, D, E, and G. Hepatitis A, the most common, is highly contagious; it produces acute flulike symptoms but usually no long-lasting damage. Hepatitis B and C, on the other hand, can linger for years, often causing few or no symptoms but in some cases leading to irreversible liver scarring (cirrhosis) or liver cancer. Types D, E, and G are rare. All forms of hepatitis attack the liver, impairing its ability to process sugars and carbohydrates, to secrete fat-digesting bile, and to rid the body of toxins and waste. But the chronic forms are the most dangerous because they may ultimately lead to liver failure.

What Causes It:
Whether contracted through contaminated food or water (type A), or through blood transfusions, infected hypodermic needles, or sexual intercourse (types B and C), hepatitis is most often caused by a viral infection. Certain medications, toxic chemicals, or years of alcohol abuse can also result in hepatitis. Rarely, an autoimmune dysfunction — in which the immune system attacks the body’s own tissues — is to blame. And sometimes, no cause can be determined.

How Supplements Can Help :
Conventional medicines have achieved only limited success in treating hepatitis, particularly the more dangerous chronic form. The natural therapies listed in the chart are designed to protect and strengthen the liver and boost general immunity. They should be used together, along with conventional drugs, until symptoms of acute hepatitis subside. Benefits may be noticed within a week. For chronic disease, take them long term.

What Else You Can Do :
Watch what you eat and drink when traveling in areas where sanitation is poor and disease rates high. Have only bottled water and cooked foods.
Refrain from alcohol, especially during and for a month after an acute illness, or until your doctor says your liver function tests are normal.
Make sure disposable or sterilized needles are used during acupuncture, body piercing, tattooing, and similar procedures.
Vaccines against both hepatitis A and hepatitis B are available. Ask your doctor if you should have one or both.

Supplement Recommendations:-

Vitamin C
Vitamin E
Milk Thistle
Licorice
Lipotropic Combination
Alpha-lipoic Acid
Dandelion Root

Vitamin C
Dosage: 1,000 mg 3 times a day.
Comments: Reduce dose if diarrhea develops.

Vitamin E
Dosage: 400 IU a day.
Comments: Check with your doctor if taking anticoagulant drugs.

Milk Thistle
Dosage: 150 mg 3 times a day.
Comments: Standardized to contain at least 70% silymarin.

Licorice
Dosage: 200 mg 3 times a day for a maximum of 10 days.
Comments: Standardized to contain 22% glycyrrhizin or glycyrrhizinic acid; can raise blood pressure. Don’t use DGL form.

Lipotropic Combination
Dosage: 2 pills twice a day.
Comments: Should contain milk thistle, choline, inositol, and other ingredients.

Alpha-lipoic Acid
Dosage: 200 mg 3 times a day.
Comments: Can be taken with or without food.

Dandelion Root
Dosage: 500 mg standardized extract twice a day.
Comments: May be contained in lipotropic combination formulas.
Disclaimer: This information is not meant to be a substitute for professional medical advise or help. It is always best to consult with a Physician about serious health concerns. This information is in no way intended to diagnose or prescribe remedies.This is purely for educational purpose.

Source:Your Guide to Vitamins, Minerals, and Herbs (Reader’s Digest)

css.php