VeryGnawty wrote:Blocking pain is really a meditation technique more than anything. It is all about state of mind.
I had looked into meditation for pain relief but the studies I found indicated that most methods led to about a 1/3 reduction in pain, and that's not enough. Looking into hypnosis, in some cases the pain could be blocked completely.
As for dental hypnosis, it's a good idea I think, but two things come to mind: they probably don't want to do pain not related to dentistry, and they probably are focused on acute rather than chronic pain.
As for Yellow Pages hypnotists, I run into the problem of wait times (ETA of relief = 10-14 sessions and scheduling could make that take a very long time) and not knowing whether they're any good. There is one hypnotherapist organization here, but they haven't responded to my request. My doctor is also looking for psychiatrists who do it but I've had no response there either.
I don't mind how it's done as long as I can function better, whether it's blocking pain or not being distressed by it. General pain insensitivity I know is a bad thing, but I'm hoping I can target the fracture-related pain in particular. As I said, I cannot make it worse so blocking the pain completely has no disadvantage.
As for painkillers, I'm on a (chronically) toxic dose of a drug with a drowsy side effect that hurts my performance in school, and I take a second one that's not bad at all. I want to get off the first, but don't mind if I have to take the second. Even taking all that and restricting my activities greatly I still run into 9-10/10 pain levels from time to time, and have had to skip classes in order to lie down.
I would very much appreciate your help, DKaiser. I like the idea of file hypnotherapy very much because I can use it when I want, and it would be nice to be part of the process. One thing I run into with medical professionals and the like is that they don't much value my input which can be very frustrating.