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Archives for June 2021

Mitochondria – Power Plants of Our Cells

June 25, 2021 by Esther Neumann - [rt_reading_time label="Reading Time:" postfix="minutes" postfix_singular="minute"]

Mitochondria

They are found in almost every cell in our body. Without it, we couldn’t produce energy. We couldn’t breathe, nor would our hearts beat. We couldn’t move a muscle, nothing would work. This refers to a tiny organelle in our cells with the peculiar name mitochondrion.

Mitochondria - Power Plants of Our Cells

Scientists have suspected their existence for a long time. But they could only be seen after the invention of the electron microscope around the middle of the last century. Mitochondria are as tiny as bacteria. But what an inner life they have! They are rightly called the powerhouses of our cells because by breaking down food they produce most of the energy that our body uses for all of its functions.

Occurrence and Structure

Mitochondria are found in all cells in our body except red blood cells. Around 1000 mitochondria per cell are typical. This large number already shows us how tiny they must be, when so many of them fit into one cell. They occupy up to 25% of the cell volume. Cells that use a lot of energy have the most mitochondria. These include the muscle, nerve and sensory cells.

Mitochondria are enclosed by two membranes. The outer membrane is smooth and contains many tunnel-like channels through which small molecules can be channeled that our body is constantly metabolizing from our food. The inner membrane, on the other hand, is impermeable to almost all molecules. Only the smallest such as water, carbon dioxide and oxygen can pass. But it has many transport systems in order to selectively channel various metabolic products from our diet into the interior. In order to be able to do all this filtering it is strongly folded to create a large surface.

Inner membraneOuter membraneRibosomeMitochondrial DNA

Inside of the mitochondria, the so-called matrix, many metabolic activities take place. We will come back to that later. The mitochondrion itself has its own DNA like the cell nucleus. So it can divide itself. Its lifespan is not very long, only around 10 to 20 days. It is constantly reproduced by transverse division.

Task of the Mitochondria

The main task is to absorb important metabolic products from our food and convert them into energy. Other residual substances must be converted into a form that can be easily excreted from the body. This includes, for example, the urea cycle, which partially is happening here as well.

Let’s look at the breakdown of fat from our food. We eat fat because, among other things, we want to use it to produce energy. Our body is a real miracle and a huge, elaborate chemistry lab. It takes many complicated steps to go from one tablespoon of oil to energy. We want to summarize the whole process in a somewhat simplified way. Our pancreas provides enzymes for fat digestion. The bile breaks up a large drop of fat into many small droplets so that the enzymes can operate more easily. They split the fat molecules into fatty acids and glycerine, that can be absorbed through the intestinal wall. After they have passed this barrier, they are reassembled back into real fat molecules. Since fat is insoluble in water and cannot simply swim in the lymph or blood, it becomes bound to lipoproteins. With this taxi, the fat finally gets into the cell, where it is to be converted into energy.

Diagram of the Fat Metabolism
Ilustration of intestines by Blausen.com via Wikimedia CC BY 3.0

This transformation happens in our mitochondria. To do this, the fat molecule must first be broken down into glycerine and fatty acid. However, the fatty acid is too large to get through the membrane into the interior of the mitochondrion. That is why a transport system is needed. Carnitine serves as a taxi, which every athlete knows very well, believing that he needs a lot of it so that he can burn more fat in order to get more energy. If the fatty acids are in the mitochondria, they are together with oxygen converted into energy, water and carbon dioxide via a complicated process called beta oxidation.

The ATP (adenosine triphosphate), as this chemical energy is called, is created inside the inner mitochondrial membrane. The body needs this energy to move its muscles, to produce vital organic molecules and to handle transport processes in the cell and from one cell to another. In an adult human, the amount of ATP that is built up and broken down in his body every day is roughly equivalent to his body weight. What an achievement!

The glycerine from the fat is introduced into the citric acid cycle. This is another extremely complicated cycle that also takes place inside the mitochondria. They are an important hub in the metabolic process. They break down components from our food and at the same time rebuild new substances such as amino acids, the smallest components of protein. The breakdown products of carbohydrates and protein metabolism also enter the citric acid cycle. Components can also be diverted from this process in order to generate energy. We see already the important role of mitochondria in our body´s metabolism.

Fats provide by far the largest amount of energy per weight, followed by carbohydrates. Energy production from protein is not very efficient and is only used when there are not enough fats and carbohydrates available.

Conversion of Nutrients

Carbohydrates are important sources of energy. Some cells like the red blood cells, the nerve and brain cells absolutely depend on glucose. Glucose is therefore stored in the liver in the form of glycogen. This substance can be split up again into glucose between the meals, when no new glucose is available. If more carbohydrates than necessary are consumed and all glycogen stores are filled, carbohydrates are converted into fat. This is stored in the fat cells. Caution: this can lead to obesity!

fruits as a source of carbohydrates - Photo by Anderson Guerra from Pexels

When fasting, after a while the brain and nerve cells even get used to obtaining energy from fatty acids. But the red blood cells are always dependent on glucose for energy. If almost no carbohydrates are ingested with food, as is the case with some restrictive diets, the body has to produce glucose from amino acids. This path is energetically very demanding.

A Varied Diet

We have seen that some nutrients can be converted into one another. With regard to their function as building blocks for bones, organs, teeth and much more, they cannot be exchanged. It is therefore important that we eat a balanced and varied combination of foods and avoid unilateral diets. The best diet consists of lots of fruits and vegetables, grains, nuts, and seeds. From all this variety of foods our body is optimally supplied, and we can produce enough energy for all its vital functions.

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Filed Under: Body Systems, Cell Function, Nutrition

The Seven Main Stressors in Your Personal Life

June 20, 2021 by Martin Neumann - [rt_reading_time label="Reading Time:" postfix="minutes" postfix_singular="minute"]

The Seven Main Stressors in Your Personal Life

When we think about stress we often think about a heavy workload. But stressors in our private life can be just as compromising as our work stress. Stress may come from debt, relationship problems, disease or even from very abstract things such as feeling a lack of purpose, or feeling uncertain about whether you have taken the right decision. Today we want to pinpoint the most common sources of personal stress and see how we can deal with them.

The Seven Main Stressors in Your Personal Life

Stress is an intrusion on your peaceful existence.  All of us strive to have orderly and peaceful lives.  We tend to develop well when we get into certain routines.   Parents often find that their children will behave much better when they have a set routine than if everything is pandemonium in the household.  Routines give a child a feeling of security, which is the one thing that a child wants most of all.

Many people will complain that their kids are unruly and do not want to go to bed on time.  For many it escalates into screaming at their kids to go to bed or threatening their kids with punishment if they do not go to bed. 

The entire “go to bed” issue can be avoided if the parents simply set a bedtime routine.  Fruits and cookies.  A bedtime story, being tucked in, a kiss on the cheek and lights switched off. Every night.  The children know what to expect and actually end up looking forward to bedtime.  This gives children an added sense of security, something that they really need in their lives. 

We all want to feel safe and secure, but as we get older, we realize that we cannot always count on things being the same.  We experience different incidents in our lives that turn our world upside down and cause us to feel stress.  Most of these incidents we cannot control, others we can control to a certain degree.  Some of us are fortunate enough not to experience these stressors until adulthood.  Others experience stress as young children.

When there is happening some change in our routine from what we consider to be normal, our minds will interpret this unknown future as a potential stressor. The amount of stress will be related to the amount of threat our mind is feeling.  Some common causes of stress are the following:

Death of a loved one

This can be a spouse, parent, child or friend.  Death is part of life, but the death of a loved one is something that causes significant stress.  Our hearts are broken as we grieve for our loved one and our lives are seriously disrupted.  This is something which we can do little about, unfortunately, and also something we all have to deal with, sooner or later.  Many people recover soon from this stressor and continue with their lives, others are grieving for a long time. The death of a loved one can cause a number of serious illnesses that we take on ourselves, including depression.

The death of a child is probably the worst pain anyone can endure and some people never fully get over it. Others do manage to get over the pain for the sake of others around them.  A sense of purpose and usefulness for other people around can help to overcome the loss. However, this is one stress factor that can be quite devastating to some people.

Mourning for a dead loved one - Photo by RODNAE Productions from Pexels

Divorce

Even in the case that you are glad to get rid of your ex-spouse, divorce is a major stressor in our lives. In addition to causing you to feel stress, it can also stress out your children. Many couples are so wrapped up with their own emotions during a divorce that they fail to notice the impact of the situation on their children.  Chances are that the kids are feeling quite a bit of turmoil, even if they are too young to understand what is really going on.  In fact, younger children can experience even more stress than older children in the case of their parent’s divorce because they cannot put their emotions into words, nor can they understand that daddy or mommy going away has nothing to do with them.  A young child tends to feel such a loss as a personal rejection.

A child who experiences the trauma of his or her parents’ divorce will feel stress. In some cases, the stress may manifest itself in a number of psychological disorders, including anxiety. The child has lost their most important point of reference and no longer feels safe, so he or she will come up with a way to alleviate the stress and retain some sort of control, trying to get attention by being silly and unruly, or even developing a disorder such as anorexia.

A divorce is always a traumatic event, because it involves feelings of rejection, and it breaks down human links that you considered to be a safe haven on earth. Somebody should consider very closely whether it is worthwhile to pass through such a traumatic event, or whether there may be some ways to restore the relationship. A counselor may be able to help you to look at things in a more objective manner, to understand the viewpoint of the other side, and to develop strategies to generate mutual respect and understanding.

In case that a divorce is really inevitable, be sure to take your due time to heal from the wounds that were caused by the separation. Allow yourself some time off to deal with the traumas that are left. If possible go for a vacation to a place where you are able to process things more calmly. Go a bit easier on your workload, and consider if you can be released for a while from some of your responsibilities in case that you are in a leadership position.  Look up some good friends with whom you can talk, and if needed ask for professional help to deal with processing the traumas of your crisis.

Moving

Even if you are moving from a shack to a palace, this is still stressful.  It may be a happy occasion, but it is still a disruption of your routine.  And any disruption of your routine causes stress. Moving disrupts the entire family.  And it is a real pain in the neck. Plus you have to deal with the packing.

Packing boxes for moving house - Photo by Andrea Piacquadio from Pexels

Everyone hates moving.  Packing up all of your belongings and then unpacking them is just a hassle.  Very few of us are fortunate enough to be able to have someone do all of this labor for us so it tends to be stressful.  However, even if we do not have to lift a finger, moving is still a disruption of our normal routine. 

It will take a while before you can get established into your new home.  You also need to get used to your new environment, figure out where to do shopping, and finding new friends in your neighborhood. Until you do, you should try to maintain as much of your usual daily routine and rituals as possible, especially if you have children. 

Major Illness

Any type of major illness is a significant stressor for the entire family.  One person being ill does not just affect that person, but everyone around him or her.  A major illness is one of the worst stressors we can endure as it can go on for years, taking its emotional toll on everyone around. If you are dealing with a potentially terminal illness like cancer, you are dealing with a huge amount of stress, dealing with feelings of anxiety about possibility of imminent death.

Some people who experience a major illness enter into depression.  This is usually due to the dramatic change in their life. Sometimes family members can be affected by the stress of dealing with the sick, which could lead even them to depression, or some kind of escape mechanism in form of dependencies.

Finances

Lack of finances can be stressful. If you cannot figure out how to pay the bills, if some emergency arrives and you have no means to resolve it, if the costs are rising but the salary does not correspond, this can cause quite a bit of stress.

Avoid taking loans and paying in installments whenever you possibly can. Purchasing a new car on an installment plan is easy and convenient, but making ends meet when paying back, can become very stressful.  Not to speak about the financial turmoil in case you are losing your job.

Sometimes finances can get out of control because of overspending. Adjusting the budget and knowing how to economize can in many cases balance the finances. If you set a financial goal and tighten your belt now, then you’ll find that the money stress eases. This might mean that you have to give up wasting money in areas that aren’t imperative to your needs, such as paying almost $5 or more for a cup of coffee.

Tightening the budget

It might also mean that you need to stop spending money on eating out. It’s cheaper and healthier to eat at home anyway. With the money that you save by not eating out or spending on impulse buys, you can pay off debt, start a savings account and eventually have the money to do what you wanted to do for a long time.

There are situations though where there is no easy solution to the financial turmoil and professional help may be necessary to deal with the resulting stress.

Job Loss

In addition to being humiliating, the loss of a job can throw you into financial turmoil.  Losing a job often results in depression as well as anxiety.   Not only did your self-esteem take a hit, but you are also worried about money.  You will probably experience stress until you get a new job or reconcile yourself to the fact that you will have to get by on less money.

Until you get your bearings, you will face a disruption in your lifestyle as well as your financial status.  The uncertainty that surrounds getting another job also affects us when it comes to stress.  Losing a job and having to find another job can be stressful. 

City Life

Living in large cities involves several stressors, like noise, traffic, pollution, fear of assaults, hectic rhythm of life, and the simple fact of lacking the relaxing influence of nature around us. Even if you have to commute to town for work, setting up your home in the country can do a lot to relax your mind at the end of the day.

Traffic in the large cities can be stressful. Traffic jams can be especially stressful if we need to get to an appointment in time. And hectic traffic around us as well as stressed out drivers being impatient, will have its toll at anybody needing to navigate under those circumstances.

Living in high crime areas can be also stressful. Not knowing whether you will suffer an assault the next time you leave home can keep you quite apprehensive. And any kind of dubious face crossing your way will make your stress hormones rise.

City Life

Other Stressors

Relationship Problems can be a big stressor. Abusive relationships, sometimes even involving physical abuse, can be hard to deal with. Addictions are another problem that can cause a lot of strain on a relationship. Those are situations that may need help from outside to try to resolve the situation. Divorce sometimes seems to be an easy way out, but it should be a last resort, since any separation of an intimate relationship involves lots of stress by itself.

Technology and information overload are increasingly perceived as a burden in our lives. The fact that we are reachable wherever we are makes us more stressed at the end of the day. Many expect companies to respond to their email within an hour, and we need to catch up with Facebook, WhatsApp, Telegram and other messenger services. We want to keep up with the life of our friends on Facebook and Instagram and many get addicted to the diversions that are all around on social media. If we search for some topic on Google, the wealth of information available to almost any topic we want to know is just overwhelming. And that we spend several hours a day in front of the television is considered as part of our live. All of this keeps our minds busy with an unnatural amount of stimulus around us, and impedes us to simply rest and relax.

These are just a few of the major stress factors that we as a society face.  There are other things that can lead to stress, but these are the most common stressors in our private life.

In some way, even happy events such as the birth of a child, marriage, or even a new job can lead to stress.  Even though these are joyous occasions, they are stressful.  Why?  Because they disrupt our set out common routine.

Are you sensing any sort of pattern here with regard to stress?  Each of the aforementioned stressors all has one thing in common – they disrupt our lives.  We don’t like to have our lives disrupted and when it happens, even if it a good disruption, passing through the adaptation phase is causing us stress. We are going to experience stressful situations throughout our lives.  How we handle those situations will determine how well we can manage stress.  There are both good ways and bad ways to manage stress. 

Identifying stressors is not always so easy. While some of us can point to different stress factors that have occurred recently in our lives, others have no idea why they are stressed. In some cases, the original stressor can be something that happened in your childhood and left you insecure. For example, an abuse can create negative thought patterns that can be a stressor remaining until the adult age. In such cases, a Psychologist may be able to help you out to identify the original cause of your stress.

Once you have identified your stressor, you can work on removing the cause. This often helps already to bring your stress under control. But not always there is an immediate solution to the problem. In this case, you need an all-inclusive approach to stress management. If you need to figure out how to manage your stress the most effective way, download now your copy of The 10 Minute Guide to Stress Management.

Do you need a guide to help you understand how to cope with Stress in an all inclusive approach? Learn how to combat stress, mentally, physically, emotionally and strategically in your life.

Get Me the Guide

Filed Under: Mental Health, Stress Management

Developing Your Children’s Taste

June 11, 2021 by Elen Duarte - [rt_reading_time label="Reading Time:" postfix="minutes" postfix_singular="minute"]

O Seu Papel no Desenvolvimento Alimentar de Seus Filhos

Did you know that your child’s eating habits are largely determined by you? An adequate and balanced diet is not only linked to the child’s growth and development. It is also directly related to disease prevention and health promotion factors in adulthood.

Developing Your Children’s Taste

In this context, behavioral nutrition plays a fundamental role in guiding food choices in the first year of life. A correct introduction of solid foods, associated with the availability and accessibility of healthy foods, in a pleasant eating environment, enables the child to start building their food preferences consistently.

At this moment, the environment that surrounds the child is the family and the role of the parents is fundamental, as they are largely the child’s only reference of learning. Parents can promote nutritious food choices to their children by selecting healthy foods, thinking about nutritional quality and not just taste. It is up to parents to introduce food to their children, make it accessible and teach about the benefits of health-conscious food choices, while respecting the child’s innate hunger and satiety control.((Ramos M. Desenvolvimento do comportamento alimentar infantil. Jornal de Pediatria 0021-7557/00/76-Supl.3/S229))

Family meals represent an important event, where a positive atmosphere is created. A study by Wardle,((Wardle J. Eating behaviour and obesity. Obes Rev. 2007 Mar;8 Suppl 1:73-5 DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-789X.2007.00322.x)) addressing the relationship between food characteristics and eating behavior, found that food preferences change as a result of personal experiences and learning involved in mealtimes. A positive environment during a meal can induce the child’s preference for foods, while a negative experience can result in a dislike of certain food choices.

Making correct food choices seems simple, however it is a complex, dynamic and multifaceted process, directed by psychosocial, cultural and economic influences.

Parents who discuss nutritional issues as a family, or, more specifically, the nutritional value of foods, provide their children with greater knowledge about nutrition, enabling children to make better food choices throughout their lives. We should mention that children learn about the importance of foods from their own experiences and also, for example, by observing their parents.

A family eating together

A project carried out by Harvard University, conducted 15 years of research on family meals and has made significant discoveries.((Lynn Barendsen. The Family Dinner Project))

Children who dine regularly in the family circle, tend to consume more nutrients from fruits and vegetables, have lower rates of obesity, and eat fewer calories than those who were eating out. Also noted were academic and emotional benefits, lower rates of drug use and depression, more resilience, broader vocabulary, greater reading ability, and overall better grades in school.((The Benefits of Home Cooking for Your Family. Huffpost, 27.05.2017))

Sitting together as a family for a meal allows us to develop valuable skills such as: listening to other people, sharing ideas, laughing, telling stories, choosing healthy foods and even passing on traditions from one generation to another.((Rossi A, Moreira EAM, Rauen MS. Determinantes do comportamento alimentar: uma revisão com enfoque na família. Rev Nutr. 2008 Dec;21(6):739-48. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1415-52732008000600012))

Studies conducted by Branen & Fletcher((Branen L, Fletcher J. Comparison of college students’ current eating habits and recollections of their childhood food practices. J Nutr Educ. 1999; 31(6):304-10. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0022-3182(99)70483-8)), found that young adults, when selecting a food item, recall the nutritional choices that were formed by their parents. This is an intriguing realization of how parents can influence their children’s eating habits in the long run.

Here are some tips to make family meal times more enjoyable:

1. Set up a healthy table. If you prefer, get everybody involved in the preparation of the table. Dividing tasks and involving children in preparation makes mealtimes easier, remember that children learn by watching, but also by doing.((Refeições em família: Como as crianças se beneficiam do contato com os pais à mesa. BBC News, Novembro 12, 2018))

2. Eliminate distractions. Turn off the television, store away cell phones and tablets, so that attention is on each other. A study carried out with 91 children and 91 parents showed that children whose families eat their meals while watching television had a lower fruit and vegetable intake and a higher consumption of pizzas, snacks and soft drinks, compared to those who did not. Furthermore, research has shown that watching television during meals is associated with a higher risk for nutritional deficiencies. Another factor linked to the practice of eating in front of the television is associated with commercial food advertisements, which induce the child to eat totally unhealthy foods. About 91% of the most frequently advertised food products tend to be high in fat, sugar and salt.

Parents should also monitor the exposure time their children spend with electronic equipment, taking into account the sedentary lifestyle associated with obesity and the possible development of chronic diseases.((Rossi A, Moreira EAM, Rauen MS. Determinantes do comportamento alimentar: uma revisão com enfoque na família. Rev Nutr. 2008 Dec;21(6):739-48. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1415-52732008000600012))

3. Celebrate the Food. Sometimes we get so used to our abundance lifestyle that we forget that there are many people in this world who die of hunger and thirst. Praying before the meals it is also a way to express thankfulness and ask for a blessing over the food.

A family thanking for the food - Photo by RODNAE Productions from Pexels

4. Have a good chat. Avoid issues that bring discomfort to the other. This is not the best time to resolve those issues. If the conversation is something light, it will encourage your children to express their views and learn to respect other people’s opinions.((Refeições em família: Como as crianças se beneficiam do contato com os pais à mesa. BBC News, Novembro 12, 2018))

The family environment should provide interactions and strengthen bonds between other family members, be safe, warm and provide adequate and healthy food. Parents have a fundamental role in their children acquiring preferences and eating habits, which can encourage healthy eating patterns for their children. Furthermore, eating together can protect the health of the whole family and add a lot of value to our lives. Get started now! Taking care of your child’s health will bring rewarding results for their lifetime!

Healthy Fruits

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Filed Under: Children, Nutrition, Phases of Life

Psychosomatic Diseases – The Body Speaks

June 4, 2021 by Dr. Cesar Vasconcellos de Souza - [rt_reading_time label="Reading Time:" postfix="minutes" postfix_singular="minute"]

Psicossomático - O Corpo Fala

Body and mind always work together. You have a suffering in your body, your mind participates. You have suffering in your mind, your body participates. Today we want to understand psychosomatic diseases, how the body and mind work together in health and illness, and how one affects the other.

Psychosomatic Diseases - The Body Speaks

I would like to start by quoting some interesting phrases:

The sympathy which exists between the mind and the body is very great. When one is affected, the other responds.((Ellen G. White. Medical Minstry p. 105))

That´s an interesting concept! Look at the next text:

Great wisdom is needed by the physicians at the Institute in order to cure the body through the mind. But few realize the power that the mind has over the body. A great deal of the sickness which afflicts humanity has its origin in the mind, and can only be cured by restoring the mind to health.((Counsels on Health p. 349))

And this author still says the following:

Sickness of the mind prevails everywhere. Nine tenths of the diseases from which men suffer have their foundation here.((Ellen G. White. Mind, Character and Personality Vol. 1 p. 59))

Isn’t this interesting? According to this text nine out of ten illnesses originate in the mind. Is this an exaggeration? Dr. Herbert Benson, a clinical physician at Harvard University in the United States says the following:

60% to 90% of patients who seek doctors at the (outpatient) clinic have their illnesses due to physical and mental stress. These are people who have had physical symptoms as a result of social and emotional problems. The average could be 75%.((Herbert Benson, Harvard University, “Timeless Healing – The Power and Biology of Belief”, 1998))

An he goes on to say:

Emotion plays a more crucial role in our physiology than most of us can understand.

According to him, feelings and emotion influence physiology, and how the body works.

Hippocrates, the so-called father of medicine, a Greek physician who lived between 460 and 370 BC, said something interesting that relates to psychosomatic diseases:

 It’s far more important to know what person the disease has than what disease the person has.

Interestingly, he recommended for example that people with asthma learn to better express their anger, in addition to other procedures that he prescribed. So it is more important to try to understand what kind of person has a certain disease, than what disease that person has. Of course, this doesn’t diminish the importance of a proper diagnosis. The diagnosis needs to be made by a doctor, so that the treatment is well indicated. But what Hippocrates was wisely trying to say, is that the professional who seeks a complete view of the person with a certain illness, can achieve better results in the treatment. So a well rounded view of the patient means researching the physical, mental, spiritual and social factors in that person’s life, rather than just focusing on that isolated symptom.

A doctor taking an anamnesis in order to prescribe a well rounded treatment - Photo by Thirdman from Pexels

It’s important to understand that we don’t get sick by compartments. The body affects the mind and the mind affects the body. Nothing is just physical and nothing is just psychological. In the development of a disease, as well as in health, there is a combination of factors in the individual’s lifestyle, which has to do with how you think, how you feel, how you express your feelings, it has to do with the way you deal with people, it has to do with your diet, whether you exercise or not, the quality of your sleep, the stress you experience at work, whether you live in a big city or a small town, it’s about all the aspects of your lifestyle.

When you have a physical symptom, it can be headache, dizziness, back pain, among many others, and you go to a medical appointment, do complementary tests, blood tests, urine and stool tests, X-ray, EEG, CT scan, magnetic resonance, ultrasound, and the doctor says you have nothing, that the results are normal, but you still have that symptom that motivated your consultation, you are dealing probably with a psychosomatic symptom, which can develop into a psychosomatic disease.

What is a Psychosomatic Disease

A psychosomatic disease is one that manifests itself in the body with physical or functional symptoms and injuries, but whose main cause originates in the mind. That means the main cause comes from emotional conflicts, psychological conflicts and mental stress. This is different from somatization, because in somatization there is no detectable disease process, either by a medical exam or a lab test. So when a person has a lot of emotional stress, he can manifest some of that stress in his body, because the body is a helper to the mind and both work in an indivisible and inseparable union. In this sense, we can say that every disease, regardless of its origin, is to a certain degree psychosomatic.

The body and mind work in harmony in such a way that when something is burdening the mind like nervous tension, sadness, excessive anxiety, it is as if the body says to the mind: Do you need help? So the mind says: Yes help me, because it is hard to deal with this suffering here. Then we throw part of our tension onto the body, and the body starts to show psychosomatic symptoms.

Each person will have the manifestation of emotional distress in one or more than one of what we call a shock organ. The shock organ is the part of your body that is most sensitive to emotional stressors. For some people, the shock organ may be the stomach, hence when there is too much stress, too much tension at work or in the family, these people feel, for example, a burning sensation in the stomach area. For others, the shock organ could be the immune system. A person experiencing a lot of tense relationships, a lot of stress, may have frequent infections, develop an autoimmune disease, who knows. In other individuals, the shock organ can be the muscular system, for example, and in the face of life pressures, these people feel muscular pain. According to studies by Dr. Dean Ornish, a cardiologist at the University of California in San Francisco, he said:

People with a heart attack have a fourfold risk of dying within six months if they remain depressed and alone.((Dean Ornish, Saving Your Heart, 2002))

He is saying here, that people who have already had the attack but survived, if they remain alone, isolated, they have a much greater risk of dying. And he cites a study at the Case Western Reserve University, and in that study he verified the following:

They surveyed 10,000 married men and found that those who answered yes to the question, “Does your wife express love to you?” had significantly less angina.((Dean Ornish, Salvando o Seu Coração, 2002))

Years ago there was a book that was a bestseller in Brazil. That’s the title of the book: “Whatever it is”. It was written by a woman, an executive secretary who had a daughter and she was a go-getter, very proactive, very active in life to take care of her daughter, excel at work, be a high-profile professional in the company, then she had breast cancer. First she was stunned: How can that happen to me, a strong woman, so powerful, has breast cancer! She started researching what breast cancer is, and wrote this book: “Whatever it is”. A book where she opens her heart, opens her life, even private things in her life, and she says: “The cancer did not come to kill me, the cancer was a beacon, a red light ascending in my life, saying: Hey, stop, stop to reevaluate your life.”

A cancer survivor - Photo by Klaus Nielsen from Pexels

I even got in touch with her at this time, and we sat together at a bar in Rio de Janeiro to talk about this subject of mind and body and the relationship to psychosomatic diseases. So she explained it this way: “We have to learn to look at the disease as an alarm. The symptom is an alarm, the symptom is talking to you. It’s like when you have a car that you’re driving, and a red light is lighting up on the dashboard, is that red light a good thing or a bad thing? Well, it has both sides, it’s bad because you have a problem with your car, but it’s good because it’s warning you.”

So when you have any symptoms, of course you’re going to seek medical help, consultations, tests, all of that, but if you went to the doctor, you did evaluations, did the tests, and he says you have nothing, you’re fine, but you still have that symptom with that same kind of pain, so you need to start thinking about what’s going on with your emotional life. What will you need to do to alleviate the emotional tension and stress? As I explained, the mind always works hand in hand with the body, and often when you’re not ready to deal with the emotional pain, give it a name, face it head-on, your body starts to absorb, because you’re asking for it, you’re saying: I can’t handle dealing with this emotional pain, I can’t handle dealing with this loss, with this frustration, so the body comes in to help to alleviate this load.

The Power of the Mind

The way you think influences your body. This very simple statement shows just that:

If your mind is impressed and fixed that a bath will injure you, the mental impression is communicated to all the nerves of the body. The nerves control the circulation of the blood; therefore the blood is, through the impression of the mind, confined to the blood vessels, and the good effects of the bath are lost. All this is because the blood is prevented by the mind and will from flowing readily and from coming to the surface to stimulate, arouse, and promote the circulation.

For instance, you are impressed that if you bathe you will become chilly. The brain sends this intelligence to the nerves of the body, and the blood vessels, held in obedience to your will, cannot perform their office and cause a reaction after the bath.((Ellen G. White. Mind, Character and Personality Vol. 2 p. 397, 398))

That’s a very interesting statement! It is saying that the blood is impaired to circulate, because the mind is in emotional strain because of the way you think. Now the way you think then influences your body? That is what is being stated there. Now look at this other text that shows that the way you feel affects your body. It says:

 It is the duty of everyone to cultivate cheerfulness instead of brooding over sorrow and troubles. Many not only make themselves wretched in this way, but they sacrifice health and happiness to a morbid imagination. There are things in their surroundings that are not agreeable, and their countenances wear a continual frown that more plainly than words expresses discontent. These depressing emotions are a great injury to them healthwise, for by hindering the process of digestion they interfere with nutrition.((Ellen G. White. Mind, Character and Personality Vol. 1 p. 62, 63))

Very interesting, depressing emotions harming nutrition! Years ago a Nobel Prize winner in medicine showed in his scientific work with his team that there is a connection between cells of the central nervous system and immune cells.

Dr. Wildemann and his collaborators from the Stress Lab at the University of Arizona, proved that people experiencing significant losses, such as the death of their spouse, can experience several months of immune system deficiency resulting from this sadness. He explains in the study that some defense cells, such as natural killer cells, T and B lymphocytes, may become reduced or less active in their work to fight viruses and bacteria, because sadness affects immunity, it affects these defense cells.

Perhaps you have heard of an elderly person who was in good health and a few months after the death of his husband or wife, he himself had a major infection and died too. You surely have heard of such a case, it’s not uncommon. The old couple lives together and they’re fine, but suddenly one gets sick and then the other one that was healthy, but after the death of that dear one, within six months he dies too. Because sadness undermined the strength of that individual’s immunology, so a virus or bacteria took advantage of the situation and caused a serious illness.

An elderly couple enjoying companionship

So it seems that the more a person has difficulties becoming aware of their emotions, especially painful or unpleasant emotions, the more likely they are to present psychosomatic symptoms, because the body absorbs such feelings that the person feels unfit to deal with in a conscious level. This means that the more a psychosomatic symptom is buried in the body, the further a person is from the truth about the repressed and somatized feeling, or about those painful thoughts that the person doesn’t want to think about at that moment.

Dr. Diana Fosha from Adelphi University in New York says that for every type of emotion there is a visceral component, that is, a feeling always expresses itself in some organ in the body. I’ve already talked about shock organs here, so if you have difficulty expressing anger, it can come out in form of asthma or high blood pressure. People who have difficulty expressing any feelings, may present for example constipation. Perfectionists and stressed individuals can have a lot of migraine headaches. Some people with a tendency to repress their emotions for many years may facilitate their body to develop cancer, according to studies by scientists such as Dr. Bernie Siegel, Lawrence LeShan and the Simonton scientist couple.

Of course I’m not saying and neither are they, that the cause of cancer is an emotion. In fact, they explain that unresolved conflicts or major losses, can be factors that affect immunity and favor the emergence of cancer, when the person already had other factors that induce the mutation of a normal cell to a cancer cell.

A person with a lot of difficulty to cry, according to some scientists, may cry through the skin, through dermatological lesions, which produces a type of secretion. Individuals who repress their feelings a lot, they tend to have degenerative diseases such as cancer, diabetes, multiple sclerosis and other pathologies, while more explosive people tend to have other diseases such as heart attack or stroke. It’s like the more melancholic, introverted people they implode and the more short tempered people they explode, so the diseases are more cardiovascular for the explosive and they are more degenerative in the more introverted people. It’s common for people who develop fibromyalgia, for example, to take exaggerated responsibilities in the family. I’ve seen a lot of people with fibromyalgia, and I realized that in all of them there was a behavioral characteristic of exactly that: carrying the piano for everyone.

Psychological disorders are not weakness or lack of faith if you have lived or are experiencing major stresses in your life. Mental sufferings such as strong anguish, deep sadness, excessive fear are expressions of suffering, which often manifests through the body. These are so called psychosomatic disorders, which are defenses used by the body to relieve the mind. If you have physical symptoms, if you’ve had several evaluations with different doctors and they all say you have nothing, because no diagnosis was found and your exams are normal, you need to start to think whether there is something unresolved in your life, in your emotional life, in your relationships with people, are you guarding some resentment, do you need to resolve an issue with someone who has been eating you from the inside for many years? If you have some repressed emotions, or one of those situations I talked about, it might manifest itself in your body. You may also consider that a professional psychological evaluation may be needed. It may depend on the level of suffering you are having.

A psychologic consultation - Photo by cottonbro from Pexels

Sometimes emotional problems get resolved with life. A friend of mine, a psychoanalyst, once said an interesting phrase: “Life is therapeutic”, meaning life, the events of life, they teach us many things by themselves, and can help us to achieve healing from some situations.

Sometimes life doesn’t solve everything, so we need some technical help. Don’t suffer without taking an attitude to improve, because actually health, for you to develop health, it depends on you to practice some habits, it depends on you to improve your lifestyle in relation to food, in your thinking patterns, in the relationship with people, your sleep, your physical exercise, but it also depends on the attitudes you take, on you assuming responsibility for taking good care of your body and mind.

So it’s important that you do something for yourself instead of always waiting for people to do something for you, or even waiting that the doctor will cure you. The doctor does not cure people, the doctor indicates some paths to health, sometimes they prescribe a medicine that will be temporary to alleviate a symptom, that suffering you are going through, but there are attitudes you take in life, there are decisions you make to take better care of your health and your mind, that will determine whether you are going to take the path of health or the path of illness. Professor Dr. Adalberto Barreto, who works with community therapy, said:

When the mouth shuts up, the organs speak, and when the mouth speaks, the organs heal.

Look how interesting it is, showing the importance of talking, of letting off steam, so that you don’t get somatized, so that you don’t keep swallowing things, without putting a limit, and you end up suffering on your body. Make the necessary changes in your thoughts and emotions for you to have a better life and health!

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