Pompal 09.
Well-Known Member
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- Feb 9, 2011
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my neighbor just told me this story and i found it both typical and unbelievable at the same time.
about a year ago she was having a lot of back pain that limited her ROM. she went to her doctor - "my back hurts". what she described to me was her doctor looking at and then touching her back with an astonished "wow that's really bad". her muscles, he told her, were very tight and knotted up - the worst he's ever seen. so he injected my neighbor with some drug she is not familiar with - directly into the muscle tissue. she went home, felt little to no relief and returned a few days later. he injected some other drug directly into the muscle with the same outcome. when she returned the third (might have been the fourth) time the doctor busted out the big guns. morphine.
i'll skip the part of the story where she describes what the morphine made her body feel like, as i'm sure you all can imagine. her pain was gone. apparently the morphine relaxed her body enough and for long enough that her back did not immediately tighten back up. the treatment was successful.
AND she wasn't telling me this story in the context of massage. she was talking about her chronic back pain (from which she still suffers and does not understand where it comes from) and offered up this story as validation. "my back gets so bad - one time i even needed an injection of morphine!" neither she nor her family feel any shock about the way she was treated. it's totally normal to them.
in school we're taught how people who suffer from chronic pain can benefit from bodywork - either to ease some of the symptoms of their "chronic pain syndrome" or even address it directly. and sometimes while talking to a massage therapist i'll hear about this or that doctor who refers patients for massage. but i have never met a person off the street or known any friend or family member who saw a doctor for pain and was told to get a massage.
i get that massage and bodywork are often times overlooked as effective therapies by a large portion of MDs and insurance providers... and i'm sorry if i'm harping on a topic that has been talked to death here - but i'm new to this and have never before recognized just how ignored it is.
my mouth is agape.
about a year ago she was having a lot of back pain that limited her ROM. she went to her doctor - "my back hurts". what she described to me was her doctor looking at and then touching her back with an astonished "wow that's really bad". her muscles, he told her, were very tight and knotted up - the worst he's ever seen. so he injected my neighbor with some drug she is not familiar with - directly into the muscle tissue. she went home, felt little to no relief and returned a few days later. he injected some other drug directly into the muscle with the same outcome. when she returned the third (might have been the fourth) time the doctor busted out the big guns. morphine.
i'll skip the part of the story where she describes what the morphine made her body feel like, as i'm sure you all can imagine. her pain was gone. apparently the morphine relaxed her body enough and for long enough that her back did not immediately tighten back up. the treatment was successful.
AND she wasn't telling me this story in the context of massage. she was talking about her chronic back pain (from which she still suffers and does not understand where it comes from) and offered up this story as validation. "my back gets so bad - one time i even needed an injection of morphine!" neither she nor her family feel any shock about the way she was treated. it's totally normal to them.
in school we're taught how people who suffer from chronic pain can benefit from bodywork - either to ease some of the symptoms of their "chronic pain syndrome" or even address it directly. and sometimes while talking to a massage therapist i'll hear about this or that doctor who refers patients for massage. but i have never met a person off the street or known any friend or family member who saw a doctor for pain and was told to get a massage.
i get that massage and bodywork are often times overlooked as effective therapies by a large portion of MDs and insurance providers... and i'm sorry if i'm harping on a topic that has been talked to death here - but i'm new to this and have never before recognized just how ignored it is.
my mouth is agape.