Posts Tagged ‘mind’

The Myth of Getting ‘Old’

Monday, January 16th, 2012

Having spent the last 15 years observing what makes one 80 year old ‘old’ and another ‘young’ and indeed witnessing the transformation of some ‘old’ ones into ‘young’ ones, I’ve been pretty humbled.  I never cease to be amazed by human potential. Through a gradual process of mental reflection, dietary and lifestyle changes and therapy, some have been able to turn their circumstances around by realising they had more control over how they felt than they realised and that they had succumbed to the popular myth about age.

Many of our patients are content merely with the removal of pain from their arthritic joints. Some, however, realise that they have become what they have through their choices and actions. They then make different choices and experience different outcomes as a result.

Of course, this doesn’t just apply to old people. These same processes occur in younger age. At the time of writing, I’m 43 and setting myself physical and mental goals that my contemporaries have clearly convinced themselves they can’t achieve. Of course, they can achieve them!They just need to engage in the lifestyle that supports their achievement. They’ve succumbed, like the majority, to societal norms and assumptions that say “you’re getting old now and so you’re going to be weaker, have poorer health and generally start going downhill”

Of course, age does play a significant role in our wellbeing. The older we get, the more time we have had to practice the habits that have determined our health in the first place. In turning things round, it might be a slower process because of this. You’ve been letting yourself go over a longer period of time. However, change you certainly can!

Our minds are far stronger than most of us are willing to admit. One just needs to watch a few episodes of Derren Brown to get an idea of this. Countless studies on the placebo affect also provide fascinating food for thought. Even ignoring the obvious dietary, exercise and lifestyle choices that are proven to affect our health, our minds can convince us into high or low levels of physical and mental performance or health states. So, its not enough to just regulate our diet, and lifestyle. We have to train our minds too. Good health is not a matter of luck, its crafted! I’m  reminded of what Gary Player is noted for having said: “It’s funny, the more I practice the luckier I seem to get”.

And that’s not even considering the amazing folk with significant, life-limiting circumstances who still remain positive.  Like Chris Moon, 49 at the time of writing, the ultra runner who had one leg and one arm blown off by a land mine, then ran the London marathon within a year of the incident!!! Check him out at:

http://www.ultralegends.com/chris-moon-bathurst-to-sydney-1997/

Geneticists estimate that our genes are responsible for about 15% of our health outcomes. The other 85% is down to our lifestyle. In other words, the choices we make in life have the largest effect on our health, by far.

So, check out your self-limiting beliefs, engage in some positive thinking training, and start releasing your latent potential now. Commit to a programme of regular exercise, whether it includes Tai Chi, running, squash or whatever. And guess what, once you’ve got over that initial inertia that inevitably exists when you’ve been inactive for so long, its really enjoyable and feels great! Go get some…you’re more than you think you are!

‘Fighting’ cancer or other life-thereatening diseases

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

I was just reading a Telegraph article today entitled “Socialising with others ‘can help fight cancer’”. The headline led me to ‘put pen to paper’.

From my clinical experience, one of the most prevalent causes of disease, whether it be a bad back or whether it be heart disease, is the unconscious refusal or inability to freely and honestly express ourselves as we truly are. The most common example of this is in the work we choose to engage in to earn a living.

The whole idea of recovering from a life-threatening disease, like cancer, being a ‘fight’, I find difficult to get my mind round. My appreciation of disease processes is clearly influenced by my style of medicine, Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) with its range of therapeutic techniques, such as acupuncture. TCM is holistic in its approach to healthcare. Holism states that body and mind are inextricably linked so what happens to one will have an inevitable knock-on effect on the function of the other. Holism understands that disease is not some random, chance occurrence that we have little or no control over. Even geneticists attribute only 25% of our state of health to our inheritance. My own personal experience of scrutinising my state of health, and intermittent fall from good health over the years, has yielded a clear connection between this and my thought processes. Scrutinising the health of thousands of others in my professional capacity, and studying research and the clinical experience of others far more experienced and talented than me, has corroborated my conclusions.

Gradually, modern medicine is starting to fully appreciate the huge influence our state of mind has on our health. This is really well summarised in Adrian Leader and    book “Why do People get Ill?” ), available from our online shop. Literally, we are what we think. It is becoming increasingly evident that our thought processes create our diseases, whether they involve physical or mental symptoms, or both. We can say that our heart condition has been brought on by working intensely under stressful circumstances for a prolonged period of time, but what thought processes have led us to work like this in the first place. For example, if during our upbringing, we have thought, for whatever reason, that we needed to ‘achieve’ in order to gain ‘acceptance’ or ‘love’ from our parents, then this might have trained the habit of ‘flogging’ ourselves in our work life.

Holistic healthcare is about helping each individual bring their unconscious motivations into conscious awareness whilst using tried and tested techniques to facilitate recovery from the current disease-state. We do this by stimulating the body’s own, already amazingly well-equipped self-preservation systems. When an individual understands their disease process as part of who they are, they see that there can be no ‘fight’ against cancer because the cancer is a part of them. There is no external ‘enemy’ to fight. They have literally created their circumstances by their thoughts words and deeds in their life to date. Therefore, the only long-term, sustainable solution is through new thoughts, words and deeds. So, in my mind, self-understanding is the key. As far as I can see, achieving self-understanding is a process, often long and arduous, which is why we are often well-advised to seek external help when experiencing a life-threatening disease state.

The word ‘fight’ often implies a struggle. Because of the negative connotations this idea holds, this is just likely to make the process of recovery that much more difficult. So, I believe that our best chance of survival is to embrace the symptoms we are suffering as messages sent from deep inside us as an aid to reaching fullness. This way we can utilise the healing power of love, love of our self and the people around us and of life. Being diagnosed with a life-threatening illness is probably one of the best wake-up calls we will ever get in helping us to express ourselves as we truly are. So let’s embrace it. Or, as the motif on one of the Tai Chi students in my class says: “make tea, not war!”

Just Psychological? It’s all in the Body-Mind

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

"Jumping for joy"

What I find really fascinating, is the answer to a question I was asked today by a fellow-Facebooker: “How can muscle problems have anything to do with a ‘purely psychological problem’?”. Traditional Chinese Medical theory has been able to answer this question for at least 2000 years, a question that modern medicine seems unable (or uninterested) to answer today. The Meridian (Jingluo) network system shows clear connections between the ‘Gan’, which is almost the same concept of the modern concept of ‘liver’, the emotion of anger and the muscles of the neck and shoulders, indeed the elasticity of muscles generally. A healthy ‘Gan’ means that, amongst other things, muscles will be elastic, relaxed, strong and that anger will be expressed appropriately to individual circumstances.

But there is no reason why modern science cannot be used to understand this connection.

I’ll answer my fellow Facebooker’s question in two ways, first with a question:

Given that we start out as the coming together of just 2 cells, so we develop into a totally integrated and connected organic whole, how can any one occurrence in the body have no connection with another? Actually, the answer to this question is so blindingly obvious and simple that 90% of the population never even consider it. And it’s no different from any other naturally occurring system e.g. if one erects groynes along a beach to stop the sand washing away for visitors, that may affect habitats further down the coast, reduce populations of some microscopic organism that is relied upon by herring, which is relied upon by tuna, which is blah-di, blah, and it goes on. In other words, everything is connected, save nothing.

Every part of the human body is linked together by a variety of extremely clever (they ought to be, having evolved over billions of years!) communication and transport systems: the nervous system, cardiovascular system, lymphatic system, endocrine system etc.  From that perspective there is no such thing as “purely psychological” problem. If you feel mentally tickety-boo, there is a cascade of chemicals that is triggered by the brain that gets dumped into the blood stream and taken to every other cell within the body, affecting its function, sometimes quite profoundly if you consider our fight and flight mechanism. We can muster incredible strength, power and speed if our life or the life of our loved ones is on the line! Concentration is poor if we have anaemia, our mood is likely to be low if we have hypothyroidism, we become aggressive when the Islets of Langerhans in the pancreas are not doing their job properly to produce insulin. The list goes on.

Depending upon which piece of research one reads, psychological stress is the cause of somewhere between 75% and 90% of all physical symptoms!

Anyone who is interested in reading further about the body-mind connection and how we get ill, I highly recommend reading “Why Do People Get Ill?” Click the link to read a brief synopsis:

http://www.theseanbarkesclinic.co.uk/shop/books

Anyway, if anyone reading this is still left wondering if the mind can really have such a strong connection with the body, you must book some tickets to see Derren Brown on stage. If he’s not at a theatre near you then you’ll just have to get the DVDs! You’re human potential is very much more than you think it is…you just have to decide what it is and then go about believing it.

Health and Holism

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

The concept of holism has already been applied to ecology and even business. So why is it yet to be applied seriously towards healthcare on a national level? There is a glimmer of hope that this is starting to happen with the NHS “Fit4Life” initiative (www.nhs.uk/change4life). However, it remains to be seen whether healthcare will turn a corner and start seeing symptoms as a communication between mind and body, unconscious and conscious, where a person’s spirituality is taken into consideration, where symptoms are not seen as inconvenient, uncontrollable, chance happenings. Disease can be viewed as part of the process of our personal growth. If it is seen in this light, I believe that the cost of healthcare in this country will tumble.