Sometimes called psychoneuroimmunology
(PNI), these approaches are based on the concept that the mind or brain
can influence the body's ability to fight disease. Mind-body approaches
such as meditation,
visualization
and guided imagery cannot probably help one will away HIV, but one can
use any of them to make living with your condition easier, and maybe even
reduce susceptibility to AIDS-related infections.
Meditation
Meditation uses deep breathing or other focusing techniques to enable
a person to center his or her thoughts. Meditation may be used to reduce
tension, fatigue, or anxiety
and increase resistance to stress.
Getting the stress out of your life may help you resist certain infections,
and will enable you to handle any adversity that may come from living
with HIV or AIDS.
Yoga Nidra
Yoga nidra is a hypnagogic state of psychic sleep reached by systematically
inducing complete physical, mental and emotional relaxation. As in meditation,
one emerges from yoga nidra feeling more rested and relaxed than after
a good night's sleep.
Visualization
Visualization is the process by which a person is directed to see himself
or herself in some other physical, emotional, or spiritual state. Patients
might be guided to imagine themselves in a state of vibrant health and
the disease organisms as weak and destructible. Through these mental images,
patients might try to direct their immune systems to fight the virus.
Other mind-body techniques for people with HIV/AIDS include hypnosis,
humor therapy, biofeedback training, and listening to inspirational or
relaxational audiotapes.
Guided imagery describes a process where you are asked to focus
on images selected to help you achieve certain goals. Common applications
include relaxation, relieving pain and other physical symptoms, reducing
distress from surgery and other medical procedures, increasing creativity,
enhancing confidence, stimulating healing responses in the body, and enhancing
memory and learning.
Interactive Guided Imagery is a specific way of using imagery with
particular applications in mind/body medicine. It is particularly effective
in helping you to discover and improve your relationship to your health,
to discover what role you can play in your recovery, and in helping you
to use your resources most effectively. In this form of imagery, a trained
guide helps you discover and work with your personal imagery about your
illness and your healing, clarify any issues that may be involved, and
learn to use your mind to support your own healing.
Other mind-body remedies such as auto-suggestion, neuro-linguistic
programming (NLP), Bach
Flower therapy, hypnosis,
progressive muscle relaxation, laughter therapy, color
therapy, DNCB (a color photography chemical that sensitises the immune
system and balances it with minimal toxicity), biofeedback,
sound
and music
therapy, oxygen/ozone
therapy, neurotherapy (a form of acupuncture)
and thymus therapycould also relieve HIV/AIDS patients.
Ultimately, the power of positive
thinking simply cannot be overstated in the battle against a disease
that first cripples the mind before felling the body. And bear in mind
what doctors say: the majority of PWAs who survived for over five years
are those who made drastic changes in previously unhealthy lifestyles.
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