Discover a Better Way to a Better You — (615) 310-1491

Body & Mind ConsultingBody & Mind ConsultingBody & Mind ConsultingBody & Mind Consulting
  • Home
  • Body
  • Mind
  • Products
    • Amare for Wellness
  • Learning
    • Blog
    • Ebooks
  • About
    • Our Team
    • Our Story
    • Client Testimonials
  • Consultation

Is stress causing your chronic pain?

    Home Body Is stress causing your chronic pain?
    NextPrevious

    Is stress causing your chronic pain?

    By BodyMindConsulting | Body, Mind | 0 comment | 10 February, 2020 | 0

    For as long as there has been civilization, humans have needed healers – for injury, for sickness, and for emotional distress. Even ancient health and wellness experts noted the psychological effects of emotional distress and its effect on the body when treating their patients, prescribing calming teas and the company of loved ones as commonly as pharmaceutical medicines. 

    Modern physicians are also well aware of how negative emotions can decrease physical wellness. In 1936, Dr. Hans Selye published an article in the journal Nature that described how stress induces hormonal changes in the body that over time can lead to many chronic diseases, including ulcers, high blood pressure, arteriosclerosis, arthritis, kidney disease, and allergic reactions. 

    The mechanisms interconnecting mental states and emotions with the physical body are a fascinating system of interwoven cellular communication. When a person is acutely distressed, the stressor sets off a cascade of physical effects in the body known as the “fight or flight” response. These changes include increased muscle tension and heart rate/respiration, decreased blood flow to extremities, suppressed immune response, intense digestion and acid production, and stalled healing and maintenance of the cells. These physiological changes are adaptive if the stressor is acute—being chased by a bear, for instance. These changes give us the strength and speed to escape danger.  Unfortunately, when the body maintains a level of being on “high alert” for extended periods (think chronic stress) these chronic adaptations foster physical illness in the body. 

    Clearly, mental wellness is a huge component of a healthy physical self. So we must ask ourselves – why is there such aversion to getting help when we know that there is a physical and emotional health connection?  

    Research shows the hesitancy to seek emotional health comes down to stigma. Many chronic pain clients whom we see as a referral from their primary care or pain management physician’s first thought is “I’m not crazy!”

    Of course, the person isn’t crazy – all people suffer emotional turmoil at some points in their lives. But to endure these problematic times without the help of a trained professional only serves to bring more damage to the physical self as mental health declines. 

    The most important thing to take away from this research is this; if your mind is working optimally, so will your body, and if your body is working optimally so will your mind.  Working to sustain good mental health is no different than maintaining good physical health; Just as someone may need medication for chronic health conditions (diabetes and insulin, for instance), the same might be needed for an adjustment to neurotransmitters to achieve a more balanced mental wellness; Just as someone may benefit from physical therapy for physical health condition, the benefit from mental health counseling can be extremely beneficial to overall health. The balance of mental and physical health works both ways; If someone is physically ill, the illness itself can cause psychological distress that can be diagnosed as depression or anxiety. Even if the distress is caused by the illness, as can occur after an acute injury, addressing and reducing the emotional distress involved can improve healing. 

    In conclusion, if you want to optimize your physical wellbeing, including finding relief from pain, you need to address the psychological as well as the physical component, as both elements are vital to general wellness. Decades of research exploring this mind/body connection have continued to confirm the value improving physical health and reducing the need for other medical interventions, including pharmaceuticals, when both elements are addressed. 

    To learn more, proven mind/body interventions include various types of psychotherapy (cognitive behavioral therapy, energy psychology and EMDR), meditation, relaxation training, hypnosis, biofeedback and neurofeedback. Schedule a free consultation! 

    No tags.

    BodyMindConsulting

    More posts by BodyMindConsulting

    Related Post

    • ADHD: How to overcome the virtual learning nightmare

      By BodyMindConsulting | 0 comment

      It has been months since a pandemic lockdown started. At the beginning of the pandemic school-age children and adult/college age students with ADHD noticed benefits (self-guided pace, movement breaks) and drawbacks (no one-on-one interaction, heavyRead more

    • New Year, New You!

      By BodyMindConsulting | 0 comment

      Most of us know that about 90% of New Year’s resolutions never actually get resolved. And it’s clear why: We all have habits that we fall back on; that’s why they’re habits. But there’s noRead more

    • What is the mind-body connection?

      By BodyMindConsulting | 0 comment

      Consider this; well-educated, slender, and attractive, Sara seems to have it all. She is an MD, has an interesting career, and good friends. From an outsider’s perspective, she almost seems perfect. So everything’s great, right?Read more

    • Improve your overall health through the mind-body connection

      By BodyMindConsulting | 0 comment

      You may have heard the expression: “healthy mind; healthy body.” It sounds like important wisdom, but what does that phrase really mean? For years it has been theorized that physical and mental health are connected; modern scienceRead more

    • Fibromyalgia Symptoms: They’re Not All in Your Head

      By BodyMindConsulting | 0 comment

      Many clients with pain symptoms come to my office with this complaint; they don’t feel heard by their primary care or chronic pain physician.  Instead, they get things like: “The tests are negative, so thereRead more

    NextPrevious

    Recent Blog Posts

    • How to Cultivate an Attitude of Gratitude
    • COVID Co-Parenting Plan Checklist: Important Issues To Consider
    • Chronic Pain and Fibromyalgia Symptoms: They’re Not All in Your Head
    • ADHD: How to overcome the virtual learning nightmare
    • Pandemic fatigue: Strategies to reclaim motivation and energy
    • Avoiding crutches in the time of COVID-19
    • Is stress causing your chronic pain?
    • New Year, New You!
    • How not to blow your diet at a fantastic party
    • What is the mind-body connection?

    Past Blog Posts

    • December 2021
    • August 2021
    • November 2020
    • October 2020
    • May 2020
    • February 2020
    • January 2020
    • December 2019
    • November 2019
    • October 2019
    • September 2019
    • July 2019
    • June 2019
    • May 2019
    • April 2019
    • March 2019
    • July 2015

    CONTACT US

    Phone:

    (615) 310-1491

    Address:

    2611 Salem Creek Dr

    Murfreesboro, TN 37128

    EMAIL NEWSLETTER

    Start a journey of body and mind improvement through content we share via email.

    FOLLOW US

    Click below to be taken to our secure, HIPAA compliant portal where you can register and complete paperwork in advance of an upcoming appointment.

    Check in for your appointment
    • About Us
    • Blog
    • Client Testimonials
    Copyright 2019 Body Mind Consulting. All rights reserved.
    • About Us
      • Client Testimonials
      • Our Story
      • Our Team
    • Amare
    • Amare for Wellness
    • Bellame
    • Body
      • Upcoming Events: Yoga Classes
    • Carousel Blog
    • Get a Consultation
    • Home
    • Learning Resources
      • Blog
      • Ebooks
      • Videos
    • Mind
      • Classes
    • Sandbox
    • Thanks
    Body & Mind Consulting