Drug treatment with antibiotics, receptor blockers, painkillers, and steroids does reduce the intensity of the pain in the short term but perpetuates the disease. To improve the quality of life of patients with chronic digestive tract diseases, it is necessary to cure the cause of cell destruction—that is, to cure the disease! It is indeed the well-known paradox of self-healing. People often choose the easy way—but the wrong one.
If nothing hurts me, is it a sign that I am healthy?
The answer is not necessary. Damage to cells at low intensity often does not reach the threshold that requires an alarm! (Pain)
Is chronic pain a sign that I still have tissue damage?
Usually, the answer is "Yes."
If the intensity of the chronic pain increased, was that a sign that my health condition had worsened?
If the pain intensity has increased significantly over time, and there have been no other (mental) changes, the answer is probably "Yes."
I have intermittent pain; what does this imply?
Intermittent pain may indicate an unstable immune system. The difficulty is in locating the causes of the phenomenon. (Nutrition, physical and mental lifestyle)
Links:
How to relieve chronic pain with the self-healing method?
https://www.sf-healing.com/page/220 (Copy & Paste)
Crohn's disease, Ulcerative colitis, and IBS.
https://www.sf-healing.com/page/122 (Copy & Paste)
The next post: Three factors determine the objective severity of pain.
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