“Find a place inside where there’s joy, and the joy will burn out the pain.” – Joseph Campbell
Pain can be difficult to deal with, particularly if it’s persistent. But, even short-term pain, acute pain, is unpleasant. But acute pain is an important signal that there is something wrong or that damage is occurring and some form of action is needed. It’s an important signal that is ignored at the individual’s peril.
So, it’s important that pain signals not be blocked or prevented. But, it would be useful to establish a method to lower pain and improve recovery from a painful stimulus. Contemplative practice has been shown to be useful for both chronic and acute pain (see links below). But the question remains as to how much practice is needed to assist with pain.
In today’s Research News article “A Brief Mindfulness Meditation Training Increases Pain Threshold and Accelerates Modulation of Response to Tonic Pain in an Experimental Study”
Reiner and colleagues examine whether a very brief (2-week) meditation practice can reduce pain in an experimental situation. They found that a brief meditation reduced the perception of pain by increasing the level of stimulation required to produce pain and by decreasing the time it takes to recover from the painful stimulus.
How does a 2-week meditation practice change the perception of pain? One way is by altering the brain’s processing of painful stimuli. It appears that meditation practice results in an uncoupling of the brain areas that process pain stimuli and the areas involved in the conscious appreciation and reactivity to pain. Also, meditation practice by focusing on the present moment, letting the past recede from attention, may promote recovery from pain. Rather than continuing to think about past pain and thus prolonging the experience, meditation may lead the individual to focus on the present when the painful stimulus is absent. This may allow the individual to let go of the pain faster.
Regardless of the mechanism the results are important in that meditation appears to reduce sensitivity to pain, but still allows the pain to be experienced. So the individual will be less uncomfortable but still able to respond appropriately to the painful stimulus, thus preventing further injury. The results also indicate that it doesn’t take years of meditation practice to provide the relief from pain. Two weeks of practice was sufficient. That such a brief practice still is effective is quite remarkable and suggests that the benefits of meditation can be obtained fairly soon after initiating practice.
So, reduce pain with meditation, even with only 2-week practice.
“There is no pain so great as the memory of joy in present grief.” – Aeschylus
CMCS – Center for Mindfulness and Contemplative Studies
LINKS
Meditation reduces pain sensitivity in adolescents
http://contemplative-studies.org/wp/index.php/2015/08/07/pain-is-a-pain-relieve-it-with-meditation/
Mindfulness Based Stress reduction (MBSR) improves quality of life in fibromyalgia patients http://contemplative-studies.org/wp/index.php/2015/07/17/mindfulness-the-pain-killer/.
Yoga improves quality of life with arthritis pain http://contemplative-studies.org/wp/index.php/2015/08/14/age-healthily-yoga-for-arthritis/