Thanks for asking.
I've not been invited to Europe, so I guess not.
Simple Contact is a way of thinking and understanding and communicating before touching another and then allowing ideomotion as more communicating takes place. As my understanding of the neuroscience of pain continues to evolve I find that my method changes hardly at all compared to what I'm imagining takes place. I assume that Simple Contact will continue in this vein.
I appreciate your interest.
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This is a sticky topic.
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Just a simple question (that might sound dumb, but nevertheless): Is there any chance that you'll do a workshop in Europe? Or is there any other "system" (or whatever you like to call it) that is similar to Simple Contact - and that I can learn over here in the old world?
Best regards
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The notion that I put my hands on "lateral bony points" comes from someone observing me. I have no sense of this and think they are wrong. The cellular mechanics of touch encourage doing it at bony prominences but this is not a firm rule by any means.
I learned all of the other techniques and applied them early in my career. I discovered Spitz's text in a review in Skeptical Inquirer. My patients taught me what to do, and what to stop doing. The theory is always evolving and it comes from all the reading I and many others do.
I got a message from Summit Professional Education yesterday informing me that my proposal for a workshop on aging and pain will be shelved. No other sponsors have expressed any interest whatsoever.
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Dear Barrett,
I`ve re-read Simple Contact: The Great Conversation and a whole lot of other posts discussing SC. I think I`m starting to get a grip on it. SC seems so easy – but at the same time it seems to require a lot of knowledge and understanding in the field of neuroscience and human behavior.
I now see SC as much more than “just” ideomotion – or enhancing ideomotion in our patients to relieve stress on / from the nervous system.
Again, out of curiosity I wonder.
1. Who or what inspired you to evolve SC and enhance ideomotion? What made you evolve this consept?
The closest hand-on approach I can think of is the functional and indirect techniques applied by a lot of osteopaths (but sadly with an old-fashioned and outdated theoretical framework)
2. Why do you place your hands on lateral bony points?
This is also emphasized in a lot of energy-based osteopathic treatment techniques.
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It's gratifying to see such support for the program. I'd like to see this marketed with the ease with which the older patient can change in mind.
I've not yet heard from the sponsor but would like to send them here in case anyone else expresses interest in attending.
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One of the qualities I thought of, when thinging of my elderly aquaintences, was less of a concern about what others think of them
Gerry, I think you are spot on. I had noticed that characteristic with patients and non-patients, but didn't connect any dots. This is a window of opportunity, but it would be very interesting to see how dementia patients fare under the same window.
NariLast edited by nari; 17-03-2010, 02:48 AM.
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I get the sense from many that the accumulation of years allows them to freely express themselves. Seems to me, they have "earned" that right.
I see too many that never did learn this. So I call them 'control freaks' and tell them to focus on the tree outside the window. If they're going to work that hard all the time, they should be doing something profitable.
Mary
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One of the qualities I thought of, when thinging of my elderly aquaintences, was less of a concern about what others think of them. I realize this varies from person to person. But overall, I get the sense from many that the accumulation of years allows them to freely express themselves. Seems to me, they have "earned" that right.
I also wondered about the beginnings of dementia, and if that might actually be helpful in not trying to analyze what is going on in detail. Perhaps a gentle touch goes further if it is simply appreciated and not scrutinized till it loses all meaning. Perhaps it also helps in decreasing the worry and concern about what others think. Just wondering.
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A few years ago I put on my glasses one morning and abandoned the contact lenses I'd worn daily since I was 16.
In my book, there's an essay titled "The lady in the lace gloves." You might already have guessed that it was about what I saw in my waiting room one cold November day and how my heart sank at the impending failure. I need authenticity, not ornamentation. I need improvisation, not artifice.
I think there's a difference between vanity and a real effort to look our best for good reason. I also think that this is a line often hard to detect until you've crossed it.
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...a relative (I said relative, not complete) indifference to mirrors.
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Gerry,
Thanks for the response. perhaps Alabama is in my future.
From this Wikipedia entry:
Comorbidity is either:
* The presence of one or more disorders (or diseases) in addition to a primary disease or disorder; or
* The effect of such additional disorders or diseases.
Are there others that you might suggest?
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I've wondered about this Barrett. What comorbidities do you think make it easier for you to treat this population? I'm not surprised you have the success you do as you mentioned in the other thread. I am considering doing some work in geriatrics, and would love to begin this practice utilizing the techniques I read about here.
I'm ready to sign up for this course!
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Often I have the impression that if a few of my patients were younger I couldn't treat them as effectively or, at least, with such ease. If that's the case, then the comorbidities that accompany aging can be said to help at times. It's an interesting thing to look at it, and I'd have never come to this conclusion in my old job.
These days I'm not terribly younger than the people I often treat, and there's no reason to believe that what has happened to them won't happen to me. No one in my current venue planned on being there one day.
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The timing is perfect to include the geriatric tag. The bulk of the population (boomers) are now on the brink of senior-icity.
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I like the geriatric tag as well. This is a group that is considered to be more prone to peripheral "pain generators" by many PTs. It's also a group that wrestles with many of the affective and sometimes cognitive aspects of the neuromatrix, so it provides an opportunity to discuss these contributions as being potentially as important if not more important than nociception in persistent pain.
Maybe you can bring a few x-rays of some bone on bone knees or hips in a patient you're treating with neck pain to help get this message across.
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