“In some cases, the holistic practice could replace narcotics.”
In this excerpt from The Atlantic the subject of the article, Sarah Kehoe had massive suffering with a herniated disc…
She had tried Aleve for her back pain. She tried stretching. She tried yoga. She tried forgetting about it. She tried pain patches. She tried acupuncture. A shot of painkillers into her back. Prescription anti-inflammatory pain patches. Opiates. Surgery. Physical therapy. Heat and compresses. Ignoring it again. Steroids. More opiates. Acupuncture again. She couldn’t sit, stand up straight, lie down on her back. She was weak, had lost muscle tone. She fainted on the subway. An otherwise healthy 36-year-old woman, Kehoe, a former high school and college athlete, a yogi of 10 years, was falling apart.
After two surgeries, and with a third surgery no longer being an option her last resort was a meditation course. Although anecdotal, Sarah’s story gives hope and supports the hypothesis put forth by Fadel Zeidan, Ph.D concerning pain being manageable with meditation. His studies, in fact show an approximately 40% reduction in pain intensity ratings during meditation when compared with non-meditation.
Read more in this article on why Zeidan feels that meditation can be a major component in successfully managing chronic pain. “It worked for beginners,… It seems a patient does not need to be a zen master of 10 years to reap the rewards of the practice.” says Zeidan.
Photo by Matthew Henry
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