This is a continuation on last month's article on Psychosomatic Pain.
Emotions and Pain
Chronic pain can be tied to abuse as a child, or even as an adult {source}. In fact, the brain processes physical pain and mental pain in a very similar manner, making the correlation between the two entirely feasible. Without proper coping mechanisms, emotional pain can easily manifest itself into physical pain. Likewise, physical pain can lend itself to emotional discontent. In many cases, chronic pain and depression can be found living in a parasitic harmony, each feeding off the other.
In her book ‘You Can Heal Your Life,’’ Lousie L. Hays lists the probable emotional cause for many different ailments and suggest affirmations to solve them. It provides an interesting insight on how working through emotional pain can have a positive impact on physical pain.
Neurotransmitters and Pain
Neurotransmitters are responsible for delivering messages from your brain to your body and vise versa. They play vital roles in physical, mental and emotional reactions. Much like the hormone imbalances discussed in the adrenal fatigue section, neurotransmitter imbalances can impact physical pain levels and emotional wellbeing.
Neurotransmitters work as filters in the communication network of the brain. If the pain management filter is not working effectively, it can cause or worsen chronic pain.
Solving the Problem
The first step to solving any pain problem is trusting yourself. Trust that there is a way to solve your problem and that you are worth the effort required to get there. You must be strong enough to seek out physicians and other healers who are able to help you.
Adrenal fatigue, emotional stress and neurotransmitter imbalances can all be helped by lifestyle choices including nutritional changes and stress management techniques. This may require adding things to your diet, finding a therapist you can communicate with, taking up a new exercise routine, and/or treating yourself to monthly massages.
Psychosomatic/psychogenic pain is very real. Often times it is downplayed because of the difficulty in finding a physical cause. A bruise hurts when you press on it. It is an obvious physical pain with an obvious physical cause. Just because the cause of a pain cannot be seen, visually does not make it less relevant. Over time, pain that is caused by hormone imbalance, emotional struggle or neurotransmitter dysfunction can cause obvious physical problems (tightened muscles can move bones, generating disc, bursa and ligament problems to name a few). As many of you know, at this point in the progression, problems become much more difficult to fix, so why not start trying to solve them now?
{Sources: Pain Center of Orlando, NaturalNews.Com, National Sleep Foundation, NCBI, Psychology Today, LA Times, Wikipedia, IWR.Com}
*Sore No More! is not a licensed physician. All information on this blog is researched by our staff and is subject to inaccuracies. No information found here should be used in the place of advice from your doctor. *
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