Tras unas graves lesiones medulares, Vidyamala Burch tuvo que enfrentarse a solas –y contando con muy pocos recursos– a la incapacitación y el dolor crónico. En lugar de venirse abajo, asumió el desafío de abordar sus problemas físicos con aceptación, compasión y amor. En Vivir bien con el dolor y la enfermedad, Vidyamala nos brinda los frutos de su valiente empresa vital y nos muestra que la práctica del mindfulness puede ayudarnos a enfrentar todo tipo de retos para la salud. Basándose en su experiencia en la enseñanza de la meditación, Vidyamala ofrece aquí su sabiduría y las instrucciones necesarias para utilizar el modelo de cinco pasos de mindfulness para alentar la curación. También nos enseña el enfoque “Respira Vida” a la meditación y el modo de aplicarlo a problemas de salud como la migraña, la artritis o la fatiga crónica. Vivir bien con el dolor y la enfermedad es, al mismo tiempo, un relato inspirador y un manual práctico para transformar nuestra relación con el sufrimiento físico y emocional.
VIDYAMALA BURCH is founder and codirector of Breathworks, an organization offering mindfulness-based approaches to living well with chronic pain, illness, and stress and with teachers in over 15 countries. She is the author of LIVING WELL WITH PAIN AND ILLNESS, based on her acclaimed program, and YOU ARE NOT YOUR PAIN.
I am a fan of all Vidyamala Burch’s work, and this book didn’t disappoint. I made lots of notes and will return to them as they offer lots of insights and ideas for living with a chronic illness. It seemed perhaps a little repetitive at times, but this is probably only because I’ve read several other mindfulness books.
This book is based primarily on Eastern philosophies and pays close attention to the idea of mindfulness. I read it as part of a pain management course for my rheumatoid arthritis. I've had RA for nearly 13 years and it is starting to take a toll on my joints, reducing my mobility and drastically increasing my levels of pain.
People say arthritis is like having bad toothache all over your body you can do nothing about. I am lucky and have only several really bad joints, so I prefer to think of it as walking on two sprained knees someone has shoved need hot knitting needles through. I needed something to complement my arsenal of drugs that would help me cope when my pain escalated to the point where I couldn't walk at all or just sat crying, afraid to stand up.
This book won't make any pain go away, but it will help you learn methods and coping mechanisms for the tough times. Above all things, it makes you feel as if you are not alone. It is hard to make pain free people understand what chronic pain feels like, so a book written and developed by a sufferer is refreshing. Although I do sometimes wish I could get some flagellate punishment device and strap it to some people and tell them they can never take it off to help them understand.
This book works best with the guided meditations that are available for download from the author's website or on cd. The meditation exercises are written in the book, but I found it easier to listen to these rather than read them when I wanted to meditate.
I've not properly started my pain management course yet, but I have hopes that this book will be of benefit.
I didnt love this book. I do mindfulness every day through the headspace app and much prefer how that app explains it to this book. I didn't find much useful sadly.
As I am currently completing a mindfulness course, my leader let me borrow this book to focus more on dealing with my pain using mindfulness.
When reading this book, I found it so easy to understand and it built very nicely on what I had learnt in the mindfulness sessions, as well as gave me extra meditations to extend what I learnt to focus more on dealing with my neck pain.
Thanks to the mindfulness course, I have discovered the benefits of meditating and also found 'kindfulness' (or 'Kindly Awareness'), to be absolutely brilliant for me, as it has changed the way I view situations and changed the way I view other people for the better. The book has simply built upon these discoveries and given me further food for thought.
I highly recommend this book even as an insight into what mindfulness is and how it can help you and I also highly recommend mindfulness, as no matter who you are or what your mental state is like, meditation and finding a state of awareness is incredibly cathartic, healing and positive for the mind, body and soul.
Am excellent introduction to mindfulness even for those of us not living with pain. This book is set out in plain English with short chapters that make it easy to read and understand. There are guides for meditation and links to the Breathworks meditation. I found myself understanding the ideas as they were explained by a woman living with chronic pain for other sufferers of chronic pain which highlighted my inability to sit still for 30 minutes due to pins and needles as a little unmindful. Very inspiring
It is a good book for beginners in the field of mindfulness, thoroughly and simply explained, with a focus on (mainly physical) pain. If you are more familiar with the topic of mindfulness meditation this book can be a tad repetitive and boring at times. But hey, it is good to be reminded of those principles from time to time!
Tiene algunos ejercicios interesante, pero básicamente el libro trabaja el dolor través de ejercicios de respiración y meditación, aunque son herramientas útiles creo que falto profundizar en otros aspectos del dolor.
Very informative. Vidyamala is a “rock star” when it comes to adversity. It’s closer to accepting than fighting pain, but good information nonetheless.
Nowadays books like this are pretty standard and have become outdated since they don't recognise that neuropathic pain can be cured through pain reprocessing or similar.
I'm not very far into this book, but so far it is pretty helpful in describing the difference between pain/illness and the attitudes or reactions to pain/illness, which exacerbate the suffering. I think it will fit in with other things I have studied.
This book has helped me immensely in dealing with chronic pain. It is full of both encouragement/motivation and practical exercises and information. Vidyamala has changed my entire outlook on chronic pain and I will be using the exercises I learned lifelong.
I think this book is inspirational and appropriate for clinician and client alike.Read it first as an eBook then just had to have it in hard copy on the shelf for ready reference and use.