New information again seems to document that pain memory lasts a long time. (see Kings College London. "Cells Carry Memory of Injury". See http://www.kcl.ac.uk/ioppn/news/records/2016/May/Cells-carry-memory-of-injury,-which-could-reveal-why-chronic-pain-persists.aspx). We have known that for fifty years but new research shows us where and how. The fact remains that early injury and its suffering carries on perhaps for a lifetime. They don’t just carry on; that continuously do damage. And the cells send information of the damage and its agony to higher levels. This was a study on persistent pain in mice. They found that damage changes epigenetic marks on some genes of immune cells to mark the spot; they carry on the memory of trauma. The investigators wanted to know why pain becomes chronic; and they are searching out the nerve pathway that carry pain along. The point is that there are neural mechanisms that make pain endure. We don’t just get over it; it is now part of us. Certain nerve cells become much more activated. The problem is that with pain they remain in an hyperactive state. It is not only in our minds but everywhere inside of us. And the adaptive damaged cells keep in replicating themselves.
Notice, I did not say, maladaptive cells. Because maladaptive is the way damaged cells adapt. To carry the idea forward, we need to get to those pained cells and experience them fully so that we can now adapt normally. They point out that neurons acquire epigenetic footprints that affect key proteins. Those pains seem to insist that we must face the pain and react fully. Otherwise, after a fully reliving why do cells return to their normal state? It is a matter of unfinished business; we cannot neglect our biology and hope to be normal.
The problem is with most enduring pain we do not know where to look or how deep to go. So instead of doing what we should, feel it fully, we push it back and hide it until it comes out in a different form: cancer? Same pain, different expression. Same epigene, different phenotype. It is not always helpful to look for different causes for different afflictions; they may be the same.
I have noted that Primal memories are not inert. They do not lie here waiting to be discovered. They agitate and gnaw away. Recently in a Ted Talk there is a report on nanoparticles “trained” to enter the body, search out developing cancer cells and kill them, all in microscopic space (see https://www.ted.com/talks/paula_hammond_a_new_superweapon_in_the_fight_against_cancer). These particles know what their job is and they don’t forget. Our own immune cells clearly have the same kind of memory; they try to do their job but imprinted pain overwhelms them and prevents them from discharging their “daily rounds.” How do I know? When we reduce the pain in the system through one year of Primal Therapy the natural killer cells increase; the same kind of cell as those nanoparticles I wrote about. Deep pain prevents us from being normal and acting normal and having our biology behave normally.
Hello Paul!
ReplyDeleteA reply to your comment on the blog "Why Primal Pain Endures"
To be aware of what I do in my efforts not to suffer means everything to succeed in my therapy!
If I can not connect all of my deviant behavior here and now in my process of therapy I will always fail! You can not skip a part of the road and think that you will arrive. I think this is where the mistakes are made because they are so subtle in the process of survival! This is where we need help to keep from falling into the disastrous experiences... as the lost part of the road has such consequence.
At this writing... so this applies to me too.
Your Frank
Chromatic Scale vs. Electroshock Therapy.
ReplyDeleteI have written about my dream about the chromatic jazz scale (A Different Way Of Using A Chromatic Scale). It was not a one-off. My primal, often begin when I enter rem sleep. During the last two months, at two occasions I have re-lived how my head during a primal suddenly is hit by electric impulses, an utmost painful feeling with certain similarities to my first petit mal fits in my late teens. My primals nowadays are far less painful than before, so the first re-living of electroshock treatment was just that, a shock and surprise, when I finally after 3/4 of a century had the strength to experience it.
“Electroconvulsive therapy (ETC) was introduced in Switzerland 1937 och was already 1940 widespread and Nobel Prize nominated. Electroshock is a psychiatric treatment that involves electrocution of the patient and putting the patient into a seizure. Mainstream psychiatry argues that electroshock is therapeutic and alleviates mental illness. Many electroshock patients receive the treatment against their will. Psychiatrists also claim that electroshock is safe during pregnancy and give the treatment to pregnant women. A study in 2007 (!) found that electroshock during pregnancy can cause brain damage to the fetus!” Surprise!
Thanks to my new addiction (learning to play the saxophone) I have found out that I / my brain are strong enough to re-live the effects of a treatment which, fortunately, never got the Nobel Prize. With less luck and with a more old-fashioned neurologist than David Ingvar, I could have been treated with an even worse method, lobotomy, which, outrageously, won the Nobel Prize, 1949, when 20.000 lobotomies had been performed in the US alone. This treatment was applied to a daughter of friends of our family. She died within 2 years.
Jan Johnsson
An email comment:
ReplyDelete"Bravo! Great article. I have shared this as usual on Google and FB and Twitter. They can't keep ignoring you work...
"
My damned brain binds me from feeling! I hate the bastard... even if it once saved my life because now it is on its way to take it away from me. Fucking thoughts of crap without any sense. I'm so fucking tired of it!
ReplyDeleteFrank