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Professor Peter Drummond, Murdoch University's Director of the Centre for Research on Chronic Pain, and our Ambassador Dr Adrian Lopresti explore the relationship pain has with thoughts, emotions, mental health and sleep. The discussion begins with Prof Drummond exploring the influence of thoughts and emotions on one's perception of pain with a detailed discussion on various pathways that pain travels through the brain which results in the experience of feeling pain. Pyschological state seems to play a huge role in colouring pain perception where fear, anxiety, depression leads to an increased pain signalling. Prof Drummond explains how psycholeducation techniques have been proven to alter one's experience of pain through reprocessing therapy and relaxation that affects one's ability to control and manage their pain better. Covered in this episode [00:52] Welcoming Professor Peter Drummond [01:37] Can emotions affect pain? [06:18] Fear can switch pain off [08:27] Perceptions of pain can affect pain sensation chronic pain and recovery [12:57] The bidirectional relationship between emotions and pain [16:37] Connections between stress and migraine [23:34] Affects of sleep on pain [26:40] The importance of psychoeducation in managing pain [31:16] Pain reprocessing therapy: changing beliefs about pain [34:08] Pain-related questionnaires and assessment tools [36:41] Using relaxation techniques to manage chronic pain [38:45] Biofeedback [40:13] Thanking Peter and closing remarks Find today's transcript and show notes here: https://www.bioceuticals.com.au/education/podcasts/the-psychology-of-pain Sign up for our monthly newsletter for the latest exclusive clinical tools, articles, and infographics: https://login.bioceuticals.com.au ***DISCLAIMER: The information provided on fx Medicine by BioCeuticals is for educational and informational purposes only. The information provided is not, nor is it intended to be, a substitute for professional advice or care. Please seek the advice of a qualified health care professional in the event something you learn here raises questions or concerns regarding your health.***
David & Jamie Garrett join us for a steaming bowl of corn in the form of a Midnight Ritual of Secret Window(2004)! Journey With A Cinephile: https://www.instagram.com/journeywithacinephile/ https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/journey-with-a-cinephile-a-horror-movie-podcast/id1494532023 https://open.spotify.com/show/4RqRjspMHkYEOV87H9DbOk Special Guests: David Garrett Jr., Jamie Garrett, and Jeremy Skeletron.
Professor Peter Drummond, Murdoch University's Director of the Centre for Research on Chronic Pain, and our Ambassador Dr. Adrian Lopresti explore the relationship pain has with thoughts, emotions, mental health and sleep. The discussion begins with Prof. Drummond exploring the influence of thoughts and emotions on one's perception of pain with a detailed discussion on various pathways that pain travels through the brain which results in the experience of feeling pain. Pyschological state seems to play a huge role in colouring pain perception where fear, anxiety, depression leads to an increased pain signalling. Prof. Drummond explains how psycholeducation techniques have been proven to alter one's experience of pain through reprocessing therapy and relaxation that affects one's ability to control and manage their pain better. Find today's transcript and show notes here: https://www.fxmedicine.com.au/podcast/replay-psychology-pain-dr-adrian-lopresti-and-professor-peter-drummond Sign up for our monthly newsletter for the latest exclusive clinical tools, articles, and infographics: https://pages.blackmores.com.au/FXM-signup.html ***DISCLAIMER: The information provided on fx Medicine is for educational and informational purposes only. The information provided is not, nor is it intended to be, a substitute for professional advice or care. Please seek the advice of a qualified health care professional in the event something you learn here raises questions or concerns regarding your health.***
Welcome to 2023! Wow it's a new year and there are some continuing conversations that will come to the fore this year. We would all like to leave the last couple of years behind however life, and change doesn't work like that. In this Episode I cover some of the key challenges and conversations that everyone should lean into in 2023. Happy new year and I hope you had a good holiday break! Challenges in the workplace in 2023... 6:10 Fatigue in your workforce. How do you assess it and what are the indicators to look out for 11:24 Pyschological safety and what does that look like in your organisation? 18.05 Culture - how do cultures improve change agility or impede it? How has your organisation's culture changed as a result of the pandemic? 22.38 - Engagement - this is becoming more and more relevant. This isn't just about staff happiness, but how engaged staff are in your organisation and it's vision. For change practitioners these will be key areas of challenge or of support for change in 2023. Come visit us at www.myvirtualchangemanager.com to keep up to date on change in 2023.
This exciting episode features the author of a fascinating book called “Actionable Gamification” by Yu-Kai Chou. Yu-kai is one of the earliest pioneers of gamification and is a regular keynote speaker and lecturer on gamification at organizations including Stanford University, Google, Tesla, and Boston Consulting Group, among others. Yu-Kai's insights came from many years as a gamer and realizing the strategic value that the best games offer to their players. His “Octalysis Framework” has become the bible for many brands who aspire to the extra-ordinary levels of engagement that true gamification can achieve. Listen to enjoy this masterclass in gamification and how it applies to us as loyalty marketing professionals. Show Notes: 1.) Yu-kai Chou 2.) Octalysis Framework 3.) Get the Actionable Gamification book by Yu-kai Chou here 4.) Metablox
Professor, filmmaker, writer, adventurer and self-confessed 'bloody good bearded bloke' Beau Miles joins Beyond Binary to discuss adventure and all it entails. His new book "The Backyard Adventurer" is available through Brio via all good outlets. His YouTube channel features full-length films of various adventures as well as shorter challenges (search Beau Miles) and he also has a podcast (Beauisms). Pyschological, Anthropological, Philosophical, Political, Controversial Talk Show
Spring Cleaning doesn't need to be boring, overwhelming, or for your parents. In fact, Spring Cleaning is the exact opposite! It can be JUICY! And fun! And uplifting! And inspiring! And... The list goes on.Join Host Leanne Kallal as she shares her recent experience with spring cleaning and how it prompted her to research the benefits of spring cleaning. Leanne shares 5 benefits of spring cleaning in today's episode, plus some tips to help you get the ball rolling so you can experience all of the positive benefits it has to offer! Enjoy! Links mentioned in today's episode: Get in touch with Leanne and The GlowJo Podcast on Instagram. Sign up for The GlowJo Newsletter.
Blu sits down with poet, song-writer, and soul-sister Reggie Riverbear to unpack their time in Mexico together. Reggie explains her process of the importance of integration after sitting with Plant Medicine, and the insights that have come through for her. As a young girl growing up in the Netherlands on a star shaped island, Reggie always felt a disconnect between her and her culture, and had trouble feeling at home in it. After a long process of discovery, she came to know that her home is the earth- and being indigenous means to walk in right relation with the earth and her creatures.
This is the first episode of Missing, Murders, and the Mind! Today we will talk about how the case of Angie Dodge began and how it progressed. This case has so many twists and turns! The next episode we will be deep diving into Christopher Tapps. And, stay tuned for our third episode, every third episode will be our Pyschological deep dive. (This months topic "Are all serial killers psychopaths??.") Thanks for tuning in! Sources:. 48 Hours: The DNA of a Killer 48 Hours : The Twisted Case of Angie Dodge ABC News : Stranger than Fiction : The murder of Angie Dodge 20/20 Investigates Murder of Angie Dodge - Wikipedia https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwi3uI6UocnwAhWJRTABHSKAAjwQFjAGegQIFAD&url=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FMurder_of_Angie_Dodge&usg=AOvVaw3LOcRvWqj9IzhtjgVcXfzc The Angie Dodge Case from 1996 to Today https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwi3uI6UocnwAhWJRTABHSKAAjwQFjALegQIBRAD&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.eastidahonews.com%2F2019%2F07%2Fthe-angie-dodge-case-from-1996-until-today-whats-happened-why-and-whats-next%2F&usg=AOvVaw1fNH_FV2LBHmfg7h38HWoN https://www.angiedodge.com/ Retired FBI SSA Steve Moore on Crime Time, hosted by Jim Clemente. https://youtu.be/DhFdscHALnI https://www.eastidahonews.com/2019/05/read-new-angie-dodge-murder-court-documents/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/missingmurdermind/support
Is your anxiety or depression all in your head? Is it just the result of bad thinking patterns in your mind? Or is it the result of something going wrong inside your body? I'm going to talk about my journey with anxiety and being told I was simply suffering from panic attacks when in reality I had a major serotonin and stress hormone regulation problem that nobody guessed at until I did my own research. If you suffer from a lot of stress, or you find yourself becoming frequently neurotic - perhaps it's not all in your head after all - and perhaps there's a very reasonable solution to the problem. Doctors don't always know the answers, and it helps everyone to go and become their own researchers to find the solutions.
Highlights Optimistic View. 0:00-41:30 Why is prison necessary? 10:00 What should be considered an incarceration able offense? 16:35 Who gets to decide who goes to prison? 21:45 Arbitral Time Theft 26:37 Prison Reformation with the current system 30:00 REALITY 41:37 Number 1 problem with the current system 42:00
The Spooky Screen discuss the deep meaning of "The Babadook" (2014, Australia) and argue whether reducing the monster's visual onscreen presence would have improved the film.
On this episode, Raul and Parker interviewed Doctor Arash from the Prehab Guys. Topics included the psychological aspect of rehab, creating content for social media, goal setting, and more.You can follow The Prehab Guys on instagram: (https://www.instagram.com/theprehabguys/?hl=es) OR in their website: (https://theprehabguys.com/)Follow us on instagram for rehab and research content: (https://www.instagram.com/strength.rehab/?hl=es)
Sarah checks in with Dr. Andrea Hawk to discuss the impact Covid-19 is having on people’s mental health. They talk ways to support your own mental health during these uncertain times and why busting the “good-mom” myth is a great place to start.
Dr. Bonnie Henry; Ottawa report; Supporting truckers; Supports for renters; Pyschological health; Kids ask questions about COVID-19; Reusable bags.
0318 SHORT 13 MIn Why TP Hoarding Its Pyschological WIth Susan by Kate Dalley
Why would anyone spread false fear and guilt about the coronavirus, saying that it will only affect the liberals? People say stupid shit in shitty religion; this is called religious trauma! rightwingwatch.org/post/jonathan-shuttlesworth babcp.com/Trauma-from-Leaving-Religion religioustraumainstitute.com patreon.com/spiritualandshit
Community is so important for the spiritual, psychological, and physical well-being of human beings, but with the advent of nuclear families, singledom, and technology, the community is deteriorating faster and faster and resulting in terrible consequences for the mental health of people everywhere.Thank you for listening! I have just started an online community called Soul Vitamins where you can access all of my courses, books, and videos for a low monthly price. Check it out at https://bit.ly/soulvitamins3If you want to connect with me further - below are some ways:Buy my course on creating healthy boundaries at http://bit.ly/boundariescourse3Check out my YouTube Channel at https://m.youtube.com/c/BoomShikhaJoin my FB group! https://www.facebook.com/groups/millionairehippieEmail me at boomshikha at themillionairehippie dot com if you have feedback. Love and light as always,Boom ShikhaSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-millionaire-hippie. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Julie Morin and Laura Anderson, liscensed professional clinical counselors who practice at DBT and EMDR Specialists in Plymouth, Minnesota, joined us at Ridgeview’s Live Friday CME series on January 18, 2019 to discuss DBT and it’s use in PTSD. What is Dialectical Behavior Therapy?: It is a form of psychotherapy that is essentially a combination of many aspects of mindfulness and cognitive behavioral therapy. It is typically geared toward significant emotional dysregulation but was originally designed for borderline personality disorder. It has various other applications, including ptsd, anxiety as well as eating disorders. Enjoy the podcast. Objectives: Upon completion of this CME event, program participants will be able to: Identify the four stages of DBT with emphasis on Stage 2 of treatment. Recognize the patient target population that would benefit most from DBT-PE. Identify the inclusion/exclusion requirements for both PE and EMDR in order to make safe, evidence-based referrals. Describe the benefits expected from trauma work in the context of DBT-PE. CME credit is only offered to Ridgeview Providers for this podcast activity. Complete and submit the online evaluation form, after viewing the activity. Upon successful completion of the evaluation, you will be e-mailed a certificate of completion within 2 weeks. You may contact the accredited provider with questions regarding this program at rmccredentialing@ridgeviewmedical.org. Click on the following link for your CME credit: CME Evaluation: Trauma Focused Treatment - What Does It Really Mean? (**If you are listening to the podcasts through iTunes on your laptop or desktop, it is not possible to link directly with the CME Evaluation for unclear reasons. We are trying to remedy this. You can, however, link to the survey through the Podcasts app on your Apple and other smart devices, as well as through Spotify, Stitcher and other podcast directory apps and on your computer browser at these websites. We apologize for the inconvenience.) The information provided through this and all Ridgeview podcasts as well as any and all accompanying files, images, videos and documents is/are for CME/CE and other institutional learning and communication purposes only and is/are not meant to substitute for the independent medical judgment of a physician, healthcare provider or other healthcare personnel relative to diagnostic and treatment options of a specific patient's medical condition.” FACULTY DISCLOSURE ANNOUNCEMENT It is our intent that any potential conflict should be identified openly so that the listeners may form their own judgments about the presentation with the full disclosure of the facts. It is not assumed any potential conflicts will have an adverse impact on these presentations. It remains for the audience to determine whether the speaker’s outside interest may reflect a possible bias, either the exposition or the conclusions presented. Planning committee members and presenter(s) have disclosed they have no significant financial relationship with a pharmaceutical company and have disclosed that no conflict of interest exists with the presentation/educational event. Show Notes: Julie Morin and Laura Anderson are Licensed professional clinical counselors who practice at DBT and EMDR Specialists in Plymouth MN. They joined us at Ridgeview’s Live Friday CME series on January 18, 2019 to discuss DBT and it’s use in PTSD. What is Dialectical Behavior Therapy?: It is a form of psychotherapy that is essentially a combination of many aspects of mindfulness and cognitive behavioral therapy. It is typically geared toward significant emotional dysregulation but was originally designed for borderline personality disorder. It has various other applications, including PTSD, anxiety, as well as eating disorders. There are many misconceptions about what psychological trauma is and how it comes about. The sound effects just played are attention grabbing, but as we all can attest after listening to an air raid siren, real combat noise, a tsunami crash and others, rescue sirens and the like, our emotions kick in immediately, removing our ability to think rationally, even for a brief moment, perhaps conjuring up images of a previous life experience. But as we will learn in this podcast, trauma and PTSD is often due to events in life that don’t involve gunfire or ambulance sirens. Bullying, job failures, relationship issues, and other interpersonal conflicts. In fact, these minor traumas or secondary traumatic experiences can indeed be quite debilitating, and until DBT, many therapy modalities have not been as effective. Chapter 1: What is trauma and how does it present itself? Well, PTSD can present in a lot of people and in different ways. There are many people who have experienced varying degrees of trauma, such as bullying or other emotional traumas i.e. abuse and major life events. Not just war veterans or near death experiences. Trauma is really anything that has a long lasting effect on your psyche. Secondary trauma is not uncommon either, especially if you experience death and tragedy in your job regularly, such is the case in firefighters, paramedics, police officers, nurses, etc. What happens in the brain? Trauma memories are stored in different ways than other regular memories. They’re stored fragmentally. The memory is stored in the emotion center of the brain, and the reemergence of the memory tends to cause an emotional response, often irrational. Somatic complaints and findings are common, such as sweating, pain and headaches. It would be prudent for the evaluating provider in this case, especially in the absence of other diagnoses, to ask about trauma in the patient’s life. When faced with a traumatic experience, our prefrontal cortex goes off-line, and therefore language is booted out of the experience. Resultantly, trauma becomes “stuck” in our brains, in general terms. We must then learn to reconnect our language and reasoning with the trauma memory, because those memories were never really processed. Avoidance behavior tends to take place with regard to anything dealing with the experience or circumstances related to the trauma. Marsha Linehan, who developed DBT, was a teaching psychologist at Washington State, and she was recognizing that CBT itself was not working, especially on borderline personality disorder patients. Essentially, it is designed to treat people who are very difficult to treat with other approaches, including the many facets that may go with these clients, such as multiple psychiatric diagnoses, joblessness, relationship issues, substance abuse and financial woes. She broke down and researched mindfulness into 6 different sections. It turns out, clients who tend to do well with DBT are the ones who present to emergency departments frequently, especially patients who are in the suicidality-hospitalization cycle that we see quite commonly. Substance use and abuse is also common in these people, because drugs and alcohol help to repress those traumatic memories and feelings. Patients with somatic complaints and no physiologic explanation, and with a history of trauma, stand to benefit from DBT. Chapter 2: While the treatment of trauma can be confusing frightening for patients, Julie and Laura discuss the organized, stage-oriented approach to treating and helping people suffering with PTSD, using the 4 stages of DBT. The first stage of DBT involves getting behaviors under control, and minimizing life threatening behaviors, substance use disorder, hostility toward others as well as the thoughts that lead to those behaviors. Improvement of this for at least three months is desired, before moving to the next stage. Essentially, stablizing the situation overall, so that a foundation can be laid for even beginning to deal with the traumatic experience. TIDBT or “trauma informed” DBT groups deal with enhancing the awareness of what brings on these emotions associated with a traumatic experience, and to help uncover what the original trauma was that causes these feelings and behaviors. Stage 2 of DBT tends to deal with PTSD treatment. This stage is a big one. Emotional experiencing and exposure to stressful situations begins in this stage. The beginning of processing this trauma is happening in this stage. Things get hard in this stage. Cognitive restructuring happens in this stage, and we can begin to properly file these memories. Reduction of suffering by exposing clients to the event repetitively is done in this stage as well. This is a weekly meeting for about 90 minutes at a time. Prolonged exposure or EMDR are employed in this stage. Can the client talk about their trauma? We need to determine whether they can begin this process by gauging where the person is at with the mere mention of the trauma. Sometimes people need to stay in a DBT modality for a long time before moving into stage 2. Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing is a relatively new treatment modality that brings the client back to the worst part of the trauma. It involves following visual or audible bilateral brain stimulation. This was developed by Francine Shapiro. The following of visual or auditory situmli moving back and forth engages both hemispheres of the brain, and sets forth a path of engaging of a feeling or sense of the trauma, and then setting forth an alignment of the memory that leads to processing of the trauma. Right-Left brain stimulation essentially creates a panormaic orientation of the traumatic memory by filling-in the areas of the brain that store the more rational memories of the experience. There are 8 stages to EMDR treatment. Some sessions last longer than others, depending on the degree and longetvity of the trauma. Moving from the DBT prolonged exposure for PTSD involves also tape recording themselves talking about the trauma, in a series often, and then practicing her DBT skills while listening to the recording, and focusing on the intense “hot spots” during the recording. Dissociation is not uncommon in PTSD clients, especially if the trauma was significant. In other words, the client may seem entirely different throughout the process. In this case, there is a need to persistently and consistently recenter the client into the present moment, in order to confront the traumatic experience. Stage 3 involves working toward “life worth living” goals. Going back to work or back to school is addressed here. Much of this is done as an outpatient but not intensive outpatient, which is what stages 1 and 2 are done in. Housing and parameters that involve skills that let us live through our daily ups and downs while keeping an eye on the life long goals. Stage 4 involves spirtual enlightenment and connecting with a higher sense of self. Not everyone goes through this stage. Sometimes people will be guided to this if there is still something missing. Confronting our trauma and demons is hard. A lot of people don’t recognize it or have completely submerged it in their psyche, and we know that chronic pain, fibromyalgia and other painful somatization is associated with a deeper emotional trauma in one’s life. Many feel stigmatized and afraid of being labeled with a diagnosis. Sometimes people want to minimize their “little T” trauma because of embarrassment of the trauma itself, or perhaps it’s not a big enough trauma. But let’s face it, who wants to retrace some pretty ugly steps we have walked in this life, whether they happened to us, or whether we had a hand in causing them. Escapism is all too available to us in western society. Diversions that help us avoid confronting and dealing with these hard truths in our lives. Substance use and abuse is the obvious, immediate but unfortunately destructive diversion that so many lean on. If we can first take an inventory of how people are feeling: loss of sleep, panic attacks and somatization, we can then be led toward the truth of the matter in that trauma of some sort was the impetus, in some cases. Pain in general, fibromyalgia and chronic pain syndromes, in many cases are associated with an emotional traumatic experience in someone’s life. While many will struggle their entire lives with PTSD, whether it is due to a major event or a series of smaller traumatic experiences, there is help. DBT, and the multiphase approache to recognizing and tackling this disorder have shown great promise. And this service is something we should all consider for our patients when appropriate. Special thanks to Julie Morin and Laura Anderson today for joining us and extending their knowledge of PTSD treatment to all of us.
Greetings!Here are some links for your blink-happy selves!http://labs.psychology.illinois.edu/~rcfraley/attachment.htmhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26963369https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29522549
In this episode we discuss how you can make yourself better remembered when doing a speech, introduction or presentation. The Zeigarnik Effect talks about how thing are better remembered when they are unfinished. You can use this to your advantage. You can schedule a no-obligation consultation at Allied Pixels
Victoria assigned Kait the movie I Know Who Killed Me, so, this week, Kait is giving her in-depth description of the Lindsay Lohan vehicle.
In episode eight, Jason Bianco-Starnes, pitches a psychological thriller called, "The Traveler" with Matt Reveles. The host, Derk Harron, would compare this pitch to the films, "Due Date" and "Fight Club."
NBC's Chuck Todd weighs in on the Wisconsin primary on Bloomberg Surveillance with Tom Keene and Michael McKee. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
NBC's Chuck Todd weighs in on the Wisconsin primary on Bloomberg Surveillance with Tom Keene and Michael McKee.
Peter Fitschen and Cliff Wilson discuss natural bodybuilding contest prep. What happens to your testosterone? What is the influence of psychological factors? Are there gender differences? What can be done to minimize the negative effects of extreme fat loss?
Each time I tell someone what my job is they are curious or they are worried. They want to know more about psychology, or how I can help them. Or they want to stay away from being analyzed. If you've ever been curious about the "mysteries of psychology" join me for Everything is Psychological. This is the beginning of the podcast adventure. Everything is Psychological will explore the world of psychology, and how it weaves through our lives. Our experiences are shaped by our emotions and thoughts. Understanding the psychology of an event is important to a greater self-awareness and an improved functioning. In this episode we will explore the purpose of this show, and set the table for the future of Everything is Pyschological. There are several psychology podcasts currently available that take the thoughts in different directions. If you're a psychology lover like me check out The Psych Files, Shrink Rap, or Seattle Psychology podcasts. Their hosts bring great content to explore different aspects of the field. Everything is Psychological is a creative exploration of how our mind forms the world around us, and how we can tap into reshaping the way we think. For more discussion join me at: www.drneilstafford.com Facebook - Dr. Neil Stafford Instgram - Drneil06 Twitter - @drseab Ask questions, let's talk.
Confused by the omnipresent "Studies Show..." headlines? Can't figure out which conflicting psychological and medical studies to believe? We bust some of the psychology myths and discuss how the scientific community makes sense of the myriad of studies.
AS024 Ask Sister podcast recorded live on May 7, 2010. Sponsored by aNunsLife.org ministry. Topics include: what happens at a Come and See, scapulars, student debt, sisters and retirement, psychological testing prior to entrance, facing darkness and more! Click PLAY below or right-click here to download the MP3. Subscribe to A Nun's Life Podcasts: Ask [...]