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Method Name:
Dealing With Pain Through Mindfulness Meditation
Description:
The use of meditation techniques to treat
chronic pain is becoming increasingly common, largely as a result of the
pioneering work in Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction started by Jon Kabat-Zinn
in 1979 at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. Dr.
Kabat-Zinn's scientifically validated work has touched the lives of tens of
thousands of people and helped to establish meditation as a highly respected
tool in the treatment of chronic pain, stress, and depression.
Some people initially find the idea of
using meditation to deal with pain incongruous. After all, isn't
meditation about developing greater awareness? And wouldn't that mean
becoming more aware of the pain itself in an almost masochistic kind of way and
therefore experiencing greater suffering? For others, who think about
meditation as a technique for "tuning out" and turning attention away from the
body, meditative techniques can be seen as a welcome, if almost unattainable,
form of escapism.
In fact, meditation is neither masochistic
nor escapist. In meditation we do in fact become more aware of ourselves,
but what is most important is that we become aware of and change the way that we
relate to our pain. It is that change in relationship that makes
meditation a potent tool in pain management.
So what is this change in the way that we
relate to pain, and how does it have the effect of helping us to deal more
effectively with it, or even to reduce the level of pain we experience?
The quality we cultivate through meditation practice is mindfulness.
Mindfulness is much more than simply being aware. We can be aware of pain
without being at all mindful of it. Mindfulness is a particular kind of
awareness, which is purposeful, focused, curious, and rooted in our
moment-by-moment experience.
With mindfulness we purposefully observe
our experience as it takes place, including any pain that may be present.
The mind naturally tends to see pain as being a "thing," and to give it a degree
of solidity, permanence, and coherence that it doesn't in fact have. In
mindfulness meditation we train ourselves to see the many different sensations
that we collectively label as "pain." We may even gently make mental notes
of the most prominent sensations that we notice. For example, we may note
the presence of "tingling," "pulsing," "throbbing," "heat," "cold," "aching,"
"tightness," etc. When we let go of the rather crude label "pain" in this
way and instead note what is actually present, we can find that each individual
sensation is easier to bear. Sometimes we notice that there is no pain
present, or that the sensations that we're experiencing are neutral or even
pleasurable.
Additionally, in exercising curiosity about
our pain we are also gaining another important benefit in the form of the
quality of acceptance. The mind, quite understandably, tends to see pain
as something that is undesirable and therefore to be pushed away. This
pushing away shows in the body as physical tension in and around the area of
pain, causing additional discomfort and even intensifying the original pain.
It's as if, having accidentally touched a hot stove, we were to react by trying
to push the stove away. In doing so we would of course simply intensify
our pain. So, in mindfulness meditation an attitude of curiosity allows us
to let go of our resistance and to see the pain for what it is: an
ever-changing variety of interwoven sensations. Much of our resistance to
pain is mental rather than physical. When we experience pain, the mind can,
like the body, try to push it away. We experience desire for the pain just
to go away. We crave its absence. Unfortunately, as we all know,
wishing that something were so does not make it so, and our frustrated desires
do nothing but add mental suffering to our physical distress.
In mindfulness meditation we observe more
than just any pain that may happen to be present. We become aware of the
whole physical body, emotions, and thoughts, and of how each of these interacts
with the others. One thing we can then begin to see is that although pain
is present in our experience it isn't the whole of our experience.
Mindfulness gives us a sense of the physical and mental "landscape" within which
our pain is experienced, and which helps to give a sense of perspective to our
experience of it. At times of stress it may seem as if pain is the only
thing that we experience, but this comes about because we have a kind of mental
"zoom lens" that is closely focused on the pain. Change that zoom lens for
a wide-angle lens and the pain seems much smaller and therefore more manageable.
Without mindfulness, our experiences tend
to proliferate in an unhelpful way. We may experience physical pain, and
this leads to thoughts such as "This is never going to end," "This is just going
to get worse," "I can't bear this," or "I must be a bad person to deserve all
this pain." In turn, these thoughts lead to anxiety, despondency or anger,
because we tend to believe the stories we think when we are unmindful, and this
adds further to our suffering. The practice of mindfulness includes
becoming aware of our thoughts and seeing that our thoughts are indeed just
thoughts and are not facts.
Thoughts are not facts. This can be a
revolutionary discovery, and also a liberating one. When we learn to see
thoughts as just another experience coming and going against the background of
our overall physical and mental experience, we free ourselves from the kind of
runaway thinking that is so characteristic of stress. We can see thoughts
like "I can't stand this" coming into being, realize that they are thoughts
rather than facts, and instead of indulging in them and encouraging them we
simply note them and let go of them.
Finally, mindfulness can help by reminding
us that pain is not "the enemy." Pain is the body's naturally evolved way
of letting us know that something needs attention, and can play a vital role in
maintaining physical well-being. It's easy to see how important pain is
when we consider what life would be without it. There are medical
conditions in which people can't experience pain, and those people find that
life is very hard indeed. Imagine, for example, trying to warm yourself at
a fire without being able to tell when your skin was overheating: serious
burns would be a distinct possibility. So we can see that pain is an
essential part of being human. Of course, when pain goes on for a long
time, or when it's particularly intense, it can be hard to remember that it
evolved as a helpful function, and it's easy to see it as an enemy. The
meditative approaches outlined above help us to develop acceptance of our pain,
but an even more powerful aspect of mindfulness that allows us to accept our
pain is the quality of lovingkindness.
Mindfulness has a quality of appreciation
and welcoming that can radically transform our relationship to difficult
experiences. Buddhist meditation techniques can be used, for example, to
cultivate an attitude of lovingkindness towards those people that we find
difficult and towards whom we experience aversion, anger, and even hatred.
Millions of practitioners over thousands of years have found that the
cultivation of lovingkindness leads to the lessening of conflicts and the growth
of love and appreciation for those who were previously enemies.
Lovingkindness transforms our relationships.
The development of lovingkindness can also
be used internally, by cultivating lovingkindness for painful experiences so
that we can accept them as a part of life. Wishing our pain well can be a
powerfully healing experience in which we let go of inner tensions and barriers
on a deep level and come to see that our pain is a part of us, and a part of us
moreover that is greatly in need of cherishing and love.
But do these approaches actually have
medical benefits? Do they reduce pain, or do they simply allow us to
handle our pain better? Clinical studies are unequivocal in demonstrating
that the practice of mindfulness meditation both increases the ability to deal
with the effects of pain and reduces pain overall. A study published in
General Hospital Psychiatry followed 51 chronic pain patients who had not
improved with traditional medical care. The dominant pain categories were
low back, neck and shoulder, headache, facial pain, angina pectoris, noncoronary
chest pain, and GI pain. After a 10-week program of meditation, 65% of the
patients showed a reduction in pain of greater than 33%, and half of the
patients showed a reduction in pain levels of more than 50%. It should be
remembered that these were patients whose pain had shown no improvement with
traditional medical care. In other words people with the most difficult
cases of chronic pain still showed dramatic improvements in their condition.
The practice of mindfulness is particularly
effective because it "decouples" the physical sensations of pain from mental and
emotional processes that heighten suffering. Pain comes to be seen as "just
another sensation" and the fear of pain is significantly reduced. The
development of mindfulness, as Buddhists have known for 2,500 years, brings
about mental and emotional freedom and a decrease in suffering.
Bodhipaksa is a Buddhist
teacher living in New Hampshire. He is the founder of Wildmind Buddhist
Meditation (http://www.wildmind.org), and is the author of "Wildmind: A
Step-by-Step Guide to Meditation," published by Windhorse Publications, as well
as a number of other titles, including the popular audio CD "Guided Meditations
for Calmness, Awareness, and Love".
This helpful meditation method was provided by
Bodhipaksa of Wildmind Buddhist Meditation. Visit Wildmind Buddhist Meditation for more information on meditation.
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