Pain and Its Transformations


Book Description

Pain is immediate and searing but remains a deep mystery for sufferers, their physicians, and researchers. As neuroscientific research shows, even the immediate sensation of pain is shaped by psychological state and interpretation. At the same time, many individuals and cultures find meaning, particularly religious meaning, even in chronic and inexplicable pain. This ambitious interdisciplinary book includes not only essays but also discussions among a wide range of specialists. Neuroscientists, psychiatrists, anthropologists, musicologists, and scholars of religion examine the ways that meditation, music, prayer, and ritual can mediate pain, offer a narrative that transcends the sufferer, and give public dignity to private agony. They discuss topics as disparate as the molecular basis of pain, the controversial status of gate control theory, the possible links between the relaxation response and meditative practices in Christianity and Buddhism, and the mediation of pain and intense emotion in music, dance, and ritual. The authors conclude by pondering the place of pain in understanding--or the human failure to understand--good and evil in history.




Pain and Its Transformations


Book Description

Pain is immediate and searing but remains a deep mystery for sufferers, their physicians, and researchers. As neuroscientific research shows, even the immediate sensation of pain is shaped by psychological state and interpretation. At the same time, many individuals and cultures find meaning, particularly religious meaning, even in chronic and inexplicable pain. This ambitious interdisciplinary book includes not only essays but also discussions among a wide range of specialists. Neuroscientists, psychiatrists, anthropologists, musicologists, and scholars of religion examine the ways that meditation, music, prayer, and ritual can mediate pain, offer a narrative that transcends the sufferer, and give public dignity to private agony. They discuss topics as disparate as the molecular basis of pain, the controversial status of gate control theory, the possible links between the relaxation response and meditative practices in Christianity and Buddhism, and the mediation of pain and intense emotion in music, dance, and ritual. The authors conclude by pondering the place of pain in understanding--or the human failure to understand--good and evil in history.




Pain: The Accelerator To A Life of Purpose


Book Description

This book is written to help women navigate through seasons of pain and hardship, using those seasons to birth their transformation to a whole new level. But she must first have the right perspective and tools, or the pain can become paralyzing. And with the right tools, and with the awareness of the reason for their pain, it is no longer a hindrance but can be converted to fuel, accelerating these women into their next season.




Transformations


Book Description




Transformation Through Pain


Book Description

"God, who gives life to the dead and calls those things which do not exist as though they did" (Romans 4:17) What is the role of pain and suffering in our walk with God? In Scripture, we see that God is a restorer. He always takes what is broken and creates something beautiful from it. So in Christ, God took broken humanity and re-created a new creation. So how then should we deal with the things that are painful and cause suffering in our lives? Find out What the true nature of God is and how He works (He creates life out of death), What attitude we should have towards suffering and pain when we experience it, How Christ's wounds can bring us healing, How we can trust that God is working in us, and How God will use our wounds and pains and transform us into catalysts of healing, restoration, and hope.




The Analytic Field and its Transformations


Book Description

The Analytic Field and its Transformations presents a collection of articles, written jointly by the authors in recent years, all revolving around the post-Bionian model of the analytic field - Bionian Field Theory (BFT). Going hand-in-hand with the ever-growing interest in Bion in general, analytic field theory is emerging as a new paradigm in psychoanalysis. Bion mounted a systematic deconstruction of the principles of classical psychoanalysis. His aim, however, was not to destroy it, but rather to bring out its untapped potential and to develop ideas that have remained on its margins. BFT is a field of inquiry that refuses a priori, at least from its own specific perspective, to immobilize the facts of the analysis within a rigid historical or intrapsychic framework. Its intention is rather to bring out the historicity of the present, the way in which the relationship is formed instant-by-instant from a subtle interplay of identity and differentiation, proximity and distance, embracing both Bion's rigorous, and his radical, spirit.




The Book of Pain


Book Description

None of us are immune to the trauma of emotionally painful experiences. These experiences act like narration in our lives as we make meaning out of them. When pain goes unprocessed and unresolved we act out of that pain transmitting it to others. We often inflict pain on those we are in the deepest relationships with without even realizing what we are doing or the source of these actions. Through the author's powerful stories of personal pain and suggestions for how to transform this pain, readers will gain necessary skills and hope for their relationships to become more healthy and whole both spiritually and emotionally.




Transformation Through Pain


Book Description

As a believer, do you feel that you have experienced a fair share of setbacks and sufferings? Take heart. God is committed to your transformation.He will use your wounds and pains, and transform you into something beautiful.Learn from the many characters in the bible that went through great trials and hardships, only to discover in the process that God had turned them into catalysts of healing, restoration, and hope. He will do the same for you.




Transitions and Transformations


Book Description

Rapid population aging, once associated with only a select group of modern industrialized nations, has now become a topic of increasing global concern. This volume reframes aging on a global scale by illustrating the multiple ways it is embedded within individual, social, and cultural life courses. It presents a broad range of ethnographic work, introducing a variety of conceptual and methodological approaches to studying life-course transitions in conjunction with broader sociocultural transformations. Through detailed accounts, in such diverse settings as nursing homes in Sri Lanka, a factory in Massachusetts, cemeteries in Japan and clinics in Mexico, the authors explore not simply our understandings of growing older, but the interweaving of individual maturity and intergenerational relationships, social and economic institutions, and intimate experiences of gender, identity, and the body.