6 ways to use your mind to control pain
Meditation with guided imagery, which often involves
imagining yourself in a restful environment, may reduce your need for pain
medication.
Relaxation, meditation, positive thinking, and other
mind-body techniques can help reduce your need for pain medication.
Drugs are very good at getting rid of pain, but they often
have unpleasant, and even serious, side effects when used for a long time. If
you have backache, fibromyalgia, arthritis, or other chronic pain that
interferes with your daily life, you may be looking for a way to relieve
discomfort that doesn't involve drugs. Some age-old techniques—including
meditation and yoga—as well as newer variations may help reduce your need for
pain medication.
Research suggests that because pain involves both the mind
and the body, mind-body therapies may have the capacity to alleviate pain by
changing the way you perceive it. How you feel pain is influenced by your
genetic makeup, emotions, personality, and lifestyle. It's also influenced by
past experience. If you've been in pain for a while, your brain may have
rewired itself to perceive pain signals even after the signals aren't being
sent anymore.
The Benson-Henry Institute for Mind-Body Medicine at
Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital specializes in helping people
learn techniques to alleviate stress, anxiety, and pain. Dr. Ellen Slawsby, an
assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School who works
with patients at the Benson-Henry Institute, suggests learning several
techniques so that you can settle on the ones that work best for you. "I
tend to think of these techniques as similar to flavors in an ice cream store.
Depending on your mood, you might want a different flavor of ice cream—or a
different technique," Dr. Slawsby says. "Practicing a combination of
mind-body skills increases the effectiveness of pain relief."
The following techniques can help you take your mind off the
pain
and may help to override established pain signals.
1. Deep breathing.
It's central to all the techniques, so deep breathing is the one to learn
first. Inhale deeply, hold for a few seconds, and exhale. To help you focus,
you can use a word or phrase to guide you. For example, you may want to breathe
in "peace" and breathe out "tension." There are also
several apps for smartphones and tablets that use sound and images to help you
maintain breathing rhythms.
2. Eliciting the
relaxation response. An antidote to the stress response, which pumps up
heart rate and puts the body's systems on high alert, the relaxation response
turns down your body's reactions. After closing your eyes and relaxing all your
muscles, concentrate on deep breathing. When thoughts break through, say
"refresh," and return to the breathing repetition. Continue doing
this for 10 to 20 minutes. Afterward, sit quietly for a minute or two while
your thoughts return. Then open your eyes and sit quietly for another minute.
3. Meditation with
guided imagery. Begin deep breathing, paying attention to each breath. Then
listen to calming music or imagine being in a restful environment. If you find
your mind wandering, say "refresh," and call the image back into
focus.
4. Mindfulness.
Pick any activity you enjoy—reading poetry, walking in nature, gardening, or
cooking—and become fully immersed in it. Notice every detail of what you are
doing and how your senses and emotions are responding. Practice bringing
mindfulness to all aspects of your life.
5. Yoga and Tai chi.
these mind-body exercises incorporate breathe control, meditation, and
movements to stretch and strengthen muscles. Videos and apps can help you get
started. If you enroll in a yoga or tai chi class at a gym or health club, your
health insurance may subsidize the cost.
6. Positive thinking.
"When we're ill, we often tend to become fixated on what we aren't able to
do. Retraining your focus on what you can do instead of what you can't will
give you a more accurate view of yourself and the world at large," says
Dr. Slawsby. She advises keeping a journal in which you list all the things you
are thankful for each day. "We may have limitations, but that doesn't mean
we aren't still whole human beings."
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