Pain is very complex. Because of this there is no single solution for all pains. Pain, like a person, is a unique interwoven product of the body, mind, and spirit as well as your environment and community. When you truly start to look at chronic pain for what it is, I’m not sure how anyone can reasonably expect a medication or a surgery to unravel and repair the contributing roots of it. Ongoing research into effective pain management tools has narrowed in on key tools that are consistently shown to be helpful and effective - Education, Understanding, and Movement.
Read MoreIn the April newsletter we introduced the concept that the pain we perceive can have no relationship to tissue damage. Particularly if normal tissue healing time frames have occurred and you are now experiencing what is considered to be chronic pain. The best way to begin to understand how this can be possible is to explore the history of pain theories. While some of you might find a historical recap unexciting it is important to learn more about our evolving understanding of pain.
Read MoreNo one plans to get hurt when they wake up in the morning. It just happens. Sometimes we have an amazing story to tell of how it happened and sometimes it can be as simple as stepping off the curb to cross the street. In either case, this injury and the resulting pain starts with an experience.
Read MoreAs we acknowledge ourselves to have a past, present, and future, so too should we acknowledge that pain has one as well. If we take the time to get to know it, where it was born, how it has grown, why it exists, we will begin to form a sense of understanding and from that platform compassion and empathy.
Read MoreMotor control and movement quality can be permanently altered by injury, pain, repetitive stress, and life changes. When we experience pain, even low levels of it, we will adapt how we move to avoid it. Sometimes the changes are consciously made but more commonly they are subconscious. While a change in movement may be necessary in the early protective phases of an injury or after surgery, if maintained, this altered movement can contribute to poor recovery, continued disability, chronic pain, and decreased quality of life.
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