The line between pain with a physical cause and physical pain that's psychological in origin is extremely blurry, with a lot of overlap. That's why, researchers says, psychological therapy works on both.https://www.vox.com/science-and-health/2018/5/17/17276452/chronic-pain-treatment-psychology-cbt-mindfulness-evidence …
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Fair enough! Thanks for sharing that link. I'm a huge Dr Sarno fan. It's enraging that he never got enough credit for his work or respect from the medical community for his extended work on chronic pain.
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that article is not wildly respectful of Dr Sarno either- http://rumur.com/stuck-in-a-science-framing/ … - When I wrote this someone shared Rupert Sheldrake's book with me so I wrote this. http://rumur.com/the-difference-between-health-care-and-climate-science/ … -
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Agreed. Calling Dr Sarno a "guru" belittles his research and achievements. She also should have corrected the doctors who wrongly stated that Sarno proposed a "one-size-fits-all," narrow-minded solution to back pain.
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The problem is one of systems- for those in the materialist mindset any idea that involves the complexity of emotions is quickly rejected as woo. While there is certainly woo out there Sarno’s general ideas are being proven to be solid
End of conversation
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