Persistent Pain

We all feel pain from time to time. When someone injures themselves, specific nerves recognise this as pain, which in turn triggers the body’s repair mechanism. As the problem resolves, the pain tends to improve and usually disappears within 3-6 months. This type of pain could be argued to be beneficial: if it hurts, you are likely to try and avoid doing whatever it is that has caused the pain in the future, so you are less likely to injure yourself in that way again.

Occasionally the pain continues even after tissue healing has finished. When pain continues after this point, it becomes known as persistent (or is sometimes referred to as chronic) pain. This type of pain is not beneficial and is a result of the nerves becoming over-sensitised, which means that a painful response will be triggered much more easily than normal. This can be unpleasant, but doesn’t necessarily mean that you are doing yourself any harm simply by moving. You could think of this as a sensitive car alarm that goes off in error when someone walks past.

Persistent pain is very common and effects over 14 million people in the UK alone. It often does not respond to conventional medical interventions and needs a different kind of approach, but there are many things that you can do to manage your pain yourself with the support of your osteopath, your family and loved-ones. Keeping active, performing exercises and stretches can help, learning to pace your activities so that you don’t trigger a flare-up of your pain as well as setting goals and priorities are all very important and can help you to maintain a fulfilling lifestyle.

For more information on how to manage your persistent pain please contact me.

Befriending the Inner Critic

The inner critic is a powerful force and sadly it is all too familiar in today’s culture. It appears in many guises but frequently as self criticism, shame, disconnection and difficulty in expressing ourselves. It saps us of confidence and energy, triggering conflict and misunderstanding, and brings untold amounts of misery. It has a powerful effect on our body and on our health often shaping our posture from the physical hold it has on us.

Held within our bodies these contraction patterns interfere with the function of our breathing and digestion further impacting on our health. Classically the person with a strong inner critic may feel slightly hunched almost as if they’re being put upon by an external force.

I’ve copied a link here to one of Rob Burbea’s talks given at Gaia House – a well known and respected retreat centre that I’m blessed to live a short distance away from. It offers a detailed and deeply insightful exploration of why and how this has become so insidious in Western culture but more importantly it offers a possible path of what can be done to help erode the habits of mind that can at times seems unrelentingly imprisoning and suffocating. His insights draw heavily on the Buddhist tradition of mindfulness and befriending these darker elements of ourselves by bring a sense of kindness, warmth, awareness and understanding that can not only free us from our own suffering but can also improve our creativity, connection and confidence. This is likely to then ripple out away from us benefitted the people around us, most likely to those close to us that we hold dear.

https://www.dharmaseed.org/teacher/210/talk/9815/

As an osteopath I’m not only concerned with releasing people from pain in their bodies. I’m also interested in trying to help him deal with other forms of pain within their own lives in whatever form it takes. I’m also hoping to somehow reduce their burden. When our burden (both physically and emotionally) is lighter we put ourselves under less strain, we have more energy, tensions can dissipate and we stand taller.

During my own practice of meditation I’m often aware how emotional knots manifest in the body and in those lucky moments when release occurs a greater sense of freedom and opening can be reflected in the body, freeing me of low back pain, tension around the shoulders, holding in the jaw and neck and the other familiar places where we store tensions.