April 11th, 2012 4:35 pm

Exercising the Brain

By |2017-12-11T13:02:22+11:00April 11th, 2012|Categories: Learn, Personal resources|Tags: , |

...I feel I'm exercising my brain when I read an article that sparks more thought and leads me on a hunt for more and more information and the process all results in gold! It might not necessarily be what I was looking for but a lovely surprise nevertheless... It made me think about another possible cure for my issue (I know, very far-fetched but imagine if my brain could be programmed to make me live/dream all the activities my pudendal nerve won't let me do by night?! Imagine?!). So I went to my favorite, most trusting online resource, no, not Google, Body In Mind...

December 21st, 2011 10:40 am

The Brain That Changes Itself

By |2017-12-11T13:30:49+11:00December 21st, 2011|Categories: Learn, Professional Resources|Tags: , , , |

..The result is this book, a riveting collection of case histories detailing the astonishing progress of people whose conditions had long been dismissed as hopeless. We see a woman born with half a brain that rewired itself to work as a whole, a woman labeled retarded who cured her deficits with brain exercises and now cures those of others, blind people learning to see, learning disorders cured, IQs raised, aging brains rejuvenated, painful phantom limbs erased,

November 30th, 2011 4:03 am

Jacques Beco M.D

By |2017-12-11T10:04:30+11:00November 30th, 2011|Categories: Help, Professional|Tags: , , |

Dr. Jacques Beco is a perineologist that is located in Verviers, Belgium. Dr. Beco specialises in the diagnosis and treatment of pudendal neuropathies (pain, urinary and incontinences).

November 21st, 2011 8:00 am

David Butler and Lorimer Moseley discuss the first five years of Explain Pain

By |2017-12-11T10:19:05+11:00November 21st, 2011|Categories: Help, Learn, Professional Resources|Tags: , , |

Explain Pain has been a huge stepping stone for patients and clinicians - not only in understanding pain but being able to communicate the concepts to others. Over 5 years on, and the book is still unprecedented in its layout, descriptive illustrations and incredible bank of information. Backed entirely by scientific evidence, Explain Pain is a recommended text at many universities but also read and enjoyed by everyday people in pain.

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