For what it's worth, I read this recommendation a year or so a go and it helped a lot despite my initial skepticism. It's mostly a mindful awareness thing.
It's actually hard to impossible to relax when you don't know the source of the tension. Finding that tension within a network of hundreds of billions of neurons can be like finding a single sand on the beach.
Worse, as time goes on you tend to compensate instead of resolving the root cause, leading to an increasingly complex web which you have to untangle first before being able to reach the root cause.
Most people die before any of the above is accomplished.
This is why I think that the methods taught in this book seem to work for some people. When you're stressed beyond all means and don't deal with it mentally, the tension you give yourself causes physical harm. Sort of like how stress can cause you to grind your teeth at night. Dealing with your problems and just simply relaxing can help tremendously.
I'm another person cured of RSI by the same approach. Initially, when learning of TMS, the RSI got worse (progressing from just constant pain to feelings of numbness and nerve damage).
Certainly worth a look if you have RSI--clearly if people can be cured more or less overnight by just reading, there's SOME mental component, whether or not Dr. Sarno's explanations of the mechanisms of TMS are correct.
Me too. I spent about a year after college in constant pain from carpal tunnel and sciatica. Even basic actions like opening a door were extremely painful.
I blew a lot of money on ergonomic equipment, PT, steroidal treatments, and was strongly considering surgery until I treated my chronic pain as TMS. My desk setup has not changed at all but I've been completely pain free for about a year now. It was eye-opening to realize that such severe pain, which inhibited simple daily activities, could be entirely psychosomatic.
The nocebo effect[1] is a well-documented phenomenon that is closely related. When you expect an autonomic symptom, you are much more likely to experience it.
Thank you for sharing. It's always great to learn about effective strategies to deal with/cure RSI; especially when so many said cures are failing. Already ordered the book, and I hope I won't be disappointed :)
Two words: music physiotherapists. Musicians get RSI-type problems a lot, and when it's career-ending for a concert pianist, people really pay attention. Plus there's several hundred years of accumulated experience dealing with these problems.
I still have fluid around my tendons 20 years later, my RSI was so bad - visible roundness in my forearms - and I haven't had a day of pain in a decade. It took six sessions, and they only worked on my neck.
I've been seeing this book pop up all over the place for the past year or so. It seems to be the go-to recommendation from friends to other friends who are frustrated at not finding relief from chronic pain after trying many other treatments.
I haven't read the book. All I can say is that the results, from my perspective, have been mixed. Some people who have tried it and not seen their pain alleviated blame themselves for not getting to the root of their stress. I haven't heard of anyone's pain disappearing in 2 weeks. I've heard people recommend it for all kinds of pain, not just muscle and back pain. Claims about its efficacy seem to have broadened over time.
The book is set at a very good "it can't hurt to try" price point, and the word of mouth marketing makes it very appealing to people who feel desperate.
I am a random person. My experiences are anecdotal.
Never read the book, but psychology changes helped my RSI issues tremendously.
> if you are unconsciously worried about something (including worried about your wrists hurting while you type), then this can cause your wrists to hurt while you type.
This. If you're scared of RSI and scared of typing, that can itself cause problems.
> including worried about your wrists hurting while you type
This is the thing that fixed my problem. After trying so many different "methods" and "tricks", I read about this approach on an HN thread a few years ago. I was skeptical in the beginning but now I'm just dumbfounded how effective it was.
In short, I relaxed and stopped being scared of it.
FWIW I also took more breaks, got a better chair and posture, stretched regularly, and especially importantly: became a lot more aware of signs of incoming pain and would take breaks before it started hurting not after. (But lately I'm fine and rarely need any breaks. After some success I stopped being scared.)
I think it's completely reasonable that your thoughts have a lot of effect on your body. I don't see anything unscientific about that. Both consciously and unconsciously your brain can move your legs, for example. And a lot of other important stuff.
As a comparison, consider running or some other sport. There's often minor aches and pains involved even if you never get anything people would call an "injury". If you had a bad attitude to them and interpreted them as a dangerous injury, I think they could bother you a huge amount. But if you aren't scared of them at all because you have a good understanding of which ones are danger signs and which are nothing to worry about, then the same pains can be no problem.
I think novices often make mistakes in both directions. Being overly worried about minor pains is common -- many people quickly give up on running. And trying to ignore major pains is also common and gets people injured. I think both types of mistakes happen (a lot) with RSI and typing too.
If you get get your psychology so you don't mind non-dangerous minor pains, but do things about any real problems, then that's good. If you stray to either direction of getting this correct you can cause problems.
Sometimes both issues happen. First you get some real pain. You take some breaks and it soon heals and you're OK but now you're scared and start interpreting non-dangerous minor sensations as scary pain. And if you keep going down that path it can escalate. And also if you try to push through while scared of every minor sensation, and type anyway, you're in no condition to understand whether there's anything dangerous going on that needs a break, some stretching, or more. So it's psychologically unpleasant plus you might hurt yourself again.
I think it's really valuable to build up more awareness and understanding of your hands/wrists, and have the right way of thinking about the topic.
EDIT: i think he deleted while i was writing my post. but basically he just asked for information about the things i talk about.
Oops, sorry, I deleted my question before you posted your answer. (I deleted it because I thought it might be slightly inflammatory.) Thanks for taking the time to answer.
Somewhere is the many paragraphs of typing he did for this article, he mentions that perhaps fixing the psychological component improves the physical condition. His idea is that mental stress over RSI restricts bloodflow to the parts of the hands/arms that need blood.
While I don't buy into this article's theory, I do think that the mind is tightly coupled to the body and that people who draw too many distinctions between the two are misguided. That said, I still seek out good ergonomics personally and think RSI, at least for me, is due to me typing for 12 hours a day. I never worried about RSI until I had pain in my hands the went on for weeks. We can debate until the cows come home about whether the mental stress caused the hand pain or whether the ergonomics caused it--in the end it's the same pain and same RSI and just semantics. If wearing wrist pads eliminates the pain or if telling yourself to not worry makes the pain go away--the physical and mental result is the same. For me, wristpads worked. But I know from experience that stress on the mind and stress on the body is basically the same in many regards.
Psychology can play a component though. If you are tense your muscles start off tighter and are easier to fatigue. You are also more likely to be hunched over your keyboard resulting in worse posture.
I'm skeptical about the book and the miracle cure side of it but, i don't think psychology can be completely ruled out.
Pain is not terribly well understood. I mean, we generally know how nerve impulses convey a signal to the CNS, but how the brain chooses to interpret those signals as "pain" is still something of a mystery. There is an area of research called neuromatrix theory that started out trying to explain phantom limbs, but has possible applications to chronic pain as well. From the little I've read about it, the idea is that the brain can start interpreting normal sensations as painful, or can create sensations that are not there. While this is an actual area if research, unlike Sarno's books, there are some interesting similarities.
Eric Cartman: Look, maybe they're all part of the same thing - Santa and Jesus and hell and leprechauns. Maybe they're all real in the same way, right?
Tom: Santa Claus and leprechauns are imaginary, but Jesus and hell are real.
Technician #1: Well then what about Buddha?
Tom: Well, of course, he's imaginary.
Technician #1: Aw, see? Now, you're being intolerant, Tom.
Please be careful with this article. It is not remotely skeptical, and seems to be highly biased in the favor of Dr. Sarno's book. Chiropractic medicine for anything other than lower back pain and Acupuncture are two forms of alternative medicine that are well known to work off the placebo effect, yet the article mentions their use despite alleging to be a skeptic. This is a major red flag.
There is not a large amount of unbiased information about Dr Sarno's methods that I could find quickly, but from what is available TMS appears to be a form of alternative medicine that has no basis in science, and instead relies on pseudoscience and the placebo effect.
Rather than the pain relief being due to TMS, there is probably a more likely cause behind the result. Perhaps stretching exercises or pain medicine was involved. Or perhaps even just the placebo effect itself.
Please read this article for more information. It even contains a brief mention of Dr. Sarno.
Chiropractic medicine for anything other than lower back pain and Acupuncture are two forms of alternative medicine that are well known to work off the placebo effect, yet the article mentions their use despite alleging to be a skeptic. This is a major red flag.
Trying something to check whether it works is orthogonal to being skeptical about it. In fact, it's the heart of science.
Making very specific predictions via a hypothesis and gathering specific, and plentiful, data that test your predictions is the heart of science. Anecdotes (on which all alternative medicine is based on) do not make good science and "trying something to check whether it works" with a sample size of one is the worst way to do medicine.
Actually, the scientific method is the heart of science, and the method is to check a hypothesis.
When the goal is to fix yourself, the only relevant sample size is yourself. And when the problem may be psychological, then placebo effect may fix it, because you believe you've fixed it.
You're making a dangerous connection here. Alternative medicine such as TMS helping reduce pain through the placebo effect does not suggest that the alternative medicine is effective. It just proves that the placebo effect is real.
Alternative medicine may help in instances where the placebo effect is all that is needed. Unfortunately, there is risk that people may use alternative medicine as a replacement for real medicine and cause themselves unnecessary harm.
A delay in pursuing an effective treatment can be extremely significant. For example, if one simply tries to will away a broken bone, it can set incorrectly and cause permanent damage.
It's not hard to learn how to deal with the minor pain of a cavity long enough for it to become a major even potentially life threatening issue. Dittio for thigs like a minor acke that's the sign of an early cancer ect. Overall pain is generally a really important issue and solid pain for over a week without obvious cause is a major warning sign that should not be ignored.
PS: Only after a reigorious investigation should someone look into developing coping skills.
You're saying "placebo effect" like it's a bad thing. Many doctors agree placebo is a powerful drug, and a component of every type of pill administered to a conscious person. Even a consultation with a doctor can have a positive, even if unmeasurable placebo effect on a patient's health.
If this method is about effective application of placebo and it works, at least for some people, what harm can be in it?
The negativity that you are sensing is not against the placebo effect, but against treatments that claim legitimacy and use anecdotes that are easily explained by the placebo effect as evidence of their effectiveness.
A placebo is by definition something that has no effect at all. Any improvement in the state of someone taking a placebo must be attributed instead to something other than the placebo. However, patients will attribute their improvement to the placebo. This is the placebo effect.
No doctor would literally say that a placebo is a "powerful drug", since it is by definition completely inert. However, they may say so in a figurative manner to mean that patients will claim effectiveness of ineffective treatments due to the placebo effect.
Treatments that rely on the placebo effect have two major negative aspects. First they may prevent people from seeking a truly effective means of treatment. Second, they take money for providing a treatment that has no actual value.
What is "actual value" and how does it relate to subjective use-value? If people value the placebo effect, why is that bad? And if they value the effect, what is wrong with valuing the source of it? (The distinction between placebo and placebo effect stinks of Cartesian duality). Do you see meditation or talk therapy as placebos? Are we obligated to deny people self improvement that isn't a result of ingesting a chemical?
Alcoholics Anonymous has the same effectiveness as cold turkey and a few other sobriety methods (about 10% success). Are you suggesting that alcoholics should never attempt the AA program?
Some solutions work for individual cases and are worth being explored on a personal basis.
Placebos are great for things you can do nothing about. If you caught the common cold and a placebo makes you feel better then great. But if you have Repetitive Strain Injury (emphasis on repetitive and injury) and your cure is placebo then you're setting yourself up for something nasty.
I'll quote the article:
> I can type as much as I want, in whatever unergonomic position I want, on any keyboard, without any pain. The amazing thing about this recovery is that the changes I implemented were entirely psychological.
Sounds great, but I'd rather recommend to not buy the book and invest in a good chair with a comfortable desk instead. Also, breaks, stretching and yadda yadda.
So the guy who wrote the article took an open minded approach tried numerous methods until he found something that worked (including all the things you seem to suggest).
Your recommendation not to buy the book is based on what evidence exactly?
Indeed, it doesn't look good. I don't know how you can be skeptical but then also try chiropractic and acupuncture (without trying a lot of other stuff)
The wikipedia talk page is interesting.
Here's my personal story about how I conquered my RSI: stopped using Emacs. It helped that I moved from a developer to a sysadmin role.
When I do occasionally use Emacs, it's with viper mode.
After reading multiple comments criticising Emacs for wearing down the hands, there's some more stuff (apart from viper-mode) that makes Emacs use less damaging:
* auto-completion (e.g. binding dabbrev-expand to an easy reachable key/combo)
* put window/buffer navigation onto easier reachable keys (for me F7, F11 work well)
* Make buffer switching smarter by using ido-switch-buffer and ido-find-file instead of the normal switch-buffer and find-file functions (see documentation for ido-mode)
* desktop-save-mode so you don't have to repeatedly re-open files after restarting emacs
* Using auto-generated boilerplate when creating new files (see Emacs manual for define-auto-insert and friends)
* using a Kinesis Advantage keyboard helps with emacs key combos as Ctrl/Alt can be reached via the thumbs without moving the hands.
I don't know what's more impressive... the results, or that the top comment on the article is by Jeffrey Friedl. I've communicated with Friedl a bit at Y!, and if he says you changed his life, I believe him.
The book helped me try to stress out less about some frightening RSI I had years ago. The speculative mechanical explanation for the "stress -> pain", something like: stress means less oxygenated blood to extremities, was never convincing - more like a dumbo's feather for those skeptical of general mind-body woo.
Coincidentally, I got better. That was probably just rest and time, but I'm grateful that the book helped me not worry so much.
I was diagnosed with bilateral arterial T.O.S. last year after reading about it in a comment on HN. I very recently had corrective surgery on my right side and I hope to have my left side done soon. I was diagnosed when an ultrasound showed full occlusion of my subclavian arteries whenever I lifted my arms (but only when sitting or standing upright, like at my desk, which was not a standard discovery).
If anyone has any questions feel free to message me.
I suspect what's happening with all the people who this works for is that given there are some people who have a psychological component to their pain and some who have a mostly physical component.
Even if there are far fewer suffering from the psychological version, they are the ones who physical treatment will fail for. So they will be the ones that get as far as trying the pseudosciencey approach to dealing with the pain. So the mind body approach will have a high success rate amongst the people trying it even if it would be a terrible initial remedy to try.
I am amazed at the shallow thinking of many in this thread who dismiss the story as "quackery".
I'd encourage anyone who speaks of a "pseudosciencey approach" to do some careful thinking and propose an approach that would let us measure the effects our minds have on our bodies. So far most people sweep this effect under the rug calling it the "placebo effect" (a catch-all phrase for everything we do not understand). That's not an answer.
Notice: we live in the XXI century, and yet we treat our bodies as though our heads were detached and completely independent. Medicine as we know it is based on pills, syringes, vials and knives. Anything else is the "placebo effect" or in the (decidedly non-scientific) domain of psychologists and psychiatrists. I'd call that hiding our head in the sand (double-entendre intended).
We do all this while readily accepting that we can sweat, or get diarrhea from nervousness. If people accept that the mind can (subconsciously) control sweating, why can't they accept that it can (subconsciously) control the narrowing of blood vessels?
Most people dismiss psychosomatic effects without understanding what they are. Psychosomatic pain isn't any less real. The physical changes are there, they just might not be exactly the changes you are looking for (e.g. no inflammation). And they are caused by the mind, which is why we call them "psychosomatic". But they are not hallucinations, or misfiring neurons in your nervous system.
I am all for scientific approach to medicine. But that includes not shutting your eyes to an entire huge branch of it that we simply do not understand — the connection between the mind and the body.
Also, many people don't understand the mechanism behind all this. It's not that Sarno is a magic-voodoo healer. All he does is show you the mechanism — which is very often enough: the mind, once exposed to its own tricks, starts working differently. This is why just reading his books and thinking about them causes changes in so many people (either the pain is gone, or the symptoms shift and change).
Source: myself. I got rid of joint pain after 8 years of fruitless doctor visits. It is now almost completely under control: if it happens, I can tell why it happened and control it. As a bonus, it turned out that my frequent throat infections and the allergies are gone, too.
Don't dismiss psychosomatic effects. Sure, go see a doctor first, but if multiple doctors are unable to find a cause of your pain, at least read one of Sarno's books and think (critically!) about it.
I am generally as skeptical as it gets, but I read the book, then spent some time contemplating how it applied to my situation and - poof - a debilitating hip joint pain I had a mispleasure experiencing every few months was gone. I went through an MRI and a bone scan prior to that and all I got back was that everything was A-OK. Frankly, I was stunned that thinking about the problem was the remedy. You can basically talk to your body, say "stop that" and it will comply. Really weird.
I'm not selling this dvd, but even the 5 or so videos here really helped. http://www.youtube.com/user/HealthyTyping. It is very practical, showing how tendons are strained in positions that seem like they should be pain free.
Since then I don't use arm rests so I can keep my elbows in, and dont curl my fingers. The pain went away almost over one weekend.
Pain treatment is one of the few areas where a placebo actually 'works' (in the sense that it leads to better outcomes than non-treatment). See Pollo et al, "Response expectancies in placebo analgesia and their clinical relevance."
So even if it's full of nonsense, it's not surprising that the book could work (and not just anecdotally). The question is whether this book is any better than a placebo, and anecdotes can't answer that. (I also wonder if it's any better than any other book that would help you cope with psychological stress.)
This book is NOT "rigorously scientific". The guy comes off as a bit of a nut, and wastes paragraphs defending Freud (seriously, wtf?).
That said, he might be right that there's a psychological component to RSI, even if his explanations and theories are incorrect. After all, fall and winter come even though Demeter isn't actually crying for Persephone.
This book helped my RSI by convincing me enough that it might be psychological, even though I tossed the book in disgust after a few chapters. For a few years my pain seemed to have gone away completely, although it's back somewhat now.
Maybe I'm missing something here, but from his very brief description of the methods used, I thought that there was at least some "method" or "logic" to it.
Which seems to indicate that the "treatment" is something much more vague like...journaling, support groups, therapy...?
Pardon the stereotype, but I'm imagining some old women's knitting group or something...or all the stuff about "repressed anger" "childhood abuse", etc....if that were the case, wouldn't women's circles, group therapy, individual therapy, anger management classes, spontaneously start curing people of their pain? I don't see anything specific about this method.
Maybe I'm missing something very basic? Distraction and getting your mind off of it is a well known way to deal with pain. I didn't think that was new.
I'm another person that was helped by this. I was also pretty skeptical entering it, and I hate that I am embarrassed to tell my RSI-suffering friends about it when I know that it has helped many people (including others of my RSI-suffering friends).
To those talking about how it's pseudoscience, all I have to say is that there are at least some people, including the author of the post, who have tried many other options and found that this approach helps. As far as I'm concerned, I'd be happy to sit in a crystal pyramid or any other sort of quackery if it genuinely improved the problem.
(And in reading the book, the author does have some reasoning as to why it works. I think it's at least indisputable that there are physical consequences to many mental ailments like stress, so it doesn't seem like such a reach to me to try treating the mental issue to improve the physical symptoms.)
1. Pound away at the keyboard indiscriminately for years, no pain
2. Pound away, start to get pain but it goes away after some off time (could be as little as a night)
3. Pound away, get pain but it goes away after extended rest time
4. Pound away, the pain never really goes away, it just subsides.
It is much like the straw the breaks the camel's back, the frog in a boiling point of water - what you take for granted (the ability to input your thoughts into a machine) might not always be toll-free.
If you get pain, stop. Don't be macho or in denial. Go out and do some whole body exercise like swimming (http://totalimmersion.net rocks)
-Someone who has residual pain of 3 on a scale of 10, with spikes going higher. I've become very efficient and have long ago since started diversifying out of programming.
I am unsure this book's claims are correct, and I still remain skeptical. But one epiphany I had in dealing with my recent RSI is that it does make me worry — quite a bit in fact. Programming is not only how I make a living, and also a hobby and my future life as a grad student. Having it all be at risk because of RSI makes me incredibly stressed. Previously when I've had RSI, it's gone away after a week or so. Now I'm the most stressed I've ever been about it because it just hasn't gone away. I don't think it's so odd to suspect that there is a psychological component (and now that I am aware of it I am addressing this it from angle more). There's an unlimited positive pain feedback cycle, which could explain the persistence. I could see some sort of process where RSI's origination is physical (overuse, definitely was in my case) but its lingering is a function of stress.
This article also made me realize that it is silly for skeptics to use the placebo effect (a purely psychological effect) to attack pseudoscience healing crap, but then dismiss psychological explanations for pain. If the mind can limit pain through the placebo effect, why is it so suspicious the brain can cause or continue pain?
82 comments
[ 308 ms ] story [ 2635 ms ] threadWorse, as time goes on you tend to compensate instead of resolving the root cause, leading to an increasingly complex web which you have to untangle first before being able to reach the root cause.
Most people die before any of the above is accomplished.
Certainly worth a look if you have RSI--clearly if people can be cured more or less overnight by just reading, there's SOME mental component, whether or not Dr. Sarno's explanations of the mechanisms of TMS are correct.
I blew a lot of money on ergonomic equipment, PT, steroidal treatments, and was strongly considering surgery until I treated my chronic pain as TMS. My desk setup has not changed at all but I've been completely pain free for about a year now. It was eye-opening to realize that such severe pain, which inhibited simple daily activities, could be entirely psychosomatic.
The nocebo effect[1] is a well-documented phenomenon that is closely related. When you expect an autonomic symptom, you are much more likely to experience it.
[1] http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/12/opinion/sunday/beware-the-...
I still have fluid around my tendons 20 years later, my RSI was so bad - visible roundness in my forearms - and I haven't had a day of pain in a decade. It took six sessions, and they only worked on my neck.
Highly recommended.
I haven't read the book. All I can say is that the results, from my perspective, have been mixed. Some people who have tried it and not seen their pain alleviated blame themselves for not getting to the root of their stress. I haven't heard of anyone's pain disappearing in 2 weeks. I've heard people recommend it for all kinds of pain, not just muscle and back pain. Claims about its efficacy seem to have broadened over time.
The book is set at a very good "it can't hurt to try" price point, and the word of mouth marketing makes it very appealing to people who feel desperate.
I am a random person. My experiences are anecdotal.
> if you are unconsciously worried about something (including worried about your wrists hurting while you type), then this can cause your wrists to hurt while you type.
This. If you're scared of RSI and scared of typing, that can itself cause problems.
This is the thing that fixed my problem. After trying so many different "methods" and "tricks", I read about this approach on an HN thread a few years ago. I was skeptical in the beginning but now I'm just dumbfounded how effective it was.
FWIW I also took more breaks, got a better chair and posture, stretched regularly, and especially importantly: became a lot more aware of signs of incoming pain and would take breaks before it started hurting not after. (But lately I'm fine and rarely need any breaks. After some success I stopped being scared.)
I think it's completely reasonable that your thoughts have a lot of effect on your body. I don't see anything unscientific about that. Both consciously and unconsciously your brain can move your legs, for example. And a lot of other important stuff.
As a comparison, consider running or some other sport. There's often minor aches and pains involved even if you never get anything people would call an "injury". If you had a bad attitude to them and interpreted them as a dangerous injury, I think they could bother you a huge amount. But if you aren't scared of them at all because you have a good understanding of which ones are danger signs and which are nothing to worry about, then the same pains can be no problem.
I think novices often make mistakes in both directions. Being overly worried about minor pains is common -- many people quickly give up on running. And trying to ignore major pains is also common and gets people injured. I think both types of mistakes happen (a lot) with RSI and typing too.
If you get get your psychology so you don't mind non-dangerous minor pains, but do things about any real problems, then that's good. If you stray to either direction of getting this correct you can cause problems.
Sometimes both issues happen. First you get some real pain. You take some breaks and it soon heals and you're OK but now you're scared and start interpreting non-dangerous minor sensations as scary pain. And if you keep going down that path it can escalate. And also if you try to push through while scared of every minor sensation, and type anyway, you're in no condition to understand whether there's anything dangerous going on that needs a break, some stretching, or more. So it's psychologically unpleasant plus you might hurt yourself again.
I think it's really valuable to build up more awareness and understanding of your hands/wrists, and have the right way of thinking about the topic.
EDIT: i think he deleted while i was writing my post. but basically he just asked for information about the things i talk about.
While I don't buy into this article's theory, I do think that the mind is tightly coupled to the body and that people who draw too many distinctions between the two are misguided. That said, I still seek out good ergonomics personally and think RSI, at least for me, is due to me typing for 12 hours a day. I never worried about RSI until I had pain in my hands the went on for weeks. We can debate until the cows come home about whether the mental stress caused the hand pain or whether the ergonomics caused it--in the end it's the same pain and same RSI and just semantics. If wearing wrist pads eliminates the pain or if telling yourself to not worry makes the pain go away--the physical and mental result is the same. For me, wristpads worked. But I know from experience that stress on the mind and stress on the body is basically the same in many regards.
I'm skeptical about the book and the miracle cure side of it but, i don't think psychology can be completely ruled out.
Eric Cartman: Look, maybe they're all part of the same thing - Santa and Jesus and hell and leprechauns. Maybe they're all real in the same way, right? Tom: Santa Claus and leprechauns are imaginary, but Jesus and hell are real. Technician #1: Well then what about Buddha? Tom: Well, of course, he's imaginary. Technician #1: Aw, see? Now, you're being intolerant, Tom.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0995579/quotes?item=qt0391524
There is not a large amount of unbiased information about Dr Sarno's methods that I could find quickly, but from what is available TMS appears to be a form of alternative medicine that has no basis in science, and instead relies on pseudoscience and the placebo effect.
Rather than the pain relief being due to TMS, there is probably a more likely cause behind the result. Perhaps stretching exercises or pain medicine was involved. Or perhaps even just the placebo effect itself.
Please read this article for more information. It even contains a brief mention of Dr. Sarno.
http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/why-do-people-turn-to-al...
Trying something to check whether it works is orthogonal to being skeptical about it. In fact, it's the heart of science.
When the goal is to fix yourself, the only relevant sample size is yourself. And when the problem may be psychological, then placebo effect may fix it, because you believe you've fixed it.
You're making a dangerous connection here. Alternative medicine such as TMS helping reduce pain through the placebo effect does not suggest that the alternative medicine is effective. It just proves that the placebo effect is real.
Alternative medicine may help in instances where the placebo effect is all that is needed. Unfortunately, there is risk that people may use alternative medicine as a replacement for real medicine and cause themselves unnecessary harm.
PS: Only after a reigorious investigation should someone look into developing coping skills.
Of course. That's how Steve Jobs died.
The scientific method requires someone to check their hypothesis. If they ignore data, then they're not doing science.
A placebo is by definition something that has no effect at all. Any improvement in the state of someone taking a placebo must be attributed instead to something other than the placebo. However, patients will attribute their improvement to the placebo. This is the placebo effect.
No doctor would literally say that a placebo is a "powerful drug", since it is by definition completely inert. However, they may say so in a figurative manner to mean that patients will claim effectiveness of ineffective treatments due to the placebo effect.
Treatments that rely on the placebo effect have two major negative aspects. First they may prevent people from seeking a truly effective means of treatment. Second, they take money for providing a treatment that has no actual value.
Alcoholics Anonymous has the same effectiveness as cold turkey and a few other sobriety methods (about 10% success). Are you suggesting that alcoholics should never attempt the AA program? Some solutions work for individual cases and are worth being explored on a personal basis.
I'll quote the article:
> I can type as much as I want, in whatever unergonomic position I want, on any keyboard, without any pain. The amazing thing about this recovery is that the changes I implemented were entirely psychological.
Sounds great, but I'd rather recommend to not buy the book and invest in a good chair with a comfortable desk instead. Also, breaks, stretching and yadda yadda.
Your recommendation not to buy the book is based on what evidence exactly?
"The first medical specialist I consulted was a chiropractor"
Chiropractic was founded by magnetic healer, D.D. Palmer. Magnetic healing is also a pseudoscience but less people take it seriously.
http://www.amazon.com/4-Hour-Body-Uncommon-Incredible-Superh...
If you look at the reviews you'll get a better understanding.
The wikipedia talk page is interesting.
Here's my personal story about how I conquered my RSI: stopped using Emacs. It helped that I moved from a developer to a sysadmin role.
When I do occasionally use Emacs, it's with viper mode.
* ergo-emacs key bindings (http://ergoemacs.org/features.html)
* partial-completion-mode
* auto-completion (e.g. binding dabbrev-expand to an easy reachable key/combo)
* put window/buffer navigation onto easier reachable keys (for me F7, F11 work well)
* Make buffer switching smarter by using ido-switch-buffer and ido-find-file instead of the normal switch-buffer and find-file functions (see documentation for ido-mode)
* desktop-save-mode so you don't have to repeatedly re-open files after restarting emacs
* Using auto-generated boilerplate when creating new files (see Emacs manual for define-auto-insert and friends)
* using a Kinesis Advantage keyboard helps with emacs key combos as Ctrl/Alt can be reached via the thumbs without moving the hands.
...
Coincidentally, I got better. That was probably just rest and time, but I'm grateful that the book helped me not worry so much.
I was diagnosed with bilateral arterial T.O.S. last year after reading about it in a comment on HN. I very recently had corrective surgery on my right side and I hope to have my left side done soon. I was diagnosed when an ultrasound showed full occlusion of my subclavian arteries whenever I lifted my arms (but only when sitting or standing upright, like at my desk, which was not a standard discovery).
If anyone has any questions feel free to message me.
Even if there are far fewer suffering from the psychological version, they are the ones who physical treatment will fail for. So they will be the ones that get as far as trying the pseudosciencey approach to dealing with the pain. So the mind body approach will have a high success rate amongst the people trying it even if it would be a terrible initial remedy to try.
I'd encourage anyone who speaks of a "pseudosciencey approach" to do some careful thinking and propose an approach that would let us measure the effects our minds have on our bodies. So far most people sweep this effect under the rug calling it the "placebo effect" (a catch-all phrase for everything we do not understand). That's not an answer.
Notice: we live in the XXI century, and yet we treat our bodies as though our heads were detached and completely independent. Medicine as we know it is based on pills, syringes, vials and knives. Anything else is the "placebo effect" or in the (decidedly non-scientific) domain of psychologists and psychiatrists. I'd call that hiding our head in the sand (double-entendre intended).
We do all this while readily accepting that we can sweat, or get diarrhea from nervousness. If people accept that the mind can (subconsciously) control sweating, why can't they accept that it can (subconsciously) control the narrowing of blood vessels?
Most people dismiss psychosomatic effects without understanding what they are. Psychosomatic pain isn't any less real. The physical changes are there, they just might not be exactly the changes you are looking for (e.g. no inflammation). And they are caused by the mind, which is why we call them "psychosomatic". But they are not hallucinations, or misfiring neurons in your nervous system.
I am all for scientific approach to medicine. But that includes not shutting your eyes to an entire huge branch of it that we simply do not understand — the connection between the mind and the body.
Also, many people don't understand the mechanism behind all this. It's not that Sarno is a magic-voodoo healer. All he does is show you the mechanism — which is very often enough: the mind, once exposed to its own tricks, starts working differently. This is why just reading his books and thinking about them causes changes in so many people (either the pain is gone, or the symptoms shift and change).
Source: myself. I got rid of joint pain after 8 years of fruitless doctor visits. It is now almost completely under control: if it happens, I can tell why it happened and control it. As a bonus, it turned out that my frequent throat infections and the allergies are gone, too.
Don't dismiss psychosomatic effects. Sure, go see a doctor first, but if multiple doctors are unable to find a cause of your pain, at least read one of Sarno's books and think (critically!) about it.
I am generally as skeptical as it gets, but I read the book, then spent some time contemplating how it applied to my situation and - poof - a debilitating hip joint pain I had a mispleasure experiencing every few months was gone. I went through an MRI and a bone scan prior to that and all I got back was that everything was A-OK. Frankly, I was stunned that thinking about the problem was the remedy. You can basically talk to your body, say "stop that" and it will comply. Really weird.
Since then I don't use arm rests so I can keep my elbows in, and dont curl my fingers. The pain went away almost over one weekend.
So even if it's full of nonsense, it's not surprising that the book could work (and not just anecdotally). The question is whether this book is any better than a placebo, and anecdotes can't answer that. (I also wonder if it's any better than any other book that would help you cope with psychological stress.)
Personally, I was having problems in my dominant hand and switching from a mouse to a Wacom tablet with a pen made a colossal improvement.
If, for instance, you use vim, check out the map feature ... http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/map.html
That said, he might be right that there's a psychological component to RSI, even if his explanations and theories are incorrect. After all, fall and winter come even though Demeter isn't actually crying for Persephone.
This book helped my RSI by convincing me enough that it might be psychological, even though I tossed the book in disgust after a few chapters. For a few years my pain seemed to have gone away completely, although it's back somewhat now.
But then I brought up:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tension_myositis_syndrome
Which seems to indicate that the "treatment" is something much more vague like...journaling, support groups, therapy...?
Pardon the stereotype, but I'm imagining some old women's knitting group or something...or all the stuff about "repressed anger" "childhood abuse", etc....if that were the case, wouldn't women's circles, group therapy, individual therapy, anger management classes, spontaneously start curing people of their pain? I don't see anything specific about this method.
Maybe I'm missing something very basic? Distraction and getting your mind off of it is a well known way to deal with pain. I didn't think that was new.
To those talking about how it's pseudoscience, all I have to say is that there are at least some people, including the author of the post, who have tried many other options and found that this approach helps. As far as I'm concerned, I'd be happy to sit in a crystal pyramid or any other sort of quackery if it genuinely improved the problem.
(And in reading the book, the author does have some reasoning as to why it works. I think it's at least indisputable that there are physical consequences to many mental ailments like stress, so it doesn't seem like such a reach to me to try treating the mental issue to improve the physical symptoms.)
1. Pound away at the keyboard indiscriminately for years, no pain 2. Pound away, start to get pain but it goes away after some off time (could be as little as a night) 3. Pound away, get pain but it goes away after extended rest time 4. Pound away, the pain never really goes away, it just subsides.
It is much like the straw the breaks the camel's back, the frog in a boiling point of water - what you take for granted (the ability to input your thoughts into a machine) might not always be toll-free.
If you get pain, stop. Don't be macho or in denial. Go out and do some whole body exercise like swimming (http://totalimmersion.net rocks)
-Someone who has residual pain of 3 on a scale of 10, with spikes going higher. I've become very efficient and have long ago since started diversifying out of programming.
This article also made me realize that it is silly for skeptics to use the placebo effect (a purely psychological effect) to attack pseudoscience healing crap, but then dismiss psychological explanations for pain. If the mind can limit pain through the placebo effect, why is it so suspicious the brain can cause or continue pain?