3 Must-Read Books for Chronic Pain
If you have pain or a chronic health condition, you know how isolating, frustrating, and exhausting it can be. While Western Medicine continues to make life-saving advances, it has fallen short in managing chronic pain. Modern medicine is just beginning to acknowledge the Bio-Psycho-Social model, which recognizes the connection between the physical body (like tissue damage), mental and emotional health, and social factors (like societal expectations, family support, and cultural background). If pain were solely a biological issue, a doctor could simply “fix” you. But as you’ve likely discovered after multiple unsuccessful treatments and procedures, it’s far more complicated than just repairing physical damage. Fortunately, experts in pain science and mind-body health have seen the effectiveness of a holistic approach in managing and reducing pain. If you’re ready to take back your life, I highly recommend reading these 3 must-read books for chronic pain.
1st Must-Read Book for Chronic Pain
When the Body Says No: The Hidden Cost of Stress by Gabor Maté, MD
Dr. Maté, a highly respected expert on trauma, addiction, stress, and mind-body health, explains that repressed emotions, chronic stress, and unresolved trauma can manifest as disease and chronic pain conditions. Emotional stress takes a toll on the body, affects the immune system, and causes inflammation. Through decades of medical practice, Dr. Maté has documented the connection between chronic illness and personality traits such as people-pleasing, perfectionism, and self-sacrifice. When we ignore our body’s messages, suppress emotions, and push through exhaustion and burnout, our body eventually says “no” and we experience illness and pain. However, by setting boundaries, prioritizing self-care, processing emotions, and reducing stress, we can promote greater health and wellness and even reverse some of the damage.
2nd Must-Read Book for Chronic Pain
The Pain Management Workbook: Powerful CBT and Mindfulness Skills to Take Control of Pain and Regain Your Life by Rachel Zoffness, MS, PhD
Dr. Zoffness, PhD in clinical psychology specializing in pain, explains that 100% of the time pain is both physical AND emotional. This workbook will teach you the brain’s role in pain perception and the importance of addressing mindset and behavior rather than relying on meditations or medical procedures to manage pain. You’ll learn science-backed cognitive techniques as well as mind-body practices. For example, noticing and changing negative thought patterns, regulating emotions, and breathwork, meditation, relaxation, and visualization. The goal is to relax and rewire the nervous system, which has become conditioned to create persistent pain signals in the body. With practical strategies, including exercise, sleep hygiene, and social connection, you’ll be empowered to take back your life one step at at time.
3rd Must-Read Book for Chronic Pain
Mind Your Body: A Revolutionary Program to Release Chronic Pain and Anxiety by Nicole J. Sachs, LCSW
Nicole Sachs, psychotherapist and student of Dr. John Sarno, developed JournalSpeak, a therapeutic writing practice for uncovering repressed emotions. She explains that repressed thoughts, beliefs, emotions as well as unresolved trauma are the root cause of pain. Creating the sensation of physical pain is your brain’s way of protecting you and keeping you safe. Your work is to uncover what your brain is protecting you from. Sachs teaches that chronic pain, chronic conditions (like IBS), Long Covid, and even pain that moves throughout the body, are not separate diagnoses. They all stem from the same source and they are all healed through uncovering repressed emotions. Throughout this book and in her podcast The Cure for Chronic Pain, she shares real-life stories of recovery and setbacks and continually helps you understand that the pain is not “all in your head” but the solution is not in your body.
Chronic pain isn’t just a physical experience. Which means it’s solution won’t be solely physical either. Pain is deeply connected to our emotions, nervous system, and past experiences. Understanding how the nervous system works to protect us (and that pain is crucial to survival), the role of stress on our health, and how our own thoughts, emotions, lifestyle choices, and past trauma play a role in our experience of pain is life-changing. While this realization might feel overwhelming, it’s also empowering. You have far more power than you believe. These 3 must-read books for chronic pain are your first steps to reclaiming your life.
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