4 Quotes About Psychosomatic

Psychosomatic means “mind-related,” which means that the body can affect the mind. We often don’t realize that our bodies can affect our minds, but it’s true. Think about how the weather affects your mood. Or how your diet can make you feel better or worse Read more

Our bodies are affected by everything around us, and having good relationships with our bodies is important. We all have psychosomatic conditions that are based on what we eat, how much we sleep, and other things. These are some of the best quotes about learning to have a positive relationship with our bodies.

Surely even those immune from the world, for the time...
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Surely even those immune from the world, for the time being, need the touch of one another, or all is lost. Eudora Welty
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When preparing for Book One, I talked to a couple of psychiatrists about psychosomatic phenomena, neuroses and dissociative conditions, for example the so–called hysterical blindness suffered by many who saw the Killing Fields in Pol Pot’s Cambodia: their eyes objectively see, but they are not aware of it and are blind because they believe they can’t see. One specialist told me that among modern Western people, ’metaphorical’ symptoms such as Fredy or those Cambodians evince are much rarer now than earlier in the twentieth century or before. Nowadays most people are better equipped by education to verbalise their neuroses, and have lots of jargon in which to do so. For most of the dissociative dimension, I could draw on things I knew from within myself. . Les Murray
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When a disease insinuates itself so potently into the imagination of an era, it is often because it impinges on an anxiety latent within that imagination. AIDS loomed so large on the 1980s in part because this was a generation inherently haunted by its sexuality and freedom; SARS set off a panic about global spread and contagion at a time when globalism and social contagion were issues simmering nervously in the West. Every era casts illness in its own image. Society, like the ultimate psychosomatic patient, matches its medical afflictions to its psychological crises; when a disease touches such a visceral chord, it is often because that chord is already resonating. . Siddhartha Mukherjee