More from Keenan Patterson at Google+
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Timeless Healing by Herbert Benson with Marg Stark
More from Keenan Patterson at Google+
Friday, April 30, 2021
Superimmunity by Paul Pearsall
Psychologist Paul Pearsall was an early proponent of current notions of mind-body medicine. For Pearsall, it was important to heal a person’s life even if it wasn’t possible to cure their disease. Often a disease can be the body’s way of getting a person’s attention, and letting him know a change is needed. People who make those changes can experience healing, sometimes in the form of a cure and sometime as health and happiness in the midst of disease. Pearsall described some of his ideas in Superimmunity.
In this book, Pearsall draws from Eastern medicine an organizing theme: hot and cold thinking. Hot thinkers are fast, impatient, black-or-white thinkers. They can be judgmental and prone to exaggeration, overreaction and isolation. Cold thinkers overreact to trivial things and underreact to important things. They are prone to passivity and feeling of inadequacy. They are isolated in their own way, and though often out of touch with their emotions, they often despair.
The body responds to these thinking styles. Hot reactors are always on the attack, and their immune systems attack their bodies. Heart disease is associated with hot people. Cold reactors are inactive, so their bodies may respond with excessive activity, particularly cell growth (i.e. cancer).
Pearsall does not eschew medicine. If you are facing a serious illness, the likes of heart disease or cancer, you need a lot of medical help. However, you also need to enlist the aid of your own immune system, which may be doing something counterproductive if it is very active at all. You’re immune system is closely linked to your brain, more so that was commonly thought when Pearsall was writing in the 1980s, so getting the best immune response calls for leaving hot or cold thinking for something more balanced.
“Until recently, we have behaved as if the immune system were somehow separate from us, doing its job secretly, automatically, beyond our control…. Research now tells us that our immune system functions within a supersystem of mind and body,” Paul Pearsall, Superimmunity
Superimmunity includes many tests to help you identify if you tend to be a hot or cold thinker (you can be both). From there, Pearsall offers strategies for cooling off or warming up your thinking as needed. This can mean observing your body, listening to your disease and getting in touch with your emotions in ways that can be unfamiliar to one in the throes of hot or cold reaction. This self-evaluation that reveals the underlying dysfunction, and your own exploration and imagination may uncover your path to healing.
Pearsall does not suggest that changing your thinking will always lead to a cure, though sometimes it might. Disease and mortality are part of being a human. However, you can truly live while you are alive, and in this since experience healing. Life is more than surviving, eating, drinking and breathing. It is important to live as fully as you can.
Paul Pearsall also wrote
The Last Self-Help Book You'll Ever Need
If you’re interested in this book, you may also be interested in
Change Your Brain Change Your Body by Daniel
G. Amen
The Relaxation Response by Herbert
Bnson with Miriam Z. Klipper
The Road Less Traveled by M. Scott
Peck
Timeless Healing by Herbert Benson with Marg
Stark
Pearsall, Paul. Superimmunity: Master Your Emotions & Improve Your Health. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1987.
Saturday, November 24, 2018
The Beethoven Factor by Paul Pearsall
Saturday, April 29, 2017
Suggestible You by Erik Vance
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Walking with God by John Eldredge
Walking with God is a book for Christians who want, really need, an intimate relationship with God. This is not an abstract walk, but real, daily communication with the real, living God in which we not only send up our prayers, but in which He talks to us.
This is not a how-to book. It is a series of stories, incidents and anecdotes from about a year of Eldredge’s life that are meant to illustrate what it is like to walk with God.
It’s not easy. The Christian who desires to abide in Christ will find many things that come against him. Much of it is just facing the tiring trials of being an imperfect human in a fallen world. It is also difficult be cause we have an enemy who’ll do everything he can to prevent us from having the relationship to which God is calling us. The vignettes of walking with God are also pictures of spiritual warfare.
At the beginning of the book, Eldredge breaks from the memoir format to make the case that God still talks to his people personally. It’s not a theological dissertation, but it is an argument from the Bible that makes that case that God does want to relate to us intimately and communicate to us directly. This in no way diminishes the role of the Bible, but goes hand and hand. The book presents the case that revelation and wisdom are needed to effectively hear from God.
In some of his other books, Eldredge talks about people being wounded and are in need of healing that only God can provide. In those books, he writes about inviting Jesus into those wounds, into those parts of our live and experiences where we’ve been hurt. I found it to be like getting a diagnosis without getting prescription. That may be unfair to his other books, but I thought Walking with God does a much better job of showing what it is like to bring Christ’s healing and redemptive power into the hurts of life.
Other books by John Eldredge:
Epic
Saturday, April 24, 2021
Cure by Jo Marchant
Over my lifetime, I’ve observed an increasing interest in the connection between mind and body. It is not a new concept, but it has gained ground and the Cartesian distinction between mind and body has eroded. However, how we are still learning how it works and the extent to which it is effective in the treatment of disease. Geneticist and science writer Jo Marchant explores these issues in Cure.
Marchant considers three areas in which there appears to be mind-body connections that have promise for use in medical settings. First is the placebo effect. Next, she looks at meditation, biofeedback and hypnosis. Finally, she discusses the effects of our viewpoint, especially how increase or reduce stress.
We are equipped with an internal pharmacy that can reduce or aggravate pain, and it can be triggered by something as vague as our expectations. This placebo affect can be as powerful as drugs at reducing pain and some other symptoms of disease, which can make it difficult to test the effectiveness of drugs. Some physicians are starting to change their minds about the placebo effect. Instead of seeing it as a problem that gets in the way of testing drugs, they are seeing it a potential substitute for drugs. The placebo effect has limitations; it can reduce pain and symptoms, but it does not cure the underlying disease or injury. There is also a nocebo effect, which causes pain and fatigue.
Another interesting effect discussed by Marchant is conditioning of the immune system. In some cases, we can prompt the immune system to have a conditioned response; we can train it. After taking a drug, the immune system can reproduce the response to the drug at lower doses. We can strengthen the conditioning by accompanying the drug with strong rituals; repeating the rituals can produce the response to some degree. This holds some promise for improving the effectiveness of drugs and reducing the dose needed to be effective, especially when a drug as serious side effects. I thought this was fascinating.
Our brain is more connected, and in control, of our bodily functions that we previously realized. Meditation, hypnosis and biofeedback can allow people to exercise control over operations of the body that were previously thought to be automatic or even independent of the brain. This includes pain, blood flow, stress response, heart rate variability and vagal tone.
Relationships also have a profound effect on our health. Strong social connections keep us young, and lack of relationships is harmful to our health. Our own compassion for others can reduce stress hormones and inflammation. When physicians, surgeons, nurses and other health care professionals care for their patients as people, those patients receiving the emotional support experience less pain and longer lives.
Marchant shows there is potential for a new way of doing medicine, or room to reintroduce older practices. By slowing down and showing genuine concern for patients, doctors can multiply the effect of their treatment. Teaching people to slow down and pay attention to their bodies, the people they love and the good things in their lives, we can take advantage of the healing capacities of the mind and body. Medicine can be less about dispensing drugs and more about lifestyle and relationship.
If you’re interested in this book, you may also be interested in
The
Beethoven Factor by Paul Pearsall
Change
Your Brain Change Your Body
by Daniel G. Amen
Descarte’s
Secret Notebook by Amir D.
Aczel
The Genius
in All of Us by David Shenk
I
Can Make You Happy by Paul
McKenna
I
Can Make You Thin by Paul
McKenna
Instant
Self-Hypnosis by Forbes
Robbins Blair
The
Last Self-Help Book You'll Ever Need by Paul Pearsall
The
Relaxation Response by
Herbert Benson with Miriam Z. Klipper
The
Road Less Traveled by M.
Scott Peck
The
Solution by Lucinda Bassett
Switch
on Your Brain by Caroline Leaf
Take
the Leap by Heather
McCloskey Beck
Timeless
Healing by Herbert Benson
with Marg Stark
Writing
Down the Bones by Natalie
Goldberg
Marchant, Jo. Cure: A Journey into the Science of Mind over Body. New York: Crown, 2016.
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Saturday, June 10, 2017
I Can Make You Happy by Paul McKenna
Sunday, April 25, 2021
Happiness is a Choice by Frank B. Minirth and Paul D Meier
I’ve been reading a lot about anxiety and depression lately, and it has led me to some older books, such as Happiness is a Choice by psychiatrists Frank B. Minirth and Paul D. Meier. The book appears to be written for a mixed audience of therapists who may be treating patients with depression and people who may pick up the book as a self-help guide. If depression is affecting your life, I recommend you talk to your physician or reach out for appropriate counseling; there are effective therapies and in some cases drugs may be appropropriate.
The book may be broken into three major parts. The first deals with the symptoms of depression. Though it is fairly widely know now (thanks largely to drug advertising), it was probably less known in 1978 when this book was published, that there are physical symptoms to depression. Feeling bad emotionally can make us feel bad physically and vice-versa.
The second part deals with the causes of depression. These are particularly stress and trauma. We all face trauma in life, and it does not have to be “major” to result in depression. We all grieve losses, get angry over the way we or others are mistreated, face dysfunction in relationships and countless other stresses and traumas. Any of us may suffer a blow that leads to depression.
“Who gets depressed? At some period of life, nearly everyone does!” Frank B. Minirth and Paul D. Meier, Happiness is a Choice
Finally, they deal with the treatment of depression. Much of Minirth and Meier’s advice deals with thinking and relationships. Therapy may occur at a counselor’s office, but healing takes place in everyday life, thoughts and relationships.
The book also contains appendices that deal with things that may be of more interest to therapist. These include a few very brief case studies, a short chapter on the biology of depression and additional information on various types of treatment.
Minirth and Meier are known as Christian counselors who discuss faith alongside medicine. This book is no exception. The authors reference the Bible and draw lessons from it. Though many may find useful advice in this book, I think it would especially appeal to Christian who are seeking help that is consistent with their faith. Their advice on overcoming depression and anxiety is rooted in their religion.
If you’re interested in this book, you may also be interested in
Anxious for Nothing by Max Lucado
The Mindful Way through
Depression by
Mark Williams, John Teasdale, Zindal Segal & Joh Kabat-Zinn
Rewire Your Anxious Brain by
Catherine M. Pittman & Elizabeth M. Karle
The Solution by Lucinda Bassett
Think 4:8 by Tommy Newberry & Lyn Smith
12 “Christian” Beliefs That Can Drive You Crazy by Henry
Cloud & John Townsend
Minirth, Frank B., and Paul D. Meier. Happiness is a Choice: A Manual on the Symptoms, Causes and Cures of Depression. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker House, 1978.
Wednesday, June 3, 2020
Lost Connections by Hari Johnson
Depression
and anxiety are growing problems in the West. The model of depression as a chemical imbalance in the brain is breaking down, and antidepressants
are ineffective. (I’m not suggesting you should stop taking antidepressants.
Even if they are not working out for you, discuss it with your physician first.) Where do we turn to find
relief?
The Beethoven Factor by Paul
Pearsall
Change Your Brain Change Your Body by Daniel
G. Amen
The Last Self-Help Book You'll Ever Need by Paul
Pearsall
The Relaxation Response by Herbert
Benson with Miriam Z. Klipper
Switch on Your Brain by Caroline
Leaf
Timeless Healing by Herbert Benson with Marg
Stark