As much as I admire the work of Dr. John Sarno, and got a lot out of reading his book "The Mindbody Prescription," I struggled to oblivion reading his "The Divided Mind: The Epidemic of Mindbody Disorders." First off, Dr. Sarno only writes half of the book, a half that only serves as a repeat of everything he wrote about already in "The Mindbody Prescription." Sure, I appreciate Sarno's reinforcement of ideas in order to drive the point home as to the importance of understanding TMS. However a reading experience, it was bloody torture.
The second half of "The Divided Mind: The Epidemic of Mindbody Disorders" consists of other doctors that Dr. Sarno hands the book off to: general practitioners, orthopedists, etc..to get their own professional take on TMS. Yet few of the doctors offer anything of value, aside from repeating the same thoughts and ideas previously expressed by Dr. Sarno. One doctor at least makes an attempt to describe in detail the psychotherapeutic approach to healing TMS, yet the rest only speak in generalities, and offer up the same old boring stores about this or that patient who suffered from X, Y and Z, only to be cured after a few office visits. The physicians take the time to be self-congratuatory, yet do not take the time to go into any specifics as to what exactly happened in this or that patient's. Instead, it was always "John Smith had back pain. He came to see me. I diagnosed TMS. Now he's fine." Not that I doubt the merit of the stories, it's just their repetitive nature mixed with a scarcity of details left me bored, with no new knowledge gained. Okay, even if there was NOT any more to these patient stories, then why waste pages after pages on them? I'd rather the space used to further enhance my knowledge of TMS. I mean, wasn't that the point of the book?
TMS is a terrible condition, and I do applaud any literature that attempts to educate the public as to its workings, and the importance of understanding the unlimited power of the brain, and the unconscious. True, perhaps had I not read Dr. Sarno's "The Mindbody Prescription" first, I would have appreciated "The Divided Mind: The Epidemic of Mindbody Disorders" a lot more. Yet the fact is, I came into reading "The Divided Mind: The Epidemic of Mindbody Disorders" in hope of gaining further insight not covered in Dr. Sarno's other book. Unfortunately, that's not what I got.