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A Health Information Management professional, I survived a life-threatening emergency with information that only a person of my professional experience would know. And I’m sharing it!

Showing posts with label addictions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label addictions. Show all posts

Sunday, February 18, 2018

How to Persevere PAST PAIN, No Drugs Involved!

B'SD

Adar 3, 5778

You might have read any of my several articles and op-eds about America's opioid epidemic. I am convinced that the core of the problem is a need to know coping mechanisms, and to feel comfort with them.

This news update reminded me of the necessity to be able to deal with physical and/or emotional pain without drugs:

Connecticut Medical Examiner’s Office Struggling To Keep Up With Deadly Overdoses



I'm not in some ivory tower, folks, I speak from experience. Remember when I recovered from debilitating RSD/CRPS several years ago? It was a matter of choice, focus and effort. My medical team was stunned at the speed and thoroughness of my recovery and alerted their other patients to my innovative technique (some of them bought the book to understand me and the healing processes that I use a bit better!).

Each of us has different chemistries and needs. Different pain-fighting techniques work for one person, perhaps not for another.

Seek out and use what works for you.

Do not succumb to drug dependence. Drugs are great for getting over hurdles and preventing harm. But when they become a source of harm, we need to rely on user-friendly resources instead.

Click on some of your options, below. Look for others as necessary.

Blessings in the Universe. 



Read about how natural healing techniques restored my sight, strength, and abilities and what those life lessons just might do for you!




The book holds information about FOODS that fight pain. 





Buy the E-book or print edition of EMPOWER Yourself to Cope with a Medical Challenge. Help yourself or someone who needs the information inside the covers.






Face Your Medical Problems with Dignity. Face Your Future with Optimism.

Fill your efforts with determination to succeed.

Sunday, December 31, 2017

When Online Life and/or Games Interfere with Real Life

B'SD

13 Tevet, 5778

You've surely noticed that I've been blogging less than usual this past year. It's a result of my concern that some people are online too long and too often, neglecting the richness of real time life and actual interactions with the people sharing your air space.

There's genuine value in enjoying fresh air, exercise, sunshine, and live social interactions rather than stultifying (boring, irritating, tedious, absurd, take your pick - whatever applies) online activity. But some of us spend a harmful amount of time and effort in viewing or commenting on too much input.

"Social media" is a misnomer. As Miss Manners indicates, "sharing is about teaching little ones about giving access to toys" and to other favored things or people. But online life seems to an "All about me" mindset as people bombard each other with unrequested photos of food, pets and other non-essentials. Recipients tying to keep up with the overload lose track of their obligations to themselves and to other people.

There's another aspect to online life that's causing concern to professionals in the medical and mental health world. I shared an FYI about that via facebook:


Yocheved Golani In 2018 the World Health Organization will be updating their mental health conditions to include "gaming disorder" to their International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10 medical coding for research and insurance reimbursement purposes, in which I'm certified). 

The definition of the problem will be categorized as playing video games for an unhealthy amount of time and that the game-playing person, plus observers watching the game player, being convinced that they cannot stop. Self-control will be the core issue, and the mindset which damaged/destroyed it. See this article on Mashable: http://on.mash.to/2E89imY

Speak with a competent mental health professional about how to help [someone whose life has been disrupted with the problem].
Manage


Gaming disorder is similar to other addictions.
MASHABLE.COM


ReplyRemove Preview4m


The DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) will surely be updated with relevant information, too. 

Please read and re-read that facebook message. You probably know someone who needs relevant help. You might be able to help them to get it just by knowing that such help exists.

Quiet contemplation sans keyboards and monitors is an important part of a goal-directed and satisfying life.




Need help to strengthen your resolve to heal? Read relevant passages in the E-book or print edition of EMPOWER Yourself to Cope with a Medical Challenge


http://www.booklocker.com/p/books/3067.html?s=TrackingCode




Face Your Medical Problems with Dignity. Face Your Future with Optimism.

Fill your efforts with a sense of fun, purpose and energy!

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Dealing with Addiction

B'SD

4 Av, 5777

Several mental health practitioners or practices are mentioned in the Global Resources section of the EMPOWER Yourself book. I urge you to make use of them, or the ones you prefer, especially if you or a loved one are dealing with any sort of addiction.

Unlike medical problems which can traced back to a definite cause or two, treated with medication, diet, lifestyle changes and/or surgery, the cause of an addiction is hard to identify. It is as much a physical problem as it is a mental health matter. That makes the situation even more complicated to understand and to treat. The overall problem is quite hard for lay people to understand. 


The situation is all the harder for the addict to overcome.
They suffer from the addiction, and from the lack of
awareness as to what is amiss in their minds.

Read on to learn of a subtle but powerful factor driving addiction. Educate yourself a bit, and do what you can to learn more in your quest to help an addict to move beyond it into a more productive, satisfying life. 

The article below is a simple starter kit, hardly the last word on how to overcome addictions. Keep in mind that every journey begins with the first step.



A years-ago television drama called ER showed its audience some of the ramifications of drug addiction, and confronting it. A hard-working, conscientious d
E-COUNSELING.COM




Read that Global Resources section and find out where to get help.

Buy the E-book or print edition of EMPOWER Yourself to Cope with a Medical Challenge directly from the publisher for fast delivery.. 





Face Your Medical Problems with Dignity. Face Your Future with Optimism.

Fill your heart and mind with facts, compassion and good sense.

Monday, November 9, 2015

Coping with Adversity Beats the Alternative

B'SD

27 Cheshvan, 5776

It's been a while since I made remarks, here. Today I have quite a powerful statement to make regarding an article featured below: "Coping with Adversity Beats the Alternative."

I've spoken about that in public appearances. It means that people can choose to forthrightly admit their problems and practice sensible ways to minimize or to end them.

The alternative to doing so? Drowning your sorrows in counterproductive behaviors that bring on more problems: Gambling, substance abuse, wasting time and opportunities, etc. You and I could spend the day listing more alternatives to coping efforts. But let's do something sensible, instead: Think clearly about the issues involved.

Here's what prompted my blogpost today:
















Photo

CreditBjorn Rune Lie

THERE has been an alarming and steady increase in the mortality rate of middle-aged white Americans since 1999, according to a study published last week. This increase — half a percent annually — contrasts starkly with decreasing death rates in all other age and ethnic groups and with middle-aged people in other developed countries.
So what is killing middle-aged white Americans? Much of the excess death is attributable to suicide and drug and alcohol poisonings. Opioid painkillers like OxyContin prescribed by physicians contribute significantly to these drug overdoses.
Thus, it seems that an opioid overdose epidemic is at the heart of this rise in white middle-age mortality. The rate of death from prescription opioids in the United States increased more than fourfold between 1999 and 2010, dwarfing the combined mortality from heroin and cocaine. In 2013 alone, opioids were involved in 37 percent of all fatal drug overdoses.
Driving this opioid epidemic, in large part, is...

I disagree with the writer's conclusion, "WHAT is really needed is a sea change within the medical profession itself. We should be educating and training our medical students and residents about the risks and limited benefits of opioids in treating pain. All medical professional organizations should back mandated education about safe opioid treatment as a prerequisite for licensure and prescribing."

Society at large ALSO needs to re-evaluate its ability to deal with discomfort, not only the medical establishment. Medicating your life away so that you need not confront your fears, limitations, aches and other disappointments is immature, a failure to use the executive thinking skills GOD gave you. Exercise your tolerance for inner and outer pain. Hiding it under an onslaught of drugs is not a problem-solver. And NO, I do not advocate letting people in astonishing physical or emotional anguish linger in it. I'm addressing the everyday issues of life, not the exceptional problems that indeed require pain-killers (e.g., post-surgical pain, clinical mental health issues).






Want some solutions to inner and outer pain? 

Find several in the doctor-recommended E-book or print edition of EMPOWER Yourself to Cope with a Medical Challenge

I have lived the tale and proven to many people that once a person decides to face their pain, they need not become addicted to anything.





Face Your Medical Problems with Dignity. Face Your Future with Optimism.

Fill your mind and heart with pro-health choices.

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Whew!

B'SD


20 Menachem Av, 5775

Whew, it's been sweltering weather throughout the Middle East, and my home lost fans plus air conditioners during 40+/100+ temperatures!

Updating this blog between bouts of lost electricity, high heat, piles of the repairman's equipment, messy floors and feeling quite drained has been a challenge. But I have some interesting news to share with you, a sort of informational potpourri:


Vocabulary matters. So does attitude.



One of my friends is suffering from 
the consequences of Cymbalta.

You and she need to know:

Eli Lilly is in court today fighting charges
that it should have warned patients taking 
its antidepressant duloxetine (Cymbalta) 
that they could face a scary withdrawal syndrome 
when they stop it.



Think. Think harder.

A St. Louis entrepreneur’s brilliant idea won instant FDA approval. Eight years later, babies started dying. Was there a connection?
STLMAG.COM



I'm convinced that the technique works. It has helped me throughout life.

Prepare to flex a few facial muscles as you learn more about this evolutionarily contagious behavior.
T.TED.COM|BY RON GUTMAN
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You don't think I'd sign off 
without leaving you laughing, 
do you?



The forecast through Friday is not too encouraging. I need that pool from a long-ago commercial filled with iced tea, a bunch of like-minded friends and a few shade umbrellas. A floating lounge chair would be nice. Chilled beverage in the arm pocket. Ahhh...
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Buy the E-book or print edition of EMPOWER Yourself to Cope with a Medical Challenge





Face Your Medical Problems with Dignity. Face Your Future with Optimism.

Fill your life with sensible options. Act on them.