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General Health

Health
- It's All in the Mind
by Michael Hadfield
Do
you ever listen to other people's conversations? I
mean when you're standing at a bus stop, or having a drink in a
café after a hard morning's shopping. You know, those people
whose voices are just a little too loud and you can't really help
listening; after all you are on your own, and other people's lives are
quite interesting.
What
do they talk about? Their problems I'll bet,
with
health issues being high on the list. And have you ever noticed how
it's a bit like a game of ping-pong. One party will bat a little tidbit
"my back's been playing up something awful", and the other will respond
with something 'better' and before you know where you are, you know all
about all the cancers, and the hip operations, and the chronic chest
infections, that their family and friends have had in the past ten
years.
Sound
familiar?
So
illness seems important. If it isn't, why do we
spend
so much time talking about it?
Have
you ever noticed how you suffer with a bad
cold, or
dose of 'flu, or possibly something more serious, when life itself is
becoming tedious, work is getting you down, or your husband seems to
have lost interest in you. Have you ever noticed how, when you are
happy and life is full of joy and excitement, you rarely experience
illness? It has been known for a long time that 'stress' has a
depressant effect on the ability of your body's immune system to fight
infection. Illness is the body's way of saying 'you're not looking
after you', and usually the way you are failing to look after yourself
is in your mind - your emotional well-being is generally the part which
is being neglected when you start to experience illness.
Now,
the scientists say that disease organisms,
viruses,
bacteria, genes, and even your age, cause illness. They may be right.
But if they are then those same 'experts' are your only hope for
defeating illness. Yet with all the drugs and all the scientific
advances over that last fifty years - shouldn't the hospitals be
emptying out by now. How easy is it to get an appointment with your
doctor? How full was the waiting room last time you visited? All that
science seems to be accomplishing is to change the nature of illness
without actually removing it.
If
illness is a necessary warning system to let
you know
that you need to slow down, or look at how you are living your life
then this is exactly what we would expect to see with scientific
advances; a change in the style of illness, but no change in the
quantity or quality. Smallpox and bubonic plague have been eradicated,
but doesn't AIDS do pretty much the same sort of job.
So,
how can this awareness help you?
Well
it can help you if you want to feel better
and be
less ill. Because the first step to freeing yourself from this pattern
of stress/illness is to recognize that the illness is helpful. Now, I
know pain isn't much fun, and I'm not suggesting that life threatening
problems should be ignored. In fact I'm not even suggesting that you
stop visiting your doctor for treatment. I would actually strongly
advise that you take all the help you can get if you have a health
problem.
What
I am suggesting is that if you want to be
free of
illness, you need to start by looking at what illness gives you, and
welcome those gifts. You might get a few days off work, early
retirement, forced retirement from a job you hate; illness may be the
only occasion when anyone looks after you or gives you affection, if
you are lonely then illness at least brings you into close contact with
people (doctors and nurses) who touch you and treat you gently; if you
are trying to cram too many things in your life then illness gives you
break and gives your body a much needed rest.
It
would be beneficial then to see what changes
you
could make to your life so that this 'benefit' was no longer needed
because you already had it. If you don't like your job then consider
the possibility of doing something you enjoy instead; if you are alone
then open your mind to the possibility of this being different. If you
are simply too busy then build relaxation into your schedule and see it
as just as important a part of life as the 'busy'ness.
But
whatever you do, don't neglect illness, it is
your
mind's way of telling you it's time for change.
Michael
J. Hadfield
MBSCH is
a registered clinical hypnotherapist. You can experience his unique
style on a range of hypnosis CD's and tapes at http://www.hypnosisiseasy.com.
Here you can also obtain treatment for a variety of problems and
explore his approach to health, healing, and hypnosis.
Article source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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