20 May, 2022

 Living With Chronic Pain Conditions



Millions around the world struggle with chronic pain conditions every day.

Yes, millions of people. A staggering number of people worldwide live with one or more chronic pain conditions every day. I’m talking about Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Arthritis, Rheumatism, Fibromyalgia, Chronic Migraines, Lupus, Multiple Sclerosis, etc. That's a massive chunk of the global population living in pain every day. Most of these conditions bring more than mere physical pain. Other symptoms include fatigue, general achiness, insomnia, mental fogginess, and nausea. So, why do I care?

Why Do I Care?

I care because I am one of those people. Back in 2011, after a couple of years of dealing with constant pain, after an exhausting battery of blood tests and some physio, I was diagnosed with fibromyalgia. I already had occasional bouts of pain from carpal tunnel syndrome and tenosynovitis, and I have had a lifelong struggle with migraines and tension headaches. Living with chronic pain has been my life for a long time. Almost the first question asked by most people is: “What medications do you take?” My answer? I have codeine for the migraines; I’ve learned to live with the rest of it. You may be asking yourself why I have chosen to deal with chronic pain without the help of prescribed medications.

Let's Talk About Medication

Over the years, I have been prescribed many different medications for chronic pain. My experience has been predominantly negative. I find that prescribed medications do very little for the pain associated with fibromyalgia, and most come with some nasty side effects. The milder painkillers like paracetamol and ibuprofen have no impact whatsoever. More potent painkillers bring some of those side effects I was talking about. For instance, Naproxen badly affected my stomach, and I refuse to take another medication to combat the side effects. Tramadol can only be described as sending my head wappy. I couldn’t think straight, and decision-making was impossible. My doctor even tried morphine derivatives, first in tablet, then patch form, the itching from those far outweighed any relief they could have offered. 

Some of the medications prescribed haven’t been painkillers at all. For instance, Amitriptyline is a mild sedative and muscle relaxant in a low dose. I found it gave me no respite from the pain. It did help me sleep at night but struggling to wake up foggy-headed two hours late every morning was not something I could accept. Like pregabalin and gabapentin, other medications did nothing for the pain but did an awful lot for weight gain. I am twice the woman I was before trying those out. So if prescribed medications were getting me nowhere, how do I manage to keep going? How do I minimize the impact on my quality of life?

My 5 Top Tips For Living With Chronic Pain 

I took a step back and went back to what I knew. I have always had an innate affinity for holistic therapies. I had used energy healing, both with and without crystals, from my late teens. So I started practicing my energy healing more and studying other holistic healing modalities. I have become a Reiki Master, a certified meditation teacher, and an accredited aromatherapist through my studies. I have also studied diet and nutrition to understand how food impacts chronic pain conditions.

All that said, here are my five top tips for better living with chronic pain.

Tip 1 - Pace Yourself

Energy is like money. If you borrow some today, you better believe you’ll pay for it tomorrow. Trying to do anything when in constant pain takes way more energy than doing the same thing when you’re feeling OK. You may have heard of the “spoon theory,” which suggests that we can measure our energy in spoons, and you only have so many at the beginning of the day. Everything you do or try to do uses up your spoons. For example, if you have ten spoons at the beginning of the day, getting out of bed will use one spoon. Getting dressed, taking a bath, preparing and cooking a meal, doing household chores, getting the shopping, etc., will all use up your spoons. Some things will only take one spoon on a good day but may take three or four spoons on a bad day. So my advice is to pace yourself and weigh up your spoon allowance before you do anything else every morning. Next, decide what has to be done, what you’d like to get done, and what can wait for a better day. Spend your spoons wisely each day. If you overspend today, you’ll have fewer spoons tomorrow and the next day.

Tip 2 - Meditation 

I have meditated regularly for years. I already knew how meditation helps me relax and focus. After studying to become a meditation teacher, I worked out how to use meditation to combat pain flare-ups. I use a combination of a body scan meditation with healing light meditation, which I will be expanding on in my book “Holistic Living With Fibromyalgia”. Using meditation morning and night and occasionally in between, I have some control over the frequency and severity of pain flares. Learning meditation takes time and practice. The best way, I’ve found, is to start small. Just try meditating for a few minutes and build up slowly.

Tip 3 - You Are What You Eat

Without getting into the nitty-gritty of organic foods, specific diets, the evils of processed foods, or the importance of vitamins and minerals, let’s look at how some foods can aggravate or alleviate a pain flare. I have seen a few websites and books advocating a so-called fibromyalgia diet. The truth is, there isn’t one. We are all unique individuals; our bodies respond to different foods differently. The only accurate way to figure out what works for you is to keep a food/pain diary. Track what you eat along with how your body is feeling. It won’t be long before you notice that certain foods will worsen your symptoms while others help you feel better. For instance, I found that red meats, mainly burgers, aggravate a flare while white meats don’t. Chicken helps. Bananas, citrus, and other fruits are not great for me, while grapes, strawberries, and pears are good. I also find that cauliflower is the best veg to fill my plate. Unfortunately, though, cauliflower cheese is out. Peanuts are bad, but walnuts are great for me too. I could go on and on, and on listing every food I find good or bad, but it’s better if you keep your food/pain diary and see what works for you.

Tip 4 - Aromatherapy

You may think of essential oils as something you just use to make your space smell nice. Or, you may never have given them a second thought. Either way, it may be time for a rethink. Extensive research has been done to verify the efficacy of essential oils when used to treat various symptoms. My personal favourites are lavender, peppermint, roman chamomile, ylang-ylang, and grapefruit. I like to use Lavender, ylang-ylang, and roman chamomile to destress, relax, and help me sleep. They are also an excellent combination to combat aches and pains. Peppermint and grapefruit are my favourites for those days when my mental acuity is below par. They help to wake me up and help me focus. Again, peppermint is also an excellent analgesic. Good quality essential oils don’t have to be expensive either. I found a wonderful herbalist in my hometown with an inexpensive line of essential oils.

Tip 5 - Energy Healing

Energy healing is not all “woo woo hocus pocus”. There is a fair number of research papers online explaining how it works. Have you ever noticed how some people just light up a room when they enter - and I’m not talking about how they look. You just feel better around some people. Conversely, you’ve probably come across people who drain your energy whenever they’re around.  It’s all down to energy transfer. We can all affect others with our energy, and we can all be affected by the power of others. Energy healing encompasses reiki, quantum touch, crystal healing, and others. It’s all about focusing your energy transference on healing. When you learn to control your energy, often with the hands and the mind, you can begin to encourage your body to heal itself. It is well worth suspending any disbelief, doing a little study, and learning to harness your inherent ability to self-heal. 

 These self-healing techniques are covered more fully in my upcoming book, “Holistic Living With Fibromyalgia”, due for release in late summer this year.

Originally published in GEW magazine

30 June, 2021

Meditation for Beginners


Meditation For Beginners

Online course available at: adawnspirit.teachable.com/p/meditation-for-beginners

It took me longer than I intended to create this course. Deciding what to put in for complete beginners and what to leave out as complicating matters too much was a difficult decision. I hope I got the balance just right and that this course will help many, many people learn to enjoy meditation.

The course is short, simple, and to the point, covering the basics of meditation and offering the chance to follow four short guided meditations. I know we each have our own prefered learning style, with this in mind I have included downloadable audio versions of each lesson and meditation for those who like to listen while on the move; I have also included transcripts for those who prefer to learn by reading. I have also included editable word document scripts for the four guided meditations - students can edit the scripts to suit their needs and record their own versions should they wish.

So, whether you are a complete meditation novice, or have tried it and thought you were doing it wrong or thought it wasn't for you...

Give the course a go, learn to meditate your way and reap the benefits of regular practice.

22 June, 2021


 Breath Awareness Meditation

This guided meditation video is extracted from my "Meditation For Beginners" course which will shortly be available both in the AdawnSpirit Academy and on Udemy.

The course covers the benefits of meditations, types of meditation, aids to meditation, position and posture, and breathing techniques. The course also includes four guided meditations to get you started on your meditative journey.

21 May, 2021

Types of Meditation


Hi all,

I have been working on a new course over the last few weeks. I thought I would share one of the video lessons from the course as a sneak preview. 

The complete course will be available soon in both the AdawnSpirit Academy and the Udemy course marketplace.

Hope you enjoy this short excerpt :-)

Dawn Louise Howson

10 April, 2020

Energy Healing and Attunements

Image by Okan Caliskan from Pixabay
We have long understood that practitioners, masters and teachers of Reiki are attuned to life energy. Practitioners of various other energy healing modalities also undergo attunements. So, what are attunements? And why do we need them?

Well, first, allow me to offer some credentials. I'm not just making this up as I go along.

For just over thirty years, I have been able to channel the energy all around us for healing. I have channelled energy both with and without crystals. As an aside, I also channel energy for card readings. Feeling for imbalances in the auric body with my palm chakras; I smooth out wrinkles and repair tears in the aura. I also channel energy into the body for healing through the palm chakras. I do not direct the energy. I am a conduit. I channel energy and trust it to go where it is needed. I channel the energy for someone in my physical presence; I also channel over distance.

It was around twenty years ago that I first began using the internet. It was then that I was introduced to the concept of Reiki. I did a little reading up, but at this point in time, there was very little information available unless you could afford large sums of money for in-person attunements. I decided this was something I couldn't afford at that time, neither was it something I needed. I continued using the energy as I always had.

Fast forward to two and a half years ago. The availability of online resources and teaching platforms makes it much easier to learn almost anything. So I decided now was the time to learn a little more about this Reiki thing. The first affordable Reiki course I found was Dave Nelson's "Reiki Infinite Healer". I found there are only three differences to what I have been doing all along; hand positions, symbols and attunements. The first two, we are told, will be unnecessary with enough practice and focus. Of those, I assure you, I have enough. I have since studied Reiki and other energy healing modalities with other teachers: Lisa Powers, Nikolaos Baralos, Aimee Phlegar, and Alexander Fairman, to name a few. I also had attunements with some of those teachers.

During Mr Nelson's course, he claims that self attunement is possible. In fact, as he reminds us, Dr Mikao Usui himself was never attuned by a teacher or master. I have also read somewhere that Dr Usui himself never offered attunements. Dr Usui also taught all three levels together. He taught his students for longer, and advocated for self attunement. It was Dr Chujiro Hayashi, second Grand Master, who introduced a set formula for teaching Reiki in three levels. Madam Hawayo Takata, third Grand Master, made further changes to how Reiki is taught. Unfortunately, as she forbade students taking notes or recording lessons in any way, we cannot be sure what all those changes are.

The energy, and healing system, Dr Usui "found" has been around for centuries. Two notable names who had previously utilised this energy are Jesus and Siddhartha Guatama (Buddha). I am not religious. I have not done extensive research. However, what I have found is a similarity in the histories of the three:

  • After his baptism, the Holy Spirit descended upon Jesus "like a dove". He then spent forty days in the wilderness. There he was tempted by the "Devil".
  • Usui spent twenty-one days at the summit of Mount Kurama in meditation before praying to God to show him the light. According to his life story, he was hit directly in the third chakra by a brilliant, white light. He was then "tested" four times as he descended the mountain.
  • Siddhartha Guatama lived an ascetic life for five years. He then spent several days in meditation, battling the demon Mara, before placing his hand on the earth and asking it to bear witness to his enlightenment.
Each of the three underwent a period of deprivation. Each was tested in some way. Each found enlightenment. Yes, OK, Jesus cheated by being enlightened before being tested. It's called nepotism. 😉

The point is, each achieved enlightenment directly from spirit; from the life energy which surrounds, and is a part of, us all. The baptism of Jesus could be likened to an attunement. However, this would imply that the son of God needed attunement from another.

So back to the original questions. What are attunements? And why do we need them?

In answer to the first question; an attunement connects a student to the life energy. It enables the student to channel healing energy for themselves and for others. Students are taught that they need to be attuned before being able to channel Reiki energy. Because of this teaching, this is what is believed.

All of that almost answers the question, "why do we need attunements?".
The full answer is; we don't. Every one of us has the innate ability to channel healing energy. Don't get me wrong, the attunements I have had have been wonderfully healing experiences. However, not one of them has made the slightest difference to the energy I channel. The channelling is neither stronger nor weaker. It is neither more focused nor more diffuse. I have, however, found that coffee now makes me ill.

It all boils down to what you believe. Belief in the necessity for attunements makes them necessary. Conversely, if you know you don't need attunements, you won't need them. In an amusing twist, many people don't know if they need an attunement until they already had one; unless, like me, they are channelling energy long before hearing the word Reiki.