Showing posts with label research on pain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label research on pain. Show all posts

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Beyond the Pain Barrier


Beyond the Pain Barrier

Introduction

Pain, particularly chronic pain, is much more than a neurological response, a simple cause-and-effect. It is a complex physical, emotional, intellectual, environmental and social response to damage, disease or distress. While most pain becomes evident with nerve or tissue damage, the origins of some pain may be emotional, intellectual or even spiritual.

Pain is a common human experience and yet we don't really know what someone else's pain is like. Pain is personal; we all feel and respond to it differently and our tolerance levels vary. What is painful for one might be dismissed as insignificant by another. Long-term pain, or chronic pain, can be a lonely experience and sufferers can feel isolated and powerless.

Perhaps the most destructive aspect of chronic pain is the way it steadily erodes and fragments the life force of the person in pain. The pain sufferer can lose a sense of being in charge of their life, becoming reactive and increasingly powerless, devitalised and demoralised. By its very nature pain can affect all aspects of the sufferer's life - their relationship with themselves and with others, their finances and, if they are able to work, their work performance.

In the range of help available to the chronic pain sufferer, there is a vast resource that is potentially and consistently the most powerful of all. This is the mind. In combination with appropriate therapies, the healing power of the mind gives us access to enduring, effective pain management.


Pain after Spinal Cord Injury - Chronic Pain

There were 4 of us gathered by chance - all 4 of us, we were surprised to learn, had suffered an extreme injury of our backs.

A guy in his 30's said, "I don't mind the pain. It reminds me that I'm alive."

That wasn't my attitude about the pain - mine was, "This is not acceptable."

All of us make it through another day the best we can. Smiling on the outside, while inside we might be screaming in pain. We deal with it in our own ways. Grin and Bear it comes to mind.