Posts Tagged ‘Dusky Pierce’
12:25pm – 22:45 December 9; 21:08 December 11; 08:58-13:33 December 12, 2024 Aix-les-Bains, FRANCE
Dear Reader,
Bonjour!
I wish you and everyone around you … peace, happiness, and Nature’s Beauty.
I am forever grateful to the people in my life who help me grow.
I am forever grateful to healers, medical, health professionals, caregivers, patients, researchers, authors, editors, publishers et al who make current information available in many languages.
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YouTube link to the interview with
Dr. Norman Doidge, M.D. about the BEAUTIFUL HUMAN BRAIN and HEALING
Chronic Pain; Parkinson’s and other Movement Disorders; Strokes; Autism; many more conditions
posted in 2015 by CANADA BROADCAST
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2c5aTlq3nYI&list=PLcU9gOvQNUr8XPza1RhGAjp06-f3E4QAL
Dr. Norman Doidge, M.D. | The Power of Thought
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You know friends who have had . . . Strokes? Chronic pain? Someone you care about suffering from symptoms of MS? Cerebral Palsy? Muscular Dystrophy? Alzheimer’s? Parkinson’s? Head injury? Balance problems? Vision problems? Depression?
Our amazing brains!
Reviewing the chapter titles and the index sparks hope and motivation to ask physicians the right questions.
https://normandoidge.com/
the book –
The Brain’s Way of Healing: Remarkable Discoveries and Recoveries from the Frontiers of Neuroplasticity
by Norman Doidge, M.D.
Available, so far, in 22 languages:
The Brain’s Way of Healing is now available in over 100 countries, and 22 languages including translations from English into Bulgarian, Chinese Traditional Characters, Chinese Simplified Characters, Czech, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Lithuanian, Polish, Portuguese, Portuguese-Brazil, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Turkish and Ukrainian.
French edition book title:
GUERIR GRACE A LA NEUROPLASTICITE: Cerveau les fabuleux pouvoirs de guérison
English translation of French edition: HEALING WITH NEUROPLASTICITY: Brain The Fabulous Healing Powers
Chapter 1 Physician Hurt, Then Heal Thyself
Michael Moskowitz Discovers That Chronic Pain Can Be Unlearned
Chapter 2 A Man Walks Off His Parkinsonian Symptoms
How Exercise Helps Fend Off Degenerative Disorders and Can Defer Dementia
Chapter 3 The Stages of Neuroplastic Healing
How and Why It Works
Chapter 4 Rewiring a Brain with Light
Using Light to Reawaken Dormant Neural Circuits
Chapter 5 Moshe Feldenkrais: Physicist, Black Belt, and Healer
Healing Serious Brain Problems Through Mental Awareness of Movement
Chapter 6 A Blind Man Learns to See
Using Feldenkrais, Buddhist, and Other Neuroplastic Methods
Chapter 7 A Device That Resets the Brain
Stimulating Neuromodulation to Reverse Symptoms
I. A Cane Against the Wall
II. Three Resets: Parkinson’s, Stroke, Multiple Sclerosis
III. The Cracked Potters
IV. How the Brain Balances Itself—with a Little Help
Chapter 8 A Bridge of Sound
The Special Connection Between Music and the Brain
I. A Dyslexic Boy Reverses His Misfortune
II. A Mother’s Voice
III. Rebuilding the Brain from the Bottom Up: Autism, Attention Deficits, and Sensory Processing Disorder
IV. Solving the Mystery at the Abbey: How Music Raises Our Spirits and Energy
Dr. Doidge’s books make for fascinating reads – our brains and the phenomenon of neuroplasticity - thank you to all the patients who did not give up, their loved ones, their physicians who did not give up, and the dedicated neuroscientists . . . for providing the stories.
Even if your physicians and healers have not read this book . . . YOU can arm yourselves with the information and ask them to make referrals. And, you can also ask friends to share their resources.
I cheer for you, friends & colleagues! To those who write books, I cheer for your books too! The subject matters in your books and Dr. Doidge’s books carry plenty of connections.
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Conversations with our own Brains about what we want for our Bodies.
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My father suffered from Parkinsonian Disorder. The disease impacted the safety of his walking.
I felt a great sense of accomplishment (after reading Norman Doidge, M.D.’s book The Brain’s Way of Healing
… especially Chapter 2 “A Man Walks Off His Parkinsonian Symptoms”
and learning how to ask Papa’s neurologist the right questions)…
Questions that led Dr. White to order “specific” physical therapy for Papa – therapy NOT for injuries like a broken leg from a skiing accident but therapy for movement disorders - to help Papa reverse the Parkinson’s “shuffling” gait and “freezing” gait as well as improve posture. Thank you, Dr. White!
The Brain is smart. When one set of instructions “doesn’t connect” another set of instructions will. At one appointment with neurologist Dr. Luthra when she said to my father: “Let me see you walk.”
I offered information: “Dr. Luthra, when Papa is at a doorway to enter or leave a room, and, at elevators (lifts) … his legs lock … he can’t move. That’s dangerous when the elevator door closes and he cannot move. Or when his walker gets caught by a rug that is not properly secured to the floor.”
Dr. Luthra stepped out of her small office and stood in the hallway, facing Papa. She smiled, gestured for Papa to walk out of the room. At the threshold, his legs wouldn’t cooperate. He lurched forward with his walker, but his legs couldn’t move.
Dr. Luthra: “Mr. Leung, keep one hand on your walker, raise your other arm.” She demonstrated. She raised her right arm straight up. She added: “Raising your arm tells your Brain that you want to move.”
Papa kept his left hand on his walker, he raised his right arm, then lowered it back to the walker
I watched with astonishment as he and his walker walked out the room with ease.
Later, Movement Disorder Physical Therapist Brenda taught Papa more tricks to help his Brain and his Body talk to each other, learn from each other.
If I hadn’t learned what I had learned from Dr. Norman Doidge, M.D.’s books and asked my father’s physicians the right questions, perhaps my father wouldn’t have received the level of attention from people who had the power to prescribe and deliver specific therapies, specific treatments… appropriate to Papa’s needs.
One day I was thinking out loud to my dear friend Sue R. I said: “I wish there was a Chinese edition of Dr. Doidge’s book. Papa would benefit so much if he could read Chapter 2 himself.” Sue told me that Wen Hsu worked with publishers in Taiwan.
Fast forward…. Wen contacted the publisher in Taiwan who was translating THE BRAIN’S WAY OF HEALING into Chinese. Wen wrote to the editor, explained to her/him about my father’s situation; the editor emailed Wen the “advance copy” of Chapter 2. One of the happiest moments in my life was presenting Papa those pages – Chinese transalation of “A Man Walks Off His Parkinsonian Symptoms – How Exercise Helps Fend Off Degenerative Disorders and Can Defer Dementia”
Then, when the Chinese edition came out in print, Wen helped me order many copies of the book from the publisher in Taiwan.
Papa and his friends read this wonderful book in their native language. I am forever grateful.
https://normandoidge.com/
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Has it really been more than nine years ago when I published my October 21st, 2015 blog post
Through http://www.duskyswondersite.com Dusky Pierce, I had found a remarkable book that has enriched my life, my papa’s, my friends’, Papa’s friends.
Please ask your librarians and booksellers to make this book available.
The book is The Brain’s Way of Healing: Remarkable Discoveries and Recoveries from the Frontiers of Neuroplasticity
by Norman Doidge, M.D.
Dr. Doidge’s first book: The Brain That Changes Itself: Stories of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science
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Here is the YouTube link to Dr. Norman Doidge’s lecture in Melbourne, Australia
posted April 23, 2013 An astonishing new scientific discovery called neuroplasticity is overthrowing the centuries-old notion that the adult human brain is fixed and unchanging. The Brain is, instead, able to change its own structure and function, even into old age.
Melbourne Conversations: Your Brain – How it can change, develop and improve
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ibpbkV7xc24&list=PLcU9gOvQNUr8XPza1RhGAjp06-f3E4QAL&index=2
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A thousand thanks to Michael J. Fox Foundation
https://www.michaeljfox.org/
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https://movementdisorders.ucsf.edu/
The UCSF Movement Disorders and Neuromodulation Center is a well-established, internationally recognized program. It is also one of the busiest deep brain stimulation implanting centers on the West Coast with a wide referral base.
The mission of the center is to provide state-of-the-art comprehensive multidisciplinary care to patients with movement disorders. They offer a variety of services that include comprehensive neurological evaluations, medication treatment and disease management, botulinum toxin injections, neurosurgical procedures including deep brain stimulation, and deep brain stimulation programming.
The medical staff includes neurologists, neurosurgeons, neuropsychologists, radiologists, and nurses who have specialized training in movement disorders and the problems associated with these conditions whose goal is to provide individualized comprehensive care.
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Thank you for reading my blog post:
The Extraordinary and Beautiful Ever-changing Brain, Healing Body to Improve Daily Life, Neuroplasticity
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For other posts related to “Neuroplasticity” … please look at the right side of my blog… under “Categories” please click on “Beautiful Brain Neuroplasticity”
I wish you and everyone around you – vibrant health, peace and happiness.
Sincerely,
Teresa Jade LeYung
Author / Blogger / Story-Theme Consultant / Photo Historian
https://m.youtube.com/@teresajadeleyung/videos for
short short movies of Paris, FRANCE; Portland, Oregon USA; Kuala Lumpur, MALAYSIA 2024
https://LoveMadeOfHeart.com/blog/ goes to Teresa Jade LeYung’s Blog on Wellness, Story Themes, Archetypes
Love Made Of Heart ®
Teresa Jade LeYung’s Blog Post #603 2021 February 26; February 28; March 2; March 3
“Beautiful Brain” Haiku poems
by Teresa Jade LeYung
November 2020
When Brain makes mistake
with endless loop pain signals
I reply with Sooth
Oh Beautiful Brain
Storing experiences
Of pleasure and pain
Brain changes itself
Through learning or ceasing tasks
Retrainable yes
2021 February 28
When Beautiful Brain
changes, for better, for worse
that’s plasticity
2021 March 2
I am THE expert
of my memories and thoughts
Can choose soothing ones
Because I had entered the Haiku poems written in November 2020 to the Jane Underwood Poetry Prize, I couldn’t published them on my blog at the time. On February 26, 2021, The Writing Salon’s email says that they had received nearly 350 poems. Congratulations to everyone!
The announcement from The Writing Salon says:
The final judge, David Hernandez, has selected Kelly Grace Thomas’s “Nothing Roots or Infertility” as the winning poem. Next Wednesday, March 3, 2021 The Writing Salon will publish the poem at our website. The finalists are Tony Barnstone, Twila Newey, Emily Pulfer-Terino, and Lizabeth Yandel.
The Jane Underwood Poetry Prize was established to celebrate and memorialize Jane Underwood, the founder and long-time director of The Writing Salon who passed away in 2016. Jane was a gifted poet who made The Writing Salon a prominent and respected creative writing school in the San Francisco Bay Area. She was well known for her generous spirit and her direct and encouraging teaching style. A posthumous collection of her poems, entitled When My Heart Goes Dark, I Turn the Porch Light On, was published in 2017.
Thank you to all the folks at The Writing Salon for keeping the writing community strong!
Thank you, Frances Kakugawa (beloved author /poet / teacher / speaker) and your Wordsworth, for inspiring me to compose Haiku poems.
https://franceskakugawa.wordpress.com/category/caregiving-haiku/
https://franceskakugawa.wordpress.com/2020/02/16/a-lesson-in-haiku-writing/
https://franceskakugawa.wordpress.com/category/wordsworth-the-poet/
Thank you for reading this blog post – Author and Theme Consultant Teresa Jade LeYung says: “Beautiful Brain inspires Haiku poems”
For other posts related to our Beautiful Brains and Neuroplasticity in my blog https://lovemadeofheart.com/blog … If you look at right side near top of screen, you’ll see the category “Beautiful Brains Neuroplasticity”. Please click on that category to get all my blog posts pertaining to the topic.
I wish everyone and your Beautiful Brains easy access to BLISS via SOOTHING thoughts; images,; senses (sight, sound, smell, taste, touch); memories,; emotions,; movement; and beliefs.
A thousand thanks to Dr. Michael Moskowitz, Dr. Marla Golden, Dr. Norman Doidge, Dusky Pierce, Dr. Danielle Rosenman, Linda A. Harris, Dr. Amy Grace Lam, Cynthia Tom and her program A PLACE OF HER OWN, Professor Lorimer Moseley, and all the precious people in my life.
Love Made Of Heart ®
Teresa Jade LeYung, an American naturalized citizen of Chinese ancestry, is a story/theme consultant, author of LOVE MADE OF HEART (daughter-mother novel archived at the San Francisco History Center and used by college professors), BUILD YOUR WRITER’S PLATFORM & FANBASE IN 22 DAYS (a workbook), and TALKING TO MY DEAD MOM Monologues (the first monologue received an award from Redwood Writers Ten-Minute Play Festival), an alumna of artist Cynthia Tom’s A PLACE OF HER OWN, an advocate for public libraries and public schools, creator of http://lovemadeofheart.com/blog/ , and, admirer of City of Light. Composing Haiku poems is a new love for LeYung.
Blog Post #601
2021 Feb 2, 22:08–22:43; Feb 6, 22:15–; Feb 8, 00:54–; Feb. 9, 21:21–; Feb. 11, 01:06–; Feb. 12, 01:45; amended Feb. 13; amended Feb. 15
Story Continuity / Theme Consultant Teresa Jade LeYung says…
Thank you to all the precious people in my life who have given me joyful memories – elixirs as I journey through the dark side of pain, practice neuroplasticity … to achieve wellness.
The experts and resources for wellness I found in 2015 to help my papa and friends are now helping me as I retrain my Brain to STOP sending my body pain signals and other unpleasant sensations after a bout of shingles last year. (According to Mayo Clinic… “After you’ve had chickenpox, the virus lies inactive in nerve tissue near your spinal cord and brain. Years later, the virus may reactivate as shingles…. Some people experience shingles pain without ever developing the rash.”)
I am forever grateful to Dusky Pierce, MFT who led me to Dr. Norman Doidge’s books (about neuroplasticity/our beautiful adaptable brains) which introduced me to methods developed by Dr. Moshé Feldenkrais, and, to Dr. Michael Moskowitz. Also, I am forever grateful to Linda A. Harris for remembering Dr. Danielle Rosenman https://www.medicalcounseling.net/; Dr. Rosenman (trained by Dr. Moskowitz) has coached me to practice neuroplasticity for wellness.
Techniques are simple, the journey not so easy. Persistent pain signals and other unpleasant sensations BE GONE BE GONE!
A unique aspect of retraining Beautiful Brain (BB) to rid persistent pain is not to talk about it. BB is so good at creating pain, my talking about it and thinking about it only sabotage my healing.
During a webinar with Dr. Michael Moskowitz and Dr. Marla Golden http://www.neuroplastix.com, Dr. Moskowitz recommended listening to Professor Lorimer Moseley talk about our brains and neuroplasticity – that Professor Moseley uses humor in his presentations.
This blog post contains my notes from –
“Getting a grip on pain and the brain – Professor Lorimer Moseley -
Successful Ageing Seminar 2013″
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p6sbi_0lLc
“What we now understand about pain.”
The term “neuroplasticity” = how adaptable our nervous system is. The other side of neuroplasticity is sometimes called “the dark side.”
“The mechanisms that cause us to change in a good way can also cause us to change in a way that makes our lives more difficult and more unpleasant.
“If you have a brain, you will experience pain. If you don’t have a brain, you won’t experience pain.
“We feel pain in our body, and, we feel it in a particular location, but, it is impossible to feel pain without a brain, and, it is completely possible to feel pain without the body part.”
Professor Moseley tells his story about encountering a man (with wooden leg) who was in agonizing pain (where his leg would have been). The man experienced SEVERE pain but he had NO tissue damage.
“The brain produces pain. The brain does not recognize pain coming from something else.”
“Chronic pain is misunderstood.”
All images are from “ Getting a grip on pain and the brain – Professor Lorimer Moseley - Successful Ageing Seminar 2013″
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p6sbi_0lLc
World’s most burdensome Health Issues
#1 Chronic back pain
#2 Depression
#4 Chronic neck pain
#8 Migraine and headache
#9 Diabetes
#11 Osteoarthritis
“Pain is our most sophisticated protective device.”
Nociceptors – detection of tissue damage or danger = danger receptors
[ Example from me, Teresa - at age 8, I touched a hot iron. The nerves in my finger sent messages to my brain which then instantaneously sent pain to protect me; the pain stopped me from continuing touching the source of danger. ]
Professor Moseley gave example: Violinists. Pain threshold of their left little finger is lower than pain threshold of their right little finger. Why? Left little finger is used to play the instrument while right little finger could be missing but musician would still be able to hold the bow. Fingers on left hand need more protection; brain is more protective of left hand.
For Professor Moseley’s talk “Getting a grip on pain and the brain” go to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p6sbi_0lLc
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You can experience SEVERE pain but have NO damage.
AND
You can experience NO pain but have severe damage.
Brain produces pain. Brain is the most trainable we’ve got!
Pain depends on how much danger your brain THINKS you are in, not how much danger you are really in.
Information gets stored in the brain. Brain uses information to evaluate danger to your body. Does Brain think this situation is more dangerous or less dangerous? If Brain’s conclusion is “this is dangerous”, Brain sends pain.
[ Teresa here…
Even though shingles rash healed completely last year… the scar tissue is red. The color “red” has meaning for my Brain. “Red” represents “hot” and “dangerous”. My Brain remembers the hot iron incident from my childhood, and, all my experiences with pain. Brain evaluates all that information and concludes that I still need protecting, so, Brain does what Brain does so well . . . create pain signals to protect me. I can’t sip hot tea or stand in front of a hot stove for more than a minute … before Brain sends signals to “protect” me. How I retrain my brain (“interrupt” unpleasant signals) are summarized in my blog posts published on November 6, 2020, January 3, 2021, and January 13, 2021. Since our brains are unique (the way our fingerprints are unique), what works for me might not work for someone else. Not only do our brains record our experiences, but also incidents we’ve witnessed, heard about, read about.
If my brain had ignored what I had read and heard …
(from Mayo Clinic site, medical experts, and my own memory of a loved one describing her experience with shingles) – “that the condition can be very painful … that the most common complication is postherpetic neuralgia, which causes shingles pain for a long time after your blisters have cleared…”
then I wouldn’t be feeling pain now. ]
All images are from “ Getting a grip on pain and the brain – Professor Lorimer Moseley - Successful Ageing Seminar 2013?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5p6sbi_0lLc
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What you’re seeing is produced by the brain. According to meaning!
At about 19 minutes and 39 seconds into his talk, Professor Moseley shows this slide on the screen to demonstrate how our “visual experience depends on the evaluation of sensory input.”
We see a checkerboard of white and gray squares; the greenish cylinder is casting shadows on some of the squares. The square that has “A” on it appears to be gray. The square that has “B” on it appears to be white.
Retinal information is sent to the Brain, then the Brain gathers everything else we’ve learned in our entire life – for meaning.
Professor Moseley then extracts these two squares from the board – the two square are the same color! They are the same color when no other data are presented to create meaning.
Our brain produces a different picture when it evaluates our experiences, contexts, and environment … for meaning.
You are seeing this, but, it’s not really there. Like pain. You are feeling it because the brain produces it.
Professor Moseley shows more examples . . .
” … the nature of your relationship, the roles that you have in society, the role in that context affects your pain. Not how you cope with your pain… It doesn’t change the ‘danger message,’ it changes the pain. ”
How dangerous is this, really?
When Brain concludes that the situation is dangerous, Brain will send pain signals, even when reality is not dangerous.
And vice versa . . .
At about 22 minutes and 30 seconds into his talk, Professor Moseley shows the slide of the runner who fractured his leg during triple jump at American Olympics Trials. The runner’s brain evaluated his priorities and ignored the danger messages. Even though his body was experiencing severe damage … his brain didn’t send pain … until he looked down at his knee.
Pain depends on how much danger your brain THINKS you are in, not how much danger you are really in.
At about 25 minutes and 10 seconds into his talk, Professor Lorimer Moseley shares personal experience.
He was walking in the bush, felt something on his outer leg.
How dangerous is this, really? He has walked in this setting hundreds of time.
Danger receptors in Body and Brain; nerves influence other nerves. His visual cortex plus memory circuits concluded that the sensation is the result of a twig scratching the skin of his leg.
He swam. He woke up 4 days later, had been bitten by Eastern Brown snake.
High danger but felt low pain.
Nine months later, walking in the bush again. He felt something on his outer leg. This time his brain sent harsh pain to protect him. When he looked down, this time it was just a twig. Very low danger but felt severe pain.
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at 34 minutes, Professor Lorimer Moseley talks about “The Brain’s evaluation of danger.”
All these systems that end up producing pain become more sensitive the longer you have pain.
Your systems learn how to make pain, so, you need less and less to aggravate your pain.
Things that don’t seem related can aggravate your pain.
Need to untangle the system.
Pain depends on how much danger my brain THINKS I am in, not how much danger I am really in.
[ Teresa here … Our neighbors are modifying their house to “age in place” – construction workers hammering, using power tools … Monday through Friday. The noise is impacting everyone’s tranquility, but, not everyone is experiencing pain the way I am. Thank you, Dr. Amy Grace Lam, for helping me decipher why my brain has concluded that noise is dangerous. I had (but my brain and body have not) forgotten … about another time in my life when noise from neighbors impacted my health, forcing me to leave a lovely home. So now my brain protects me by sending me pain and other unpleasant sensations. What beautiful brain-body communications we have!]
At 35 minutes, Professor Moseley gives additional data regarding the Dark Side of Neuroplasticity
“One in five Westerners have chronic pain that disable them. The majority… we can’t explain in their bodies. Understand what contributes to pain….”
What implies “Threat” to body tissue?
What implies “Safety”?
at 38 minutes and 20 seconds into his talk, Professor Moseley says:
“Aging system, less responsive. Sensitized system, more protective. Not just activity that Brain is exposed to. Anything that the Brain finds as threat.”
[ Teresa here … I was studying two Charles Chaplin movies – both scripts are brilliant. However, the themes in MONSIEUR VERDOUX (1947) sparked pain signals; two scenes in A KING IN NEW YORK (1957) did the same. ]
The longer you have pain, the better your system gets at producing it.
The good news: My body and brain are adaptable and will change if I train them.
I am determined to walk and imagine my way to wellness!
This is my journey. All that I have learned from people who care about people have brought me here. I thank you with all my heart.
I wish everyone excellent health, kindness, and sweet laughter.
Thank you for reading my blog post “Brain / Pain Scientist Professor Lorimer Moseley uses humor to help us understand the Dark Side of Pain”
Again, thank you, Dr. Michael Moskowitz, for recommending Professor Lorimer Moseley’s talks.
Having been coached by Dr. Danielle Rosenman, and, remembering what I’ve learned from Dusky Pierce (Byron Katie https://thework.com/), and . . .
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now using the workbook TRANSFORMING THE BRAIN IN PAIN: NEUROPLASTIC TRANSFORMATION by Dr. Michael Moskowitz and Dr. Marla Golden . . . I am keeping my BB busy!
Dr. Michael Moskowitz and Dr. Marla Golden http://www.neuroplastix.com
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What else had helped me? Having learned the Feldenkrais Method when my right hand was on pain scale of 8 out of 10.
https://feldenkrais.com/
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2021 January 30 Haiku poem by Teresa Jade LeYung
Brain much too busy
to send Body pain signals
during walk, must walk.
If I cannot walk
I imagine legs walking
step by step by step
For other posts in my blog, please go to: https://lovemadeofheart.com/blog If you look at right side of screen, you’ll see the category “Beautiful Brains Neuroplasticity”. Please click on that category to get all my blog posts pertaining to our our Beautiful Brains and Neuroplasticity.
Love Made Of Heart ®
Story Continuity / Theme Consultant Teresa Jade LeYung offers resources regarding our beautiful brains / persistent pain / depression / wellness through her Blog: http://lovemadeofheart.com/blog/
Teresa Jade LeYung, an American naturalized citizen of Chinese ancestry, is a story/theme consultant, author of LOVE MADE OF HEART: Journey Through Mental Illness (daughter-mother novel archived at the San Francisco History Center and used by college professors), BUILD YOUR WRITER’S PLATFORM & FANBASE IN 22 DAYS (a workbook), and TALKING TO MY DEAD MOM Monologues (the first monologue received an award from Redwood Writers Ten-Minute Play Festival), an advocate for public libraries and public schools, creator of http://lovemadeofheart.com/blog/ , and, admirer of City of Light. Composing Haiku poems is a new love for LeYung.