Many knitters say you can 'forget' pain when you knit, even those suffering from severe pain say it's effective. There are many studies trying to understand the intriguing relationship between the physical and cognitive aspects of chronic pain and how these interplay and intertwine to change the amount of pain you actually feel. Research has shown some fascinating facts about your brain and pain in recent years. The signals that travel up to your brain from an injured area do so as pain inducing signals, these have to be interpreted by your brain before you actually feel pain. Now comes the interesting bit. Researchers have also found that your brain can't concentrate on two things at the time. So if you occupy your brain with an activity that is absorbing enough to cancel out the pain signals, then your brain won't interpret those pain inducing signals. As a result you'll feel less pain and in some situations none at all! Knitting can quite literally take your mind off pain.
This process is called Distraction and can be effective for blocking out pain and other troubling thoughts. It can also help people to manage the feelings of nausea following chemotherapy. To add to this researchers have also found that signals passing down from your brain to an area of your spinal column called the Pain Gate can influence the opening/closing of this gateway. If it is open, all the pain inducing signals will pass. If it is partially closed, or closed, only some or none of the signals will pass. Your attitude and mood are significant in influencing this. So by making you feel good and raising mood your knitting could be helping you manage your pain in this way too!
Many suffering from long-term medical
conditions say that before discovering knitting they felt out of
control of their lives and worthless in society. Often they'd wander
through their days aimlessly, feeling isolated and lonely. The
discovery of knitting changes all this. Suddenly they find they can
do something and do it well, it gives them purpose and structure to
life. They begin to plan forwards, set goals, self esteem rises and
they begin to feel worthwhile in society again. The ability to give
gifts and knit for charity increases self esteem further. Enforced
rest periods become enjoyable - they're no longer seen as 'lazy'.
Knitting enables them to regain their identity and enables them to
feel special as individuals once more. Forgotten feelings such as
excitement and anticipation are rekindled. These are emotions that
can get drowned in the mire of chronic illness. Life becomes worth
living again. Importantly they find they belong to a community of
knitters. Feeling you belong somewhere is vital to wellbeing. You
don't have to be ill to feel lonely or isolated. You can feel lonely
surrounded by crowds as you commute to work - inner city life can be
very isolating. Similarly mothers of young children can feel isolated
as do many elderly - they can be isolated from society simply by not
being able to negotiate their front door step!
Knitting is an effective therapy
because it deals with the mind and body as a whole. As such it is the
perfect complement for all medical treatments. Traditional medical
treatments tend to treat the body and not the mind, but research has
shown that a person's attitude can be more important in how they
manage their condition than the severity of the pain or illness
they're suffering from.
Knitting can change negative thoughts and attitudes into positive ones. It encourages people to move forwards. Confidence, self esteem, motivation and mood improves. It gives people a vehicle by which to make social contact and, in so doing, keeps their world open.
For those of us who are fit and healthy, knitting is an effective stress management tool that we can take into the workplace.
And of course knitting in groups brings a
whole different set of benefits, both in real face-to-face groups and
those on the internet.
Great article! I've been an RN for 33 yrs. I work with many patients with chronic pain. I too have it all day from 2 forms of arthritis. Yes, when Iknit, I do forget my pain, or sometimes, I want to see the results of my knitting More than I care about how it may hurt my hands. When Ilook at the results, I'm so pleased & thankful that it brings me joy, which also erases the pain. My biggest pain patient right now has Parkinson's... so I'm not sure how knitting would work for her. But pleasant distraction works better for her than all the pains meds she takes.
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