The Medical Basis for the Healing Power of Intimacy We all know that intimacy improves the quality of our lives. Yet most people don't realize how much it can increase the quality of our lives -- our survival. In this New York Times world-renowned physician Dean Ornish, M.D., writes, "I am not aware of any other factor in medicine that has a greater impact on our survival than the healing power of love and intimacy. Not diet, not smoking, not exercise, not stress, not genetics, not drugs, not surgery." He reveals that the real epidemic in modern culture is not only physical heart disease but also what he calls spiritual heart loneliness, isolation, alienation, and depression. He shows how the very defenses that we think protect us from emotional pain are often the same ones that actually heighten our pain and threaten our survival. Dr. Ornish outlines eight pathways to intimacy and healing that have made a profound difference in his life and in the life of millions of others in turning sadness into happiness, suffering into joy.
Dean Ornish is an American physician and researcher. He is the president and founder of the nonprofit Preventive Medicine Research Institute in Sausalito, California and a Clinical Professor of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. He is a well-known advocate for using a plant-based diet and healthy lifestyle changes to treat and prevent heart disease.
Dean Ornish earned a B.A. in Humanities summa cum laude from the University of Texas in Austin, where he gave the baccalaureate address. He received his M.D. from the Baylor College of Medicine, he was a clinical fellow in medicine at Harvard Medical School, and he completed an internship and residency in internal medicine at the Massachusetts General Hospital.
I am reading the 1998 version of this now. After studying the latest in interpersonal neurobiology this comes as no surprise. But I think it is a great beginner book to affect a paradigm shift with valid points on how our medical system operates and I mean operates. The system works to allow complicated surgeries and mecdications with devestating side-effects as remedy to pain and suffering when it is proven that relationships,love and caring improve our hearts and our lives. Give me a hug, anyday!
I loved this book. The intimacy between two human beings has the power to heal. By the same token, if a person has no real connection to another caring person, sickness and death are much closer. Trying to quantify the health benefit of having close, loving relationships is a tough task. This book did it. This book shows to me, without a doubt, that having a person who really loves you, and who shows it, is the best medicine, and laughter is a distant second.
This book has sadly sat on my shelf for over 15 years. I finally picked it up and boy am I ever glad I did. The author provides an easy to read book about the importance of love and especially intimacy on the power of healing. It is more than just feeling loved that contributes to healing, it is about having intimate connections that allow you to be your true self. He touches on many different connections - marriage, religion, counseling, and self. Great read!
I'm giving this book five stars because of how important I think the message is. Devaluing love and relationships within a culture has disastrous consequences for both our emotional and physical health.
I loved surviving Ornish's book. It's a pastiche of love literature but love--think about it--is also a reworking of sorts. At best, love is a re-wiring.
Specifically, Ornish's second chapter was an overwhelming summary collection of peer-reviewed studies of the benefits of love and intimacy in maintaining healthy living. And his final chapter was also an overwhelming chapter of some such stuff (I skimmed it so well, I don't remember here what to write). But his other chapters have the pith.
I think reciprocated love the greatest wealth of the world. The times in my life that my love was reciprocated made me feel complete and whole.
Thought it went a little too hard to hammer the main point about the connection between love and intimacy with health and well being. Echoed what I've read of Brene Brown regarding vulnerability and ones ability to achieve intimacy. The biggest takeaways were one the breakdown of communicating around feelings which is huge because it is an area I struggle. In addition defining purpose as growing in wisdom and learning how to love better.
کتابی شایسته برای دریافتن اهمیت مهرورزی و ارتباط اصیل انسان، که از جنبه ی علمی و تحقیقاتی تجربی مورد بررسی قرار گرفته و تاثیر آن بر سلامت انسان به نمایش گذاشته شده. برای کسانی که طرفدار تنهایی ،انزوا ، تفرد و دوری از مردم هستند و همچنین کار های علمی و آزمایشات تجربی در کنار صرفا فلسفی و روانشناسی در این زمینه برایشان اهمیت دارد، کتابی مفید و تفکر برانگیز و چالش زا خواهد بود.
A book linking intimacy, all kind of relationships and our survival in this world. Provides a different perspective how it is beneficial to us practically. It has enough examples from different studies. A good guide where we can think about ourselves and relate to it.
I understand the prayer related stuff from a scientific perspective, but at times the religion was too persistent in the book. I took some good points from the book though!
Having the science and life experience to then prove that love and Survival go hand in hand. Many things I realized and learned by reading this book. Awesome and would recommend to others.
We all know that intimacy improves the quality of our lives. Yet most people don't realize how much it can increase the quality of our lives -- our survival.
This book helped me to understand my relationship with myself and with God.
I think if more for understanding all kinds of relationship that we have.
Dean Ornish explains how it isn't just what we eat and how much we exercise, but who we love and how. And this is from a heart doctor whose first books were about nutrition! Very good.