I’m Already Well Aware

By Mia Maysack, PNN Columnist

If I did not cling to my optimism for dear life, I'd scoff at the concept of an awareness month such as June being nationally recognized as Migraine & Headache Awareness Month.

That’s due to the fact I am someone who has lived with a daily reminder of intractable pain for over two decades. It isn’t those of us who can directly relate to the pain experience that are in need of awareness.

I feel many “awareness” efforts are limited or fall short in terms of gaining recognition for a specific cause or reason. People typically don’t concern themselves with issues that don’t directly affect or impact them.

Someone who hasn’t ever had a migraine couldn’t possibly understand how it differs from a regular stress headache. Furthermore, somebody who does experience an occasional migraine still cannot fathom what it would be like to have one on a more constant basis.

What transpires within and throughout our individual lenses of the world is real to us and valid, though different from others. That doesn’t lessen the next person’s experience as being anything less than our own.    

There have been some who have thought of my claims about illness are disingenuous. But the reality is that I actually learned to “fake” wellness, in an effort to create a sense of fulfillment and meaning in my life, despite the hand I’ve been dealt.

Others claim those of us who live with pain should be able to “fix” ourselves, once we acknowledge things like a childhood trauma; or that if we adopt “sufficient water intake” and “sleep hygiene” for example, all will be well.

Although I believe there’s some merit to those suggestions, and that they come from a decent, well-meaning place --- if it were that simple, I would be healed by now, along with millions of others who endure similar circumstances.

For a lot of us, we’ve had to come to terms with the fact that there may not be anything out there to give us back the life we once had or wanted. That’s because we’ve already attempted and tried just about everything in search of pain management or relief.

Often, we’re unable to obtain access to options that might ease our suffering because that process can be a grueling one and often has a ripple effect of further complications, along with a multitude of hoop jumping. That’s why I’ve mostly refrained from making it a habit to ask for professional help. Instead, I have worked on acceptance, as there are not many things that anyone else can do for me.   

Relentless and untreatable ailments in any form are going to take a toll, but I hold steady to the concept of “pain” being a worldwide experience that each and every one of us can relate to in some way or another. Each of us have had moments when we’d do just about anything to have the discomfort end.

But instead of embracing the potential for common ground, we as a society tend to label people, when the cure is to be found in seeing and treating one another as fellow human beings. We never truly know where a person may be in regards to their mental health or quality of life, and need not make this already challenging existence any more difficult for ourselves or each other.

Given the extent I’ve witnessed how our healthcare system fails us, I had to choose to not identify with the victim mentality or wait any longer for answers elsewhere.  Ultimately, I stumbled upon empowerment in owning my situation, by tending to myself in ways that I am able. That was my education in self-awareness.

Mia Maysack lives with chronic migraine, cluster headache and fibromyalgia. She is the founder of Keepin’ Our Heads Up, a Facebook advocacy and support group, and Peace & Love, a wellness and life coaching practice for the chronically ill. 

Advocacy and Awareness Should Promote Healing, Not Division

By Mia Maysack, PNN Columnist

June is Migraine and Headache Awareness Month in the United States. This year’s theme is “Advocate for Access.” 

Although I understand the intent behind awareness months, to those of us who truly live with a non-stop condition, they can border on being a tad mundane. Especially when the execution of the awareness itself does very little to propel us forward in any meaningful way.

I live with deeply rooted and untreatable nerve damage from an incurable traumatic brain injury. Bacterial meningitis almost claimed my life as a child. My brain swelled up and still feels pained and swollen even now -- the very definition of intractable pain.  Because migraines are literally my each and every day reality, I'm sick and tired of focusing on or talking about them. 

From what I've witnessed, awareness campaigns are often a repetition of the same conversations, among the same people and within the same circles. We as "migraineurs" don't need to continuously hear about what we already know. In my opinion, it's an unnecessary use of precious energy and the impact doesn't go as far as it could. 

The "pain community" generally seems less of a community and more like a clique -- a repeated line up of only certain people’s voices being heard and a select few being invited to participate in events.  

It gets even worse than that:  I recall emerging onto the pain scene out of an absolute last resort. I jumped head first into involvement with every organization I could find and joined several support groups out of sheer desperation. One day, a routine migraine treatment with Botox went horribly awry -- to the point I still deal with the repercussions to this day. 

I immediately logged on to share this experience, not in an attempt to scare anyone but to raise awareness and hopefully assist in others not encountering the same thing I did. I hoped for some compassionate empathy but what I received was the exact opposite. 

I was torn to shreds online by keyboard warriors claiming not to feel well enough to physically function, but clearly energized to the point of dragging me down. Before I was given a chance to clarify or further explain, I was muted by administrators. This felt violent, uncalled for and oppressive. I was bullied and shunned at a point in time I couldn’t afford to be. 

These very same individuals have the audacity and nerve to schedule days of remembrance for those who could no longer accept or deal with their pain, while simultaneously playing an active role in pushing people over their edge, probably without even caring or realizing it. 

I view it as a sickness, that a person would demand and expect consideration and respect when they don't demonstrate or possess it for others. It's a contest of underlying comparison as well as competitive victimization: I've hurt longer than you, worse than you, my life has been harder than yours, and no one else's life is as bad as mine.  

Is that really a game you want to win? How could one ever expect to feel better with a fixation like that? 

I've come to realize that many who claim to want improvement aren't truly committed to it. It takes work, a retraining of our minds and an entirely new approach to not only how we care for ourselves, but how we care for others.  

This questionable code of conduct is an illness in itself. The resistance to actual improvement is in part what's keeping members of these groups sick -- not to mention the fact that some remain utterly attached to their conditions to the point they're unsure of any identity outside of them. If those they so faithfully follow were truly interested in the well-being of their devoted followers, they'd be attempting to shine a light on the darkness as opposed to benefiting or profiting from it. 

I remained quiet on this for a long time, but one thing about my advocacy is that it’s real. Some people love that and others hate it. I’m not afraid to burn bridges, especially the ones that I built. In case you haven’t noticed, the whole world is hurting and the healing of our planet is what matters. Not just you and your cause.   

Mia Maysack lives with chronic migraine, cluster headache and fibromyalgia. Mia is the founder of Keepin’ Our Heads Up, a Facebook advocacy and support group, and Peace & Love, a wellness and life coaching practice for the chronically ill. 

The Pain Community Needs More Unity and Awareness

By Carol Levy, PNN Columnist

My column last month, “It’s Time for People in Pain to Be Heard,” received a lot of comments on PNN and in social media.

Most often the writer wrote about why or how they had been hurt by the implementation of the CDC opioid guideline. Several people commented that it’s not because they're too busy to become involved, they’re just in too much pain to advocate for themselves.

One poster told the story of a recent pain rally held at their state capitol. It was a real-life case of what if you threw a rally and no one came? Only one person showed up, defeating the point of the rally. The writer did not mention how many had said they would be there, but I imagine the number had to be more than one.

Yes, the pain stops us from doing many things. Yes, our complaints about how the battle against opioid prescriptions has made us the bad guys, has scarred us, and made our lives so much harder are true. But saying it only on PNN, Twitter, Facebook and other social media sites does not help the cause.

It helps us and only us, by giving us an outlet to express our anger and frustration about how our minds and bodies are affected when our medications have been reduced or stopped. The problem is that by speaking out only among ourselves, the rest of the world hears silence.

When we say the pain is what keeps us from going out and protesting, maybe we need to look at the many walks against cancer, Alzheimer's, multiple sclerosis and other diseases. Many of the people involved in those walks are not the patients themselves, who often cannot participate because of their illness. It is their family, friends and colleagues.

What if we worked to marshal our families, our friends and our colleagues to march for us?

Most people do not understand what chronic pain is or that it comes in many different forms. They are not educated about Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS), trigeminal neuralgia and other cranial neuropathies, Ehlers Danlos, and many other diseases and disorders that have essentially claimed our lives.

We have many “Awareness” days. For example, the first Monday of November each year is CRPS Awareness Day; October 7 is Trigeminal Neuralgia Awareness Day; and May is Ehlers Danlos Awareness Month. We who have the disorders may be aware of these days, but how many people in the general population don't know the day or month exists, much less what the disorder is?

To many people, “chronic pain” is merely pain that lasts a long time. CRPS or trigeminal neuralgia are chronic, progressive and often incurable, but to those who are not educated about them, they’re more like a stubborn toothache or ankle sprain that won’t go away.

What if on awareness days we inundate Congress, the news media and social media with letters, emails and tweets? What if we acted as a true group, not individual voices in the wilderness, but as a harrowing cry? Maybe then our voices would finally be heard.

Carol Jay Levy has lived with trigeminal neuralgia, a chronic facial pain disorder, for over 30 years. She is the author of “A Pained Life, A Chronic Pain Journey.”  Carol is the moderator of the Facebook support group “Women in Pain Awareness.” Her blog “The Pained Life” can be found here.

Becoming Aware of Ingrained Thoughts Can Reduce Pain and Anxiety

By Dr. David Hanscom, PNN Columnist

Self-awareness is the essence of healing. You cannot stimulate your brain to develop in a given direction unless you become aware of who you are and where you are starting from. Awareness is a meditative tool that can be used to calm the nervous system, reduce chronic pain and anxiety, and move forward with your life.

There are four patterns of awareness that I’ve written about in previous columns that work for me:

Environmental awareness is placing your attention on a single sensation – taste, touch, sound, temperature, etc. What you are doing is switching sensory input from racing thoughts about pain to another sensation. This is the basis of mindfulness – fully experiencing what you are doing in the moment.

I use an abbreviated version that I call “active meditation,” which is placing my attention on a specific sensory input for 5 to 10 seconds. It is simple and can be done multiple times per day.  

Emotional awareness is more challenging. It often works for a while, but then it doesn’t. When you are suppressing feelings of anxiety, your body’s chemistry is still off and full of stress hormones. This translates into pain and other physical symptoms.

Allowing yourself to feel all of your emotions is the first step in healing because you can’t change what you can’t feel. Everyone that is alive has anxiety. It is how we survive.

Judgment awareness is a major contributor to the mental chaos in our lives. You create a “story” or a judgment about yourself, another person or situation that tends to critical and inflexible.

Dr. David Burns in his book “Feeling Goodoutlines 10 cognitive distortions that are a core part of our upbringing. They include:

  • Labeling yourself or others

  • “Should” thinking – the essence of perfectionism

  • Focusing on the negative

  • Minimizing the positive

  • Catastrophizing

These ingrained thoughts are the fourth and most problematic to be aware of. You cannot see or correct them without actively seeking them out.

Our Brains Are Programmed at an Early Age

Our family interactions in childhood are at the root of how we act as adults. They stem from our upbringing and the fact that our brains are “hard-wired” during our formative years. We know from recent neuroscience research that concepts and attitudes from childhood are embedded in our brains as concretely as our perception of a chair or table.  

I used to say that thoughts are real because they cause neurochemical responses in your body. But they are not reality. I was wrong.  

It turns out that your thoughts and ideals are your version of reality. Your current life outlook continues to evolve along the lines of your early programming or “filter.” It is why we become so attached to our politics, religion, belief systems, etc. It is also the reason that humans treat each other so badly based on labels.  

One example, amongst an endless list, was how we locked up “communists” during the McCarthy era of the 1950’s and 1960’s. It is also why so many minority groups are persecuted and often treat each other badly. 

It is critical to understand that these are attitudes and behaviors that you cannot see because they are inherent to who you are. It is also maybe the greatest obstacle to people getting along. We are hard-wired enough that we don’t recognize or feel these patterns -- it’s just what we do. It’s behavior that sits under many layers of defenses and has to be dug out by each person.  

Our family-influenced habits and actions are much more obvious to our spouses and immediate family than they are to us. We can only get in touch with them through counseling, seminars, psychotherapy, self-reflection, spousal feedback, etc. What you are not aware of can and will control you.  

Slowing Down 

Here is an example of awareness I learned at work. A few years ago, before I retired as a spine surgeon, I became aware that I consistently started to speed up towards the end of each surgery. I also realized that over the years, probably 80% of my dural tears (the envelope of spinal tissue containing the nerves and cerebrospinal fluid) occurred in the last 30 minutes of a long surgery.  

The fatigue factor was part of the problem, but speed was more critical. I still didn’t notice that I was speeding up. I needed feedback from my partners or assistants, so I asked them to act as my coaches. I’d stop for a few seconds and say, “The difficult part of this case is done. It would be easy for me to relax and hurry to finish. Please speak up if you see me starting to rush.”  

Every move in spine surgery is critical, so I had to make the choice to consciously slow down. The end of each surgery is just as important as the beginning and middle. My complication rate dropped dramatically when I became more aware of what I was doing. 

This is a brief overview of how awareness plays a role in successfully navigating daily life. It’s something of a paradox, because when we are truly immersed in the moment there are no levels of awareness. It’s just complete “engagement-in-the-present-moment” awareness.

There are many layers to this discussion, but I hope this is a good starting point for you to understand the importance of mindful awareness.  

Dr. David Hanscom is a retired spinal surgeon. He recently launched a new website – The DOC Journey – to share his own experience with chronic pain and to offer a pathway out of mental and physical pain through mindful awareness and meditation.

Do You Have ANT’s? How Awareness Helps Avoid Negative Thoughts

By Dr. David Hanscom, PNN Columnist  

This is the third in a series of columns on awareness -- a meditative tool that can be used to calm the nervous system to reduce pain and anxiety.  In my previous columns, I looked at environmental awareness (how mindfulness lowers stress hormones) and emotional awareness (how moods affect how we feel physically). 

The third level of awareness I’d like to introduce you to revolves around judgment and storytelling. On this level, you create a “story” or a judgment about yourself, another person or a situation. These judgments tend to be criticisms that are rough and inflexible. The brain has a bad habit of focusing on negative judgments that ramp up our emotions. 

We can categorize these negative thoughts into ten “errors of thinking” outlined by Dr. David Burns in his book “Feeling Good.” Burns calls these thoughts “ANTS,” which stands for automatic negative thoughts.

For example, imagine someone at work walked by you and didn’t acknowledge you. You might think they’re upset with you about a situation that occurred the day before. The error in thinking in this case would be “mind reading.” You can’t read other people’s minds. 

It’s possible that the other person had just received some bad news and wasn’t engaging with anyone. But you don’t really know. If you make assumptions, you’re wasting a lot of emotional energy.

Labeling 

Then there is the error of labeling. For example, a frequently late spouse becomes “inconsiderate.” A forgetful teenager becomes “irresponsible.” In the act of labeling, especially negative labeling, you’re overlooking circumstances and someone’s good qualities, limiting your capacity to enjoy being with them. 

Then there are the labels we have for ourselves: you knock something over and call yourself “clumsy.” If a lover breaks up with you, then you’re “unlovable.”  

Rehashing these critical judgments in our minds turns them into deeply embedded stories. Such stories are much harder to move on from than single judgments. Once a judgment sets into a story, you tend to lose all perspective. Over time, faulty thinking can become your version of reality. 

In my own experience, whenever I have an “ANT,” I become either angry or anxious (or both). I am also sometimes more reactive or impulsive. These emotions fuel negative thought and it becomes repetitive. As the thought keeps whirling around, it becomes stronger, along with my emotions. They quickly destroy my day and negatively affect my relationships. 

I’ve heard this thought pattern described as a vicious cycle or whirlpool. These kinds of thoughts, or stories, can become recurrent and might last for years. They take on a life of their own even though they are often fairly outrageous.  

Regardless of what sets these patterns of thinking off, they are a universal part of the human experience. This is true whether chronic pain is involved or not. With chronic pain you have the added frustration of the physical stimulus to keep these circuits really spinning.  

Self-Perceived Flaws 

To better understand the story concept, consider common situations where the brain focuses on a self-perceived flaw that is not physically painful. It might be your height, weight, the shape of your body, or even an individual body part. Or it might be some particular quality, such as a lack of intelligence, athletic skill, musical talent, etc.  

Thinking about these flaws over and over snares you in a destructive cycle of spinning neural circuits. For example, many years ago I had a patient with neck pain who was absolutely convinced that he was “stupid.” His self-labeling wasn’t rational, as he was clearly a bright guy. I don’t know if his view of himself somehow triggered it, but he eventually developed a significant chronic burning sensation around his mouth. 

Something similar often happens in the entertainment industry, where performers commonly focus only on their negative reviews. My wife, who is a tap dancer, has seen this in her profession for years. She pointed out to me that a performer might have 99 positive reviews but will fixate on the one that’s negative. It’s a common saying among entertainers that, “You’re only as good as your worst critic.” 

ANT’s and Relationships 

Another common phenomenon is focusing on a spouse or partner’s negative traits. The other person usually has innumerable positive qualities that are forgotten in the face of their “flaw.” Over time the “story” we tell ourselves can become so strong it can break apart an otherwise great relationship. 

One particular event from my own life comes to mind. It shows how creating stories has the power to disrupt your peace of mind and detract from your enjoyment of life. 

One day my wife and I were taking my father for a ride up to beautiful Point Reyes, located on the coast north of San Francisco. About 20 minutes into our trip I noticed that the car’s low-tire-pressure light had come on. It was a brand new car with only a thousand miles on it, so I thought it was probably just a malfunctioning light.  

I wasn’t convinced that we’d made the correct decision to buy this car in the first place -- it was more expensive than I was comfortable with -- so I was more than a little frustrated that the warning light had a glitch. 

I stopped to put a little air in the tire, just in case, and then kept driving for another 45 minutes. As we approached Point Reyes in the early afternoon, we realized that the tire was really low, so I pulled over to change it. But when I opened the trunk, there was no spare.  

The story in my head was starting to ramp up as I wondered in frustration why a new car wouldn’t have a spare. I called the car company’s roadside assist line and they told me these new cars had “run-flat” tires that should be good for 150 miles at a maximum speed of 50 miles per hour.  

I felt a little insecure about that concept. We were a long way from the last large town we’d passed and I thought that we should turn back. My wife thought that since my father rarely made it to California from the East, we should go out to dinner. So, we headed toward a restaurant. About three miles down the road the tire exploded. 

It was now about four o’clock in the afternoon and we were miles and miles from anywhere. Our only option was to get towed courtesy of AAA. It was hard for me to accept the fact that I had to get my new car towed for a flat tire.  

The tow truck driver showed up to take us to the service station and let the three of us ride in the cab, with my wife sitting on my lap. She started to complain about the bumpiness of the ride, which I found a little annoying. “I’m the one on the bottom, why are you complaining?” I thought.  

She wanted to have dinner in San Rafael and take a taxi home. I started to grind my teeth to keep my mouth shut. 

Magnifying the Problem

This is how the afternoon unfolded for me. Starting with the low tire, I’d made a decision to enjoy my time with my family in spite of the problem. I took note of my frustrations and concentrated on listening to the conversation and staying involved in the day. I was successful for a while -- until the tire blew up.  

Then my anger began to bubble. I became aware that in spite of everything I’d learned about dealing with stress, I was greatly magnifying the problem with the ANT thoughts in my head. I was thinking things like, “I can’t believe I got talked into buying this car” and “My wife made me buy it.” 

Although there might’ve been some truth in the things I was telling myself, I recognized that it wasn’t helping us get through the situation. Nonetheless, I wasn’t able to minimize my suffering through the stress relief techniques that had helped in the past, which was frustrating. I tried to talk myself out of it, but it didn’t work. 

Then I began to go really dark with thoughts like, “How can I be married to this woman?” I began to notice how irrational and big these thoughts had become. It felt like a bomb had exploded. I was miserable way out of proportion to the situation. 

I was guilty of multiple errors in thinking. They came in the form of labeling – “My wife is irresponsible”— and catastrophizing -- “Why did we get married?”  

Through it all, I negated her many positive qualities. To cite one, she’s great at keeping things light, no matter what the problem. And unlike me, she was able to keep her cool throughout the day. 

In the past, I would’ve remained in this agitated state of mind for days, with some carryover lasting for weeks. I wouldn’t have been able to separate my wife’s actions from my thoughts and realize that the problem wasn’t her, it was my reaction to the situation.  

It was a major step for me to become aware of how out of proportion the stories in my head had become. This degree of awareness changed the game for me. 

Eventually, we did get towed home. We went out to dinner. I still love my wife. And I learned yet another lesson in humility.

Dr. David Hanscom is a retired spinal surgeon. In his latest book -- “Do You Really Need Spine Surgery?”Hanscom explains why most spine operations are unnecessary and usually the result of age-related conditions that can be addressed through physical therapy and other non-surgical methods.

Emotional Awareness: How I Learned to Connect with Life and Disconnect from Pain

By Dr. David Hanscom, PNN Columnist

Last month I wrote about the importance of environmental awareness – being aware of your moods, anxiety and other senses and learning how to calm them through active meditation.

In this column we’ll look at emotional awareness – living a life full of rich relationships and satisfying endeavors. You must understand the nature of someone else’s emotional needs before you can interact with them in a meaningful way.

In the presence of chronic pain however, this is a problem. When you are in pain, you are justifiably angry, which can block emotional awareness. You are just trying to survive and don’t have the capacity or energy to reach out to others.

Another problem with pain-induced anger is that it not only disconnects you from others, but also from yourself. You are so used to being in this agitated state that you feel it is the norm.

I am quite aware of this scenario, as this was my experience. I was constantly agitated, but did not perceive it as anger. I thought I could hear what others were saying and see issues through their eyes. I was idealistic and thought I was right – but was so wrong.

It wasn’t until I had every layer stripped away in the midst of suffering from severe chronic pain, that I could see the problem. Meanwhile, I lost my marriage.

Self-Discovery

The problem with becoming emotionally aware is that you have to allow yourself to feel unpleasant emotions, such as anxiety, sadness, vulnerability, shame and so on. If you don’t allow yourself to feel the dark side of life (which is core to the human experience), then you won’t be able experience deep joy, happiness and love.

My strategy for most of my life was to suppress all negativity and keep my emotions on an even keel. One of my nicknames was “The Brick.” At the time, I thought it was a compliment because it meant I was tough.

It all worked until it didn’t. At age 37, I began to experience severe anxiety in the form of panic attacks. They came out of the blue and I had no idea what had hit me. I didn’t emerge from this hole for another 13 years.

Unless you actively choose a journey of self-discovery, you can’t connect with your true emotional state. You must commit to stepping outside of your mind and looking at yourself from a different perspective.

Ask yourself these questions: Am I open? Am I coachable? Can I really listen and feel?

That is a starting point. Once you get in touch with what’s going on in your mind, you can embark on a powerful journey. Allowing yourself to feel your emotions is a learned skill with many ways of accomplishing it. You will fail endlessly, but the key is remaining open and persistent.

Many people choose not to take this journey. But they make that choice at their own peril. It is what you’re not aware of that will run your life. The result may be a lot of physical and emotional suffering for the individual and especially for those close to him or her.

Why don’t more people pursue a path of self-discovery? It may be because in our culture most of us spend a lot of emotional energy trying to look good to people around us. We also try to look good to ourselves.  

Truly connecting with your emotions is an act of humility. Most people don’t want to do something so difficult and unpleasant. However, it’s also extremely rewarding and makes life so much easier in the end. It was the beginning of my recovery from my own chronic pain.

Dr. David Hanscom is a retired spinal surgeon. In his latest book -- “Do You Really Need Spine Surgery?”Hanscom explains why most spine operations are unnecessary and usually the result of age-related conditions that can be addressed through physical therapy and other non-surgical methods.

How to Control Anxiety and Pain Through Meditation

By Dr. David Hanscom, PNN Columnist

Every sense in your body has a threshold that indicates danger – hot, cold, bitter, loud, bright, sharp, pressure, burning, nausea, etc. Without that immediate feedback from your senses, you could not protect yourself from whatever the danger is.   

When any physical threat is sensed, your body secretes chemicals and hormones to increase your chances of survival. They include cortisol, adrenaline and histamines. This chemical bath affects every cell in your body and you are on “high alert.” The feeling generated is anxiety and it is not a psychological reaction. 

Humans have a problem in that mental threats manifested by unpleasant thoughts are processed in similar area of the brain and cause the same hormonal response. But since we can’t escape our thoughts, we are subjected to sustained levels of these chemicals. One of the effects is increasing the speed of nerve conduction. All of our senses are heightened, including various types of pain.  

Environmental Awareness 

Being aware of your senses – known as environmental awareness –-- is a strategy that allows you to switch sensory input from racing thoughts to another sensation. It doesn’t matter which sense you choose.

I practice one that I call “active meditation” or “meditation on the run.” Being aware of your senses has a calming effect on your nervous system. Active meditation enabled me to be a calmer person and more effective in my work.  

As a retired spine surgeon with many years of experience, I was often referred complicated spine problems that required complex surgeries. Sometimes those surgeries resulted in complications for the patient. Although I was committed to having no complications from the first day I walked into the operating room, there was a point a few years ago when I faced up to the fact that I hadn’t been able to eliminate them. My own thoughts were interfering with my work.  

The most common interferences I felt during surgery were frustration, anxiety, distraction, complacency, and, especially, being in a rush to finish. They all detracted from the consistency of my performance. This led me to develop a somewhat defensive mindset. If I could get through the week without a surgical complication, it was a huge relief.  

Learning Active Meditation

Things changed when I decided to enlist the help of a performance coach to help me reduce any mistakes in surgery. That was a major turning point in my professional life. I brought my coach into the operating room and clinic so he could better understand my world. For 18 months, he and I underwent regular debriefings and coaching. I began to use active meditation in the operating room. 

This meditation model is not based on suppressing interference – for instance, if you’re frustrated, you don’t pretend otherwise – rather, you face these frustrations and then detach from them. Using tools and approaches that have been employed for centuries in the practices of meditation and mindfulness, I learned to identify any interference either before or during surgery, and then let go of it.  

This is how it worked: Each surgical morning, I woke up and assessed how I was feeling. Like everyone, my feelings ranged from calm and relaxed to tired and anxious. Then, I immediately started sensing every smell, touch and taste possible. I felt the water on my back in the shower. I smelled the coffee. I also reminded myself that although that day’s surgery is “just another case” for me, it’s one of the most important days of my patient’s life.  

I continued this process in the operating room. I carefully arranged the room, talked to each member of the surgical team, and reviewed the imaging studies. I was focused and immersed in what’s right in front of me, when previously I’d rush into the operating room at the last minute just before making the incision. 

During surgery, awareness allowed me to perform my next move at an optimum level. I felt my grip pressure on each surgical tool; noticed the shape of the contours of the anatomy; felt my shoulder and arm muscles stay relaxed; and just watched the flow of the case.  

If I felt any disruptive emotions intrude into my state of mind, I quickly practiced my environmental awareness techniques in order to re-focus. I learned to be more fully engaged on a higher percent of cases, so I could “program” myself into the “zone.” 

Since I started practicing active meditation, my complication rate in surgery noticeably decreased. For instance, from 1999 until 2003 I had an “acceptable” 9% rate of inadvertently entering the dural sac (a sack of fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord). After I started using meditation, I made this mistake only two or three times a year, which is less than one percent. 

Surgery became a wonderful experience for me. I eagerly looked forward to Monday instead of Friday. I committed to getting a good night’s sleep before my surgeries.  If I woke up “wired” and uneasy, I slowed down until I felt relaxed, no matter how many things were on my to-do list.  

I continue to practice active meditation daily. Environmental awareness is more difficult outside the operating room, in the less controlled areas of my life, but it is still my go-to active meditation.   

One tool I use to practice awareness is my “to do” list. I remind myself that this list is an expression of my life, and so I practice being aware as I go about each item. For instance, when I have an appointment with a patient, I listen to myself talk to him or her.  I feel the pen on the paper as I jot down notes.  I also practice meditative techniques. such as watching the disruptive thoughts of “need to finish up here, I have other things to do” enter my consciousness and then leave.  

I remember that my goal is to engage and enjoy every second of my “to do” list. It doesn’t always work, but it’s surprising how often it does.

Environmental awareness engages me in the present moment regardless of the circumstances. It is not positive thinking, but just switching the sensory input. With repetition, it has become somewhat automatic. It is a simple strategy that can help the quality of your life, regardless of the level of your pain.  

Dr. David Hanscom is a retired spinal surgeon who has helped hundreds of back pain sufferers by teaching them how to calm their central nervous systems without the use of drugs or surgery.

In his latest book, Do You Need Spine Surgery?, David explains why spinal surgeries are often risky and unnecessary.

This column is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.

How Awareness Can Help Calm Your Pain

By Dr. David Hanscom, PNN Columnist

Anxiety and anger are major aspects of the chronic pain experience. In this state, your mind is full of racing thoughts and vivid imagery, and it’s hard to focus on anything but you and your pain.

They block your awareness of other’s needs. It becomes a challenge for friends, family, and coworkers – anyone – to connect with you. If you’re touchy and constantly on edge, it’s exhausting for others to be in your presence.

Having a good support system is an important part of your recovery from chronic pain because positive relationships have a calming effect. But now you are driving people away.

Awareness is a powerful and necessary tool in breaking through this barrier. What you are not aware of can and will control you.

I have found it helpful to look at awareness from four different perspectives: environmental, emotional, judgement and ingrained thought patterns.

Environmental awareness is placing your attention on a single sensation – taste, touch, sound, temperature, etc. What you are doing is switching sensory input from racing thoughts to another sensation. This is the basis of mindfulness – fully experiencing what you are doing in the moment.

I use an abbreviated version that I call “active meditation,” which is placing my attention on a specific sensory input for 5 to 10 seconds. It is simple and can be done multiple times per day.  

Emotional awareness is more challenging. It often works for a while, but then it doesn’t. When you are suppressing feelings of anxiety, your body’s chemistry is still off and full of stress hormones. This translates into physical symptoms.

Allowing yourself to feel all of your emotions is the first step in healing because you can’t change what you can’t feel. Everyone that is alive has anxiety. It is how we survive.

Judgment is a major contributor to creating mental chaos in our lives. Dr. David Burns in his book “Feeling Good” outlines 10 cognitive distortions that are a core part of our upbringing. Some of them include:

  • Labeling yourself or others

  • “Should” thinking – the essence of perfectionism

  • Focusing on the negative

  • Minimizing the positive

  • Catastrophizing

  • Emotional reasoning

Becoming aware of these errors in thinking allows you to substitute more rational thought patterns.

Ingrained thought patterns are the most problematic to be aware of. Recent neuroscience research has revealed that thoughts, concepts and ideals become embedded in our brains and are just as real to you as the chair you are sitting in.

That is why people engage in aggressive behavior when their belief systems are challenged. We are all programmed by our past. Your thoughts and beliefs are your version of reality.

Becoming Aware of Your ‘Unawareness’

The first step in becoming aware is realizing that you are unaware. This never ends because there will always be areas of our thinking and behavior that are not consistent with the needs of the situation. 

When I look back on my life’s journey, one of the most disturbing aspects of it is realizing the extent of my unawareness. For instance, when I was in my full-blown obsessive mode, I didn’t have a clue. I recall one time when a friend referred to my “obsessive nature.”  I didn’t know what the word really meant and was certain it didn’t apply to me.

How can you tap into your unawareness? One way is to look for cues in certain behaviors and attitudes, which may mean we’re out of touch with how we’re feeling.  Some examples: 

  • Having a rigid opinion about almost anything: religion, politics, someone’s character, etc.

  • Being told you are stubborn or “not listening”

  • Interrupting someone to offer an opinion before you’ve heard theirs

  • Insisting on being right.

  • Thinking about something besides what you are doing.

  • Judging yourself or others negatively or positively.

  • Feeling anxious or angry

  • Giving advice when not asked for it

  • Thinking you are wiser than your children

  • Acting on impulse.

This list is infinite. If one or more resonates with you, it’s probably time to take a step back so that you can respond appropriately to a given person or situation. This is the essence of awareness.

Another clue of unawareness -- not listening -- is one that I discovered with others’ help. My weakness in this area became readily apparent when I attended a parents’ meeting at my daughter’s school.

I will preface this story by saying that I had always considered myself a good listener. It was one of my major personal identities. My wife has not always agreed with that viewpoint. Of course, I did not listen to her.

At the parents’ meeting, we did an exercise where we had to write down on a piece of paper a characteristic that another parent could “work on.”  We could write to two parents anonymously.

Most parents received one or two slips of paper. I received twelve (out of 18) that all said the same thing: “David, you don’t know how to listen.”  

That was a very difficult moment for me. I found it extremely hard to not become defensive. But how could I disagree with 12 people?  I came to accept that they were right, especially in retrospect. It was a trait that I truly could not see. I simply had to trust a group of people who I knew did not have an agenda and had my best interests at heart. 

After that meeting, I came to realize how not listening had interfered with my general awareness. It’s one of the central tenets of awareness: You cannot be aware if you cannot listen.

Practicing Awareness

Understanding and practicing awareness is the first step in reprogramming your brain. It’s the easiest technique to explain and the most difficult to consistently use. Environmental awareness is the foundational first step and spending as much time as possible doing “active meditation.” Regardless of where you are in your journey, being fully aware of stimuli coming into your brain will help calm you down.

When you are ready for the second level of emotional awareness, simply watch your emotions pass by and then pull yourself back into seeing, hearing and feeling, as quickly as possible. It is a little challenging, as emotions often evoke powerful reactions. Training yourself to be with these feelings instead of fighting them is a learned skill and may require some support from a professional.

The third level – judgement -- is a lifetime journey. The key is to be persistent in not judging yourself or others. A good starting point is understanding than whenever you place a positive or negative judgment on someone else, you have simply projected your view of yourself onto the other person. As you become aware of these cognitive distortions, you will be able to regain control of your life.

Remember that in the fourth level of ingrained patterns, it is impossible to see yourself through your own eyes. This is where resources such as psychologists, good friends, spouses, children, and seminars have to be utilized. The key is being willing to listen.

Becoming aware of everyone and everything around you is much more interesting and enjoyable than merely expressing and reinforcing your own views on life day in and day out.  

Dr. David Hanscom is a spinal surgeon who has helped hundreds of back pain sufferers by teaching them how to calm their central nervous systems without the use of drugs or surgery.

In his book Back in ControlHanscom shares the latest developments in neuroscience research and his own personal history with pain.

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.