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~ Musings and Inspirations towards Holistic Health

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Tag Archives: Breathing

Mental Health Day

10 Monday Oct 2016

Posted by mindbodyplusme in Holistic Health

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Breathing, Healing, Health, Mental Health, Psychology

Today is the national day when we address Mental Health issues. To limit this to one day I think is futile because as I’ve said many times, our mental health can change so quickly. One day we are fine and flowing well, the next we can experience something or our grip on the mental balance we have, slips and our mental health hits a low. It is a fluid state of who we are. For most people it remains within a health scale of balance, for other people the balance can be a bit more of a yoyo, and it does take some coping with.

Either way, our mental health is precious and needs to be treated with great love, care and understanding. Give it respect, space, acceptance and enough time of calm for it to process the data it constantly receives. It is a beautiful facet of who we are as individuals and varies as much as our physical bodies do. Be mindful, literally, of how your mental health state is, honesty is the best policy to adopt, because the mind is with you for every second and every breath of your body. We know much about the scientific workings of our brains and minds, but the vast majority of it and its abilities are out of reach of scientific assessment. That doesn’t make it not real, nor important, to me it means the opposite, it’s the hidden elements of what makes us, us. There are hidden abilities that intuition and instinct tap into, it’s fascinating don’t you think?!

If you have a bruise, a cut, a broken limb you automatically get sympathy and consideration because they are visible. So someone with a broken leg set in plaster is given special consideration for the duration of the plaster, and even after, the rehabilitation time is all given acceptance and understanding. Mental health is invisible to the naked eye, so someone’s mental state cannot be seen. If a person paints on a facade, a smile and jovial persona, why would you assume or even consider how they really are. People who suffer from fluctuating mental wellness, are often masters of disguise, often to their detriment. Mental health is better thought of today than in years gone by, but still it is not easy for some people to express they are struggling mentally. It is not expected to be the case, we are expected to be mentally strong all the time, irrespective of how we live our lives and bombard our consciousness with imagery, data etc. It is precious, it is delicate and it can be damaged and bruised, we just can’t outwardly see the injuries.

Take a moment to assess your own mental health, and then think about family, friends, people around you, and just spend a few minutes thinking what they’ve been through and see if you can see a veil of disguise as to how they are coping. Whether their persona has changed but until you stop and think, you haven’t really noticed. Most of us, at some stage struggle and a sympathetic ear of someone willing to spend a little time focused on you, can be the best and biggest remedy out there. That offering of help, listening, sharing can lift a ton weight off someones shoulders, and to endorse we all struggle at times means that it’s not a stage of failure. We cannot be strong all the time, but we can attain a safe zone of balance which encompasses ups and downs – levels we know we can cope with by using either time out, breathing techniques, counselling, chilling out, de-stressing, supplementation, and many other natural mediums. People perceive weakness in many forms, but our mental health does dictate our quality of life to a great degree, so it is as important to keep healthy as our physical wellness is.

All our mental states are real, so if the mental state is in a bad, negative way it is important to recognise it and find ways to help balance it into a more positive vibe to achieve optimum holistic health.

Druantia

 

Those Questions . . .

01 Saturday Oct 2016

Posted by mindbodyplusme in Ankylosing Spondylitis AS, Holistic Health

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Acceptance, Breathing, Healing, Health, Holistic Health, Inspiration, Mental Health, Psychology, Thoughts

Everybody at some stage in their life gets a persistent, an ever-swirling question that resonates in their minds, that just doesn’t go away. One of them I think we all have and probably do have is “what’s it all about, me, life?”

Most of us find a purpose in life and that can fluctuate as you live your life, some people don’t. Some people are fulfilled with the different roles they play, like being a parent, then possibly a grandparent, the roles continue but there is a common thread of being a parent. Some find their fulfilment with the job or career they have. Others have a defining moment when something they do, create, invent has a dramatic effect that literally can define someone’s life. There are numerous ways of evaluating your life and the purpose of it, because surely there must be a purpose for us existing as individuals . . .

What happens to the many people who do not have that purpose, that defining moment or cannot think of a reason they are here? I’ve spoken before about mental strength and the hidden depths to our conscious and subconscious minds yet to be understood. In my life I have come across a vast array of people’s take on their ‘purpose’ and it is amazing the diversity of what fulfils people’s expectations and needs. For some, it is a lifetime quest and their life leads to an awakening that suddenly makes all the pieces fit together to create a scenario that offers the answer. Other people find a niche that gives them all they dream of; it is truly an immeasurable calculus, so the question that resonates is as individual as we are and can change at different chapters of our lives.

Often people get physical problems caused by a psychological disturbance or state. When you start treating a physical condition, the mental/emotional imbalances show themselves. Sometimes you know from the start that the problem is not physical, and it is just the manifestation causing the person to find treatment. The body stores our emotions, stresses and worries in the tissue and joints of our body. Tense shoulders, tension headaches, some so called IBS when you’re anxious, sleepless nights with a whirling mind fuelled by worry etc. When you start releasing the muscles and joints, emotions often flow; and many many a time, patients release during or after a treatment whilst still in the room. In Yoga too, the different breaths, stretches all release inner often hidden emotions, that when released, reveal a deeper labyrinth of layers to the true state of the body and mind. To take something at face value, in my opinion, is often a naive stance to ever adopt when treating patients.

To treat holistically means you have to be aware of these hidden layers, and have the ability to deal with them when they are revealed. You are taking that patient into your care, and you cannot leave them exposed and vulnerable post treatment.  Sadly though, many of today’s ‘practitioners’ do just that.

When the body stops working as we perceive to be normal, questions flood the mind; ‘why’ ‘why me,’ ‘what have I done wrong’. Sometimes there are literally no answers to these questions, but some people cannot stop the questions rattling round their minds. Part of helping people is to listen, be patient, and show care and understanding without being judgemental.

That question, the one that comes back time after time, often when we are at a low state of mind, can be obsessively consuming. If a patient has a specific problem that, really to overcome it involves changes, be it dietary, physically, emotionally and those changes are not addressed, then on a return appointment, I am usually met with “I don’t know why its come back again.” Well, if something needs change to improve the status quo, and the change isn’t made, then the problem won’t go away. It has to be addressed at some stage; which stage is down to the individual and their own circumstances. Advice and guidance can help in the explanation of how the body and mind are assimilating the imbalance or problem, but no amount of counselling will resolve the scenario until the individual accepts and takes responsibility for whatever needs to be done for themselves. So many questions that resonate in our heads, and many I have heard over the years, can be resolved by change. There are still some questions though, that plague some people.

There are many a time when counselling during a treatment, I question the patient, why do they need to answer that question;  what purpose would it serve to the here and now; if the answer was given, how would it better their situation. Some people try to find answers to questions that have no answers, in the hope, and often convince themselves the answers are the only way, to make their lives better. These sorts of questions can be very destructive to body and mind.  This state of mind can be fragile, and therefore delicate. We are all different, and sometimes you can make it obvious that the search of some answers is futile, because the answer is only relevant to whoever is offering it; it wouldn’t answer to your own satisfaction, only create other questions. We can laugh at ourselves, trying to solve the questions of millennium, ‘what is this life all about’; there are no definitive answers, only the opinions of other people, and why should their opinion be any more correct that someone else’s that state the opposite, or indeed your own instinctive, intuitive opinion? No one knows!

The power of our minds is immeasurable, and as such no one can really tell or know the depths of another’s. So if something is playing on someone’s mind, causing distress, then it is real. It may seem insignificant to us, but to that individual it is something of importance and needs treating as such. Sometimes the questions breed uncontrollably in the mind, you no sooner ask yourself one question and half a dozen others rapidly follow it; spiralling that potentially becomes mentally all consuming. Fear, anxiety, loneliness, unhappiness, paranoia; there are dozens of mental states which start from the simple asking of a question that has no answer. Physical conditions can and do manifest from such mental distress. A question that cannot be satisfied no matter how you try or reword it, the fact is, there are simply no answers to some questions, they do not exist.

Questions like, ‘what’s my purpose for being here?’ being left unanswered can have dramatic consequences. One of low self-esteem, lack of confidence, depression, confusion, disassociation and often tragically can have suicidal consequences. When life cannot be justified because of a lack of answers to the questions, they often resolve themselves to the fact they are worthless, and they can resort to very distressing acts, self harming for example. So whilst we all experience the repetition of a question in our minds, if that repetition gets out of control it can destroy life, literally.

I don’t think anyone is exempt from questions that test us. As someone who was unable to have children, I have had my share of unanswerable questions, and what my purpose for being here is; questions about my body and the condition it has; questions about the twists and turns my life has taken, at times from circumstances not of my making nor of my choosing. I can find some answers, but if I am brutally honest, I have to shut down some questions that I know I cannot find an answer to, otherwise they would start burning a hole in me, become destructive to the life I have. There is sadness in not having the peace of mind answers would bring, but as I’ve mentioned in other posts, we have a vast array of emotions and feelings, and we have to have opposites to balance the scales of mental health. There is a narrow line and some days it is hard to stay on the right side of that line, when you feel tired, fed-up, resentful, a general lethargy in body and mind, when questions do raise their heads and often add to the negative vibe of the day. These days pass one way or another, and the sun shines again, but for some people the cloud doesn’t pass without help and support. They often are masters of disguise too. To the outside world they appear strong confident happy people, but behind closed doors, the mask comes off and they face their struggle alone.

For all the questions our minds may ask, take time to chat to your nearest and dearest; offer a sympathetic ear to help someone unload a burden they may have. You may not have the answers they seek, but by being able to verbalise the question out loud, sometimes lessens its grip. Often words said in passing can give a change of consciousness. A problem shared is a problem halved. You can also put out there your own questions, to see what other people’s thoughts are on the subject. It can be extremely liberating and fascinating to have other opinions and that feedback indirectly could answer your own questions anyway. Never be afraid to talk to someone if you feel a barrage of questions or merely a single one is swamping your mind. It is relevant and is important, we all deserve to have happiness of mind, a balanced equilibrium.

There is comfort to be had, realising that we all have questions we don’t have answers to. Knowing that doesn’t automatically make it easy to accept or deal with them, but it is part of life. However, at the end of the day, I believe, if we were meant to know all the answers, then we would; we just have to workout which are those unanswerable questions and which are not!

Druantia

 

 

 

Fragility Of Mind . . .

23 Friday Sep 2016

Posted by mindbodyplusme in Ankylosing Spondylitis AS, Holistic Health

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Ankylosing Spondylitis AS, Breathing, Health, Holistic Knowledge, Life Experiences, Positive Affirmations, Psychology, Sharing

Over the past few weeks we have had the pleasure of having family members coming to stay as part of their summer and school holidays. It has been brilliant but I must admit, my usual stretching routine has had to be shortened and somewhat rushed, the consequences of which was felt almost straight away.

The first morning of being back to normal, when I was able to do the usual longer exercise session, instantly reconnected me, and my mobility has felt freer again since. During this disrupted period I became aware again of the fragility of our minds. It is such a narrow line between coping and not coping.

To live in, let’s say a ‘normal’ body, you can get up in a morning, do what you want, eat what you want, and just get on with your daily life at will. You don’t have to think about it, your body just works and moves without having to give it any special thought. But when you have a body that has ‘quirks’, you do not have that luxury. You have to think about all the things you do, often from the pre ‘doing’, to the then ‘doing’, to the post ‘doing’ stages. And that process applies to everything you do, and I mean everything: getting in and out of bed, getting dressed, walking, sitting, standing, lifting the kettle, driving, shopping; every single thing, every day has to have a flash thought, to a considered thought, for a plan of action; it’s a constant reality. It takes mental strength and focus to keep the flow of your everyday life going, it can so easily become a heavy chore.

If you have pain, it can be the severity of which that stops you in your tracks and your daily life accordingly, but when it passes, life returns to normal. However, daily life for someone living with constant pain, even ‘low’ pain, or a body that does not function ‘normally’ is exhausting, as it never goes away. Having constant pain, be it an ache, or restriction that is always there is very mentally challenging, pushing you to your limits of coping. So pain is relative, bodily restrictions too, but whether severe or minor, they are hard to cope with, putting demands on our mental ability to keep living in a positive light. It is a daily challenge, and on some days, an hourly, even down to a minute-to-minute challenge.

People as you will have realised are all different, and their abilities to cope vary tremendously from person to person. Some soldier on regardless of their affliction, others sit down at the slightest hint of an ache and don’t move until the threat of it has gone. There isn’t a right or wrong, but the fragility of your mental state can make a world of difference to your quality of life.

I have been on the wrong side of depression before, brought on by having to cope with this constant challenge plus the challenge of some difficult life events combined. It has made me very aware of the scale of mental well-being a person can experience, and the speed at which it can change. It can feel very lonely, isolating and desolate when you know the problems you face are not going to go away. It can feel like you’re on a slide and no matter how hard you try to get a grip on something to steady the descent, it’s too slippery to be able to stop yourself sliding into a deeper, heavier place. A daily existence of living like it’s a real ‘Groundhog Day’. There are always ‘stages’ though, when the journey has easing slopes. Not that you can always see them for yourself at the time, but with knowledge, understanding and support, those ‘stages’ can steady the descent, enabling us to climb back to higher levels again; it isn’t necessarily a permanent one-way trip. Our mental strength is a huge factor on whether these opportunities are acknowledged in any way shape or form, never mind acted upon. To talk, share and ask for help and support are often incredibly hard acts to do. The feeling of failure and weakness having to ask, and thinking you could be burdening someone with your problems when they maybe have enough of their own, add to the scenario. You know that it could also alter the way that person then perceives you; you have no control over how they react. But that is down to the individual and who you feel you can relate and confide in, there will always be someone, either a friend, family, or a professional, a doctor, a counsellor, someone who will not judge you for who you are nor for what you are struggling with. It’s all relevant, no matter how large or small or trivial the problem may seem to be, acknowledgment of it is never a waste of time.

It is tiring mentally as well as physically to keep positive when you have a body that requires extra attention. And when you have a break from that programme of daily attention, you know it requires even more effort to get you back to where you were before, hoping that that is still possible. To live knowing you have to maintain the status quo, or suffer, is a gruelling mental state. When you want to be more active but have to weigh up the pros and cons to become so, is a mental process many people never have to contemplate, whereas others, myself included, have to consider it all the time, and I mean ALL the time.

There are times when you just want to stop the daily motivational pep talks you constantly give yourself for a while, and not feel like it’s an all consuming burden that engulfs you; it has no soft side. It is a reality that takes a lot of adapting to, and acceptance, some can adapt others cannot. Some are grateful for what they can still do; others pine for what they cannot.

For myself, even now all these years on, and with all the knowledge and experience I am lucky to have in my armoury, there are times when I can be momentarily overwhelmed by my own demise. It’s a flash of near dread that floods my senses, causing a wobble of whether I can cope with a future not of my choice. A time follows when I contemplate and reassess where I am mentally, and whether I need to search out another string in the bow of coping. Whilst my general health is excellent, my fitness is excellent, my quality of life is good – there isn’t an activity in my daily life that hasn’t been adapted because of my inflexible spine and neck. The process of wanting to do things I love is crippling, when you know you can’t do them. Even being able to freely play with young members of the family is extremely restricted. I have always loved being physical, through my work and leisure time, I loved the feeling of healthily ‘working’ my body. Despite pain, for the bulk of my life so far, I have been able to have a bearable mix of activity, and still do. But I know any sudden jarring to my body, could result in me being in the wheelchair I am told I would be in; and maybe not because I am in pain but because I would be paralysed. I could have a fall, a bump in the car with a whiplash type jar to the neck; I could do so many everyday things, that for me could paralyse me because I have no flex in my spine, it would, in essence, break and that is a very humbling but also a scary possibility. It is a scenario that any day could be my reality.

To allow fear, that foreboding emotion to come to the forefront of my mind is something I cannot afford. Knowing that any day a simple mishap could manifest in paralysis is a fear that has to be managed, never ignored but directed into a state in my mind that does not make me frightened to get out of bed. I have wobbles but so far not often and not for long. All I have been through has forged a strength I would never have been able to have had I not had my journey so far; it has been a process and still is. Ignorance is bliss as they say, but when you live ‘knowing’ something, it can be terrifying and the fragility of the mind is tested on a daily basis. Sometimes the analogy of keeping one step ahead of the fear feels very true, and a lapse, be it in the stretching routine, or a lapse in concentration when doing something can result in life changing circumstances. This creates an element of pressure on you, to keep doing the most you can whilst assessing whether it is enough or too much. The line between the two can be very narrow, and can vary from day to day. So you are always in a self-assessment mode, trying to evaluate the best approach for that day and time. Sometimes you want to stop the ‘ride’, have a break from the pressure of keeping it all up; and inevitably you momentarily start to wish. Whilst hope is fantastic almost essential, wishing for the impossible is costly to mind and body.

Mental turmoil is easily triggered; you need to be able to calm the effect before a calm ripple in the mind becomes a white water rapid out of control. Breathing, meditation, music and space help balance the mind, and I rely heavily on these disciplines and others to keep my mind stable at times of vulnerability.

Our minds are so fluid and fragile, at the same time, incredibly strong and utterly amazing. There is far more to be learned about them than we know to date. They are so precious and can define who we are over and above anything else. Take some time to evaluate your mental well-being today, don’t take it for granted because its equilibrium can change in a second. A healthy mind is invaluable to an able-bodied person but imperative to someone who has a body that doesn’t allow them to partake in ‘normal’ activities of life. It facilitates the quality of life in all of us; we all benefit from a fluid balanced mind. Maintaining the equilibrium is key to coping with the continual challenges we face in life’s learning curve. But the maintenance varies tremendously dependant on our individual bodies and minds.

The pressures and expectations put upon us from society is hard enough to mentally process, but when added to that all the other influences and pressures of life – the list is long, but to save you from the entirety – the concept that even a ‘normal’ fully functioning and able bodied person, can struggle to keep their mental equilibrium. For folk who have afflictions of one form or another, have a completely different perspective, ultimately the challenge of coming to terms with their own abilities on top of the afore mentioned. These minds need fine-tuning and in fact are often more in tune out of necessity than those of someone who hasn’t had to contact their inner strengths to cope and survive. To me, this can be seen as a positive slant, we tap into deeper depths of our survival instincts than most. The more we can use our inner strengths and intuition I believe leads to a more holistic life and many levels.

Despite all I’ve been though, and of course I wish I could do things I now can’t do, I am so grateful and thankful to have the mind I have today. How it is today has only come to be from all the pain and inner strength discoveries I’ve made on my journey through life so far. Hopefully I still have a long journey ahead of me, but one thing that is as vague as the day I started, I do not know what tomorrow will bring. Being mindful and aware are attributes that have enormous presence in my daily life. We have to allow ourselves the right to feel down, the right to feel sad, we need those emotions to balance us. Just like there is hot and cold, wet and dry, happy and sad, without one there isn’t the other, so hard as life often is, it could definitely be a lot worse. Being mindful of that helps keep me in a more positive vibe for the journey I am on.

Search out your inner mental strengths to help you cope with whatever afflicts you, emotionally, mentally or physically. My bias is to help anyone suffering from Ankylosing Spondylitus and the problems associated with it, but I hope it also resonates with everyone who reads it; we can all connect deeper with our inner strengths, always.

Druantia

 

 

International Relaxation Day

15 Monday Aug 2016

Posted by mindbodyplusme in Holistic Health, Thoughts & Words

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Breathing, Communication, Holistic Health, Inspiration, International Relaxation Day, Positive Affirmations, Relaxation, Thoughts

 

15th August is International Relaxation Day – if you have the chance, enjoy your day, taking things easy, keeping calm of mind, and basically taking life at a more relaxed pace than you normally would.

The key to good relaxation is your breath. So keep it simple and think, when you take a breath in, you are making yourself bigger, so expand your abdomen; when you breathe out, you are making yourself smaller, hence pull your tummy in.

Keep the breath long and soft, allowing the lungs to drop down as opposed to being pushed out against the ribs. The diaphragm at the base of the ribcage should flex up and down with that long gentle abdominal breath. It massages the internal organs, creating a deeper level of relaxation and increased inner health. Breathing from the abdomen slows the brain and mind down, it helps them drops down through the gears, so allowing you to clear the mind, putting the brakes on your usually busy mind, so you can experience stillness, calmness, relaxation.

So breathe, enjoy your breath and relax!

Druantia

 

An Holistic Treatment

30 Saturday Jul 2016

Posted by mindbodyplusme in Holistic Health

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Alternative Medicine, Breathing, Healing, Health, Holistic Health, Holistic Knowledge, Life Experiences, Natural Therapies, Relaxation, Sharing

Holistic treatments in simple terms, means you treat the ‘whole’ person. You do not just look at the symptom presented to you and treat that alone. You take an overall appraisal of the patient. You need to take their full case history – details about the symptom in the patient’s words. You look at their general well being, take notes of any previous conditions, enquire about their lifestyle, their environment and job, and assess their constitution. Each of those points is multi layered, and depending on how Holistic you want to go, together with the expectations of the patient, depends on how indepth you go in the treatment plan, or indeed the treatment. There needs to be some form of diagnosis on the practitioners part.

Read the full article under the ‘Page’ Section

Druantia

 

Mental Strength

26 Tuesday Jul 2016

Posted by mindbodyplusme in Ankylosing Spondylitis AS, Holistic Health

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Alternative Medicine, Ankylosing Spondylitis AS, Breathing, Communication, Healing, Health, Holistic Health, Life Experiences, Natural Therapies, Relaxation, Sharing

One aspect applicable to having AS and other pain related conditions that I’ve treated over the years, which is often over looked, or totally ignored, is the mental state of the individual. It can vary enormously, having constant pain, whether an ache or severe is mentally exhausting. Having a sudden sharp flare up can be a shock mentally, as well as being exhausting too. It can make people depressed without them realizing it and can truly bring a person down emotionally and mentally; like living with a cloud over them, or a weight on their shoulders, carrying it everyday, it can make life that bit harder than it should be.

We all cope with pain differently and whilst some people are very resilient, others aren’t, there is no right or wrong way to be, it just means pain is very relevant to the individual. It’s a very important factor of the overall condition, some people are very keen to tell you how they are suffering, some are terrified when their body experiences pain, whilst others soldier on and try their hardest to hide their pain and remain strong in the eye of the beholder, no matter at what cost to themselves. They find it harder to admit to anyone especially a Practitioner, just how much their pain hurts, or how they are struggling to keep going, as if it would be an admission of failure or weakness. I’ve used this expression a lot, because it’s true, but we all need balance. To be able to share our problems with the right sympathetic ear can greatly help through a crisis.

That in itself isn’t easy for a great many people, myself being one! But as a Practitioner I look at the patient and myself in a holistic way, I take the whole person into account when treating any problem they present. I purposely assess the mental approach everyone takes towards their life, and many a time I have been blown away with the strength and grace people have dealt with problems in their lives. It is often the case too, that people who do not have the ability to share, either because they can’t or don’t want to, find it very hard to relax in any way. With pain, the ability to breathe and relax, in my humble opinion is a fantastic advantage to have. I am not advocating ‘button-holing’ anyone who will listen and go on and on about all your ailments. But at the same time to not be able to share, release, and express your concerns, keep emotions bottled up, can lead to deeper-seated problems when dealing with pain. It prevents the body and energy flowing, which can exasperate pain levels, and weaken the mental emotional side of you.

If some of this resonates with you or someone you know, see if you can find a way to help. Be it expressing your own mental thoughts to a confidante, friend or Professional, or encouraging someone you know to talk and share their thoughts. It could give the sufferer a release they may have been in great need for but didn’t know how to achieve, often feeling they would be a burden, and you would possibly think less of them for ‘moaning‘. It isn’t easy to admit you are struggling.

If talking and sharing isn’t the right process for you, then there is a wealth of other avenues that could help, Counselling, Meditation, Yoga Therapy, even relaxing treatments like aromatherapy, reflexology, cranial massage, facials, there are many disciplines that aid in releasing pent up emotional tension, and therefore helping you have more balance; yin and yang, positive and negative, you know what I mean! Even just taking time out of your every day to allow yourself your special slot to relax and unwind could work wonders. You may find having an afternoon snooze works, or a gentle walk outside, listening to some music you love, laugh with a friend, there are so many things, but at the end of the day, whatever makes you feel good, do it!

Being anonymous is another way to release too. The Internet is a tool that could facilitate that in the form of forums, blogs (this being one!) where you can write your thoughts down. People of like mind can reply with the empathy of knowing what you’re going through. It can be a powerful form of support. Obviously be careful and don’t divulge personal information you wouldn’t want people to know. But to connect with people who have the experience of the same condition can alleviate the isolation that often comes with conditions governed by pain.

Many pain suffering people tend to shut themselves away from the world when the pain strikes, so to be armed with techniques to ease the length of those days, the better. Branch out and see what you can discover, enrich your life in doing so – bonus!

Druantia

 

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