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Quotes About Psychosomatic

The mind can cook up very subtle syndromes to throw at our bodies.
~ Terri Guillemets
Because all actions and expressions stem from the mind, it is vital to know the mind as well as decide in what way we'll use it. Everyone has heard of psychosomatic illness, and most of us acknowledge that psychosomatic sicknesses can and do occur. But what about psychosomatic wellness?
~ H.E. Davey
Disease is stress manifesting
~ H.W. Mann
The existence of illness in the body may no doubt be called a shadow of the true illness which is held by man in his mind.
~ Hazrat Khan
the health of the body is determined to a great degree by our mental processes: what we think of life and especially of ourselves, at both the conscious and the unconscious levels.
~ James Redfield
Ulcers frequently flare up or subside according to the hills and valleys of emotional stress.
~ Dale Carnegie
Upon entering therapy, adult children of borderlines are initially reluctant to discuss their childhood experiences. Several patients developed psychosomatic symptoms such as feeling a lump in their throat or experienced panic attacks following sessions during which they discussed their mother.
~ Christine Ann Lawson
Because the doctors could not cure me, they decided I could not be sick. They told me it was all in my head. Namely, I was to blame. I was the sickness.
~ Heidi Julavits
Proper stance and movement are obviously genetically old, environment-resistant behaviours. Misuse, with all its psychosomatic or, rather, somato-psychic consequences, must therefore be considered a result of modern living conditions - of a culturally determined stress.
~ Nikolaas Tinbergen
My skin really reacts to stress.
~ Madelaine Petsch
I hate knowing about illness. Whenever I read a medical book, I immediately start to get all the symptoms.
~ Paulo Coelho
We even have prepared his hokey thesis on psychosomatic factors in death by meteor-strike;
~ Philip K. Dick
The pressure of suppressed feelings is later felt as irritability, mood swings, tension in the muscles of the neck and back, headaches, cramps, menstrual disorders, colitis, indigestion, insomnia, hypertension, allergies, and other somatic conditions.
~ David R. Hawkins
To any mental state there corresponds a physical condition.
~ Unknown
Acknowledging the important role of the emotions in health and illness, medicine must reexamine its concepts of disease causation.
~ John E. Sarno
Patients often report pain in a new location as the old one gets better. It is as though the brain is unwilling to give up this convenient strategy for diverting attention away from the realm of the emotions.
~ John E. Sarno
Strange as it may seem, people with an unconscious psychological need for symptoms tend to develop a disorder that is well known, like back pain, hay fever, or eczema.
~ John E. Sarno
The decision maker in the brain has decided that the overt expression of unbridled rage would ruin the person's life, and to prevent that from happening, it automatically initiates physical symptoms in the body without consulting the conscious, rational mind.
~ John E. Sarno
Put another way, painful or otherwise distressing psychosomatic symptoms are designed for self-preservation, not self-flagellation.
~ John E. Sarno
The work of Dr. Hans Selye is credited with first drawing attention to how stress affects the body; his research and writing were prolific and stand as one of the major accomplishments of medicine in the twentieth century.
~ John E. Sarno
Neck, shoulder, and back pain syndromes are not mechanical problems to be cured by mechanical means. They have to do with people's feelings, their personalities, and the vicissitudes of life.
~ John E. Sarno
It's all in your mind" is almost insulting, implying there's something strange or weak about you or that the symptoms are in your imagination. This is most unfortunate, since the symptoms are very real, the result of a very physical process.
~ John E. Sarno
You begin to wonder whether you have lived a full life. And, strange as it may seem, strong negative feelings about your mother or father have not gone away; instead, they continue to be repressed and may give rise to symptoms.
~ John E. Sarno
Family dinners are more often than not an ordeal of nervous indigestion, preceded by hidden resentment and ennui and accompanied by psychosomatic jitters.
~ M. F. K. Fisher