Very nice work. Thanks!
Have you produced a similar thing for chronic pain issues ?
By LDN you mean Low Dose Naltrexone ?
Vafin
Is there no way to put more emphasis on quality rather than quantity of writing?
I feel like this community doesn’t lack prolific writers, if anything there’s too much to read. I probably only manage to read about 15% of my Substack subscriptions, and I use AI to summarize another 15%.
Wouldn’t it be interesting to experiment with something like one post every five days with a length limit, and at the end of each cycle a jury evaluates the posts? Then, for example, the six lowest-rated writers leave. I haven’t thought this through deeply, it’s just an idea for a more quality-centered structure.
What do you think about this (short) critic of Paul Ingraham ?
https://www.painscience.com/blog/that-pain-reprocessing-therapy-study-is-way-too-good-to-be-true.html
Hi, sorry I’m sick I won’t be able to hold the meeting
Are you familiar with the work of Paul Ingraham on https://www.painscience.com/ ?
I’ve been interested in these topics for several years, as I have chronic pain since a longtime, and he’s still the person I trust the most on these subjects.
(He wrote a critic of John Sarno here : https://www.painscience.com/articles/sarno-review.php )
Thanks for sharing this document. Like the other one, very nice work.
I probably haven’t looked into chronic pain conditions as much as you have but it matches up pretty well with what I’ve learned and experimented with throughout the past 10 years. (I was just a little surprise for acupuncture)
I think your document could be helpful for peoples who don’t have the time to delve into the scientific literature like that. I encourage you too share it as much as you can :)
I’d be curious to hear more about your experience with pregabalin and LDN