North Carolina Car Accident Whiplash: Could Hidden Anger Be to Blame?
You suffered whiplash or other musculoskeletal injuries after a North Carolina car crash. You obviously want to fix your medical problems ASAP, get compensated for your costs, and hold the careless or negligent driver to strict account for your bills and suffering. That’s a very rational and acceptable point of view.
But as you explore the diagnosis with your physician and work with a competent North Carolina car crash law firm to get the results you want, you may find it useful to read the counterintuitive (and certainly controversial) philosophy of New York based physician Dr. John Sarno. In Sarno’s bestselling books, such as “Healing Back Pain,” he proposes a very strange sounding thesis: namely, that many of our chronic muscular aches and pains can be traced back to our psychology. Sarno takes a Freudian view of the world. He postulates that, when we experience strong unpleasant emotions, like anger, fear, and frustration, we lack the psychological and verbal tools to express and expurgate these emotions. So instead, we embody them. We turn them into physical sensations in our body – we get knots in our back, we feel tight, breathing gets constricted, etc.
No one would deny that strong emotions can lead to physical reactions, at least in the short term. Everyone knows, for instance, that stress is unhealthy – particularly chronic stress. But Sarno takes this concept to the nth degree, in that he suggests that problems like North Carolina auto accident induced whiplash and carpal tunnel syndrome and a whole array of other conditions are actually perpetuated and perhaps even caused by these repressed emotions. Sarno’s idea is that, when the mind experiences unpleasant emotions, the brain essentially shuts off oxygen supply to certain muscles and soft tissue, creating very real physical problems called TMS (a.k.a. myofascial trigger points or just “muscle knots”). But essentially the emotional trauma causes the physical manifestation (muscle knots), which in turn cause the numbness, tingling, tightness, etc.
Sarno’s thesis is extremely hard for many people to believe – and let it be said that he is certainly way out of the mainstream. On the other hand, at least according to his internal records, his success rate for treating problems like back pain and carpal tunnel syndrome has been extremely high – higher than the average by far. And what’s spectacular about that is that, according to Sarno, the cure is the diagnosis. Once people “truly accept” that their pain is psychological instead of physical, their symptoms tend to resolve. Again, this all probably sounds preposterous if you’re first hearing about it. But you might want to educate yourself.
One of the interesting pieces of evidence that suggests that Sarno might be on to something comes out of Norway. Several years ago, scientists found that Norwegians experienced an epidemic of whiplash injuries… right after whiplash became an insurable and compensable injury. Some scientists thought that maybe the diagnosis of whiplash actually created more cases. So what they did was they went to Lithuania to look at victims of car accidents – comparable accidents to the ones the Norwegians suffered. They found that the Lithuanians basically had no whiplash symptoms at all as compared with controls.
This whiplash study set off a frenzy in the academic world of whiplash injury analysis, but the results are certainly intriguing and they seem to lend some support to Sarno’s thesis. If you are interested, you could check out the links below to learn more.
More Web Resources:
The Gist of John Sarno’s TMS Theory
The Norwegian Lithuanian Whiplash Study