Authenticity matters

Build your relationships first….then your dentistry. ~ Bob Barkley

Authenticity matters

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Bob Barkley frequently told us that most dentists leave dental school with a bizarre psychological combination of superiority and paranoia. The superiority complex comes from the educational process as well as from being inadvertently sheltered from the experience of seeing their own clinical dentistry fail. The paranoia evolves out of the distorted world view a dentist acquires in dental school due to their freedom from the economic, staffing, leadership, and the other psychological stressors of private practice.

Dentistry can be very frustrating, as well as financially and emotionally threatening to dentists. When we add to this the truth that many patients experience dentistry in similar ways, then you can easily see how a ‘perfect storm’ can develop.

At times, the ‘perfect storm’ requires an adaptive response, and different dentists will develop different coping strategies while attempting to manage it. Some experience the pain associated with these frustrations, and check it at the door. Some retreat into self-protective cacoons full of rationalizations and blaming, while others leave the profession entirely. Others bury their pain in substance abuse or tragically take their own lives during periods of deep dispair.

Finding the balance between the pain of growth and the pleasure of accomplishment through a growing self-regard is key. And that was why L.D. Pankey led a small revolution in dentistry.

Living with the constant anxiety the practice of dentistry can produce, is to be constantly followed around by a little voice in our head. And that little voice knows all about our weaknesses, it knows all about our mistakes, and it knows just how to play with our insecurities and how to masterfully mobilize ourself against ourself.

One of the most common adaptations we make is to become a chronic people-pleaser because we need to make payroll. We need to service the debt. We need to make financial adjustments due to the new baby at home.

We smile and try to look our best at all times by putting on the facade that everything is just fine. We say, “I am doing great, how are you?” twenty times a day, while we think, “If I can just get through today, tomorrow might be better.”

We pretend that we know more than we know, while acting more successful than we really are. We build up these walls, and then we very cleverly learn how to function behind them.

But intuitive team members and patients know something is amiss, because they can see it in our eyes and face, they can hear it in our tone of voice, and observe it in our inability to sit and truly listen to them.

At some point we need to find a way back to ourselves because our patients need it, our team members need it, and we need it, along with our spouses, children and communities.

Developing a truly Relaionship-based / Health-centered practice is the best way to square the circle between who we are and what we repeatedly do. And that feels good, because it promotes our growth as well as the growth of others.

And truly serving others with our whole heart is the place where happiness and fulfillment is found – even in this frustrating and imperfect world.

Aristotle said so.

L.D. Pankey said so.

Bob Barkley said so.

Each of us has more wisdom inside of us than we can possibly know. And the trick to gaining access to that wisdom lies in our to ability quiet that anxious, disempowering voice in our heads, while pushing though our current challenges and toward our more authentic selves.

Paul A. Henny, DDS


CBD Dialogue Part 3

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Part 3:

The endocannabinoid system (ECS), upon which CBD, or cannabidiol, influences, was discovered in the early 1990’s. Since that time, we have learned that the ECS helps regulate neurotransmission, inflammatory cycling within cells, pain signaling to the brain, insulin sensitivity, bone metabolism, and limbic system functioning, just to name a few.

Consequently, CBD formulations are currently being used to manage anxiety, depression, stress, PTSD, Autism, Parkinson’s Disease, Alzheimer’s Disease, IBS, Chrohn’s Disease, fibromyalgia, insomnia, glaucoma, macular degeneration, osteoporosis, and diabetes.

In the realm of dentistry, CBD is commonly and successfully used to manage anxiety, promote post-surgical healing, pain management, muscle relaxation, and for reducing inflammatory responses.

The ECS has neuroreceptors throughout the body which function via neurochemicals our body produces on demand called endocannabinoids. These receptor sites are also influenced by phytocannabinoids – plant based analogues found in unusually high concentration in hemp/cannabis.

ECS receptors (CB1, CB2, and CB3) are found throughout the body, and this is why CBD – a phytocannabinoid- positivity influences brain function including memory, mood, pain perception, cognition, emotions, motor function, and habits.

Outside the nervous system, ECS receptors are found in the intestinal tract, liver, heart, immune system, skin, and other organs. Consequently, the ECS regulates a wide range of physiological effects, with the goal of maintaining homeostasis and healing.

Additionally, endocannabinoids produced by the body, and phytocannabinoids such as CBD, positively influence other neuroreceptors in the body such as TRPV1 sites responsible for managing chronic pain, 5-HT3 sites which manage our vomiting response, and GABA sites responsible for sedation, muscle relaxation, anti-convulsant activity, and anti-anxiety effects on the body.

As you can easily see, the impact of the ECS, and therefore CBD, is broad and represents a relatively new area of research.

In my next segment we will explore how to choose CBD products, and how to use and prescribe them to potentially help yourself, your family, your friends, and your patients.

Paul A. Henny, DDS

To read parts 1 & 2 of this series, please visit CoDiscovery.com

CBD Dialogue Part 2

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Part 2

Today I will be continuing with my weekly segment focused on CBD, including what it is, how it works, and the therapeutic benefits of “full spectrum” hemp oil. This series will be posted in full on my companion website CoDiscovery.com for future reference.
…..

In 1988, 24 years after Dr. Raphael Mechoulam first isolated the THC molecule, Dr. Allyn Howlette and her colleagues at St. Louis University discovered what became known as the CB1 receptor, onto which THC attaches, and therefore how it disrupts normal functioning. She achieved this by attaching radioactive dye to synthetic THC molecules, and then tracked where they went in the body.

This research technique, then led to the discovery that there is a neuro-modulating system within the body which was previously unknown, and which works independently of our other neuro-modulating systems – such as the dopamine and serotonin systems- as well as in a synergistic fashion with some of them.

This new system was named the “endocannabinoid system,” and is made up of two unique receptors (and possibly a third) which are influenced by unique neurotransmitters called “endocannabinoids.”

The endocannabinoids represent five different compounds (and there may be others), with the two most significant being Anandamide, or AEA and 2-AG.

Additionally, the second receptor sites, called CB2 sites, were found to be primarily located within the body’s immune system as well as many other locations throughout the body – including the skin.

The purpose of the endocannabinoid system is to regulate the flow of signals sent between cells -hence to maintain bodily system homeostasis in the face of challenges.

Endocannabinoids are made and released at postsynaptic neuron sites in response to stressors such as injury, illness, and inflammation. In this way, the endocannabinoids try to keep the body’s responses to threats balanced and not self-destructive as seen in autoimmune disorders.

Mechoulam, Howlette, and others eventually discovered that the endocannabinoid system is the most widespread receptor system in the human body, and that it is involved in:

  • GI activity
    -cardiovascular function
    -pain perception
    -neurotransmitter activity
    -management of bone mass
    -protection of neurons
    -hormone regulation
    -metabolism
    -immune system effectiveness
    -inflammatory responses
    -inhibition of growth in some tumor cells

And because most practicing health care providers today were never taught that this amazing, and critically important system even existed, most know very little about it, as well as how to optimize its functioning to better promote health and healing.

In future segments, I will be sharing more information about how you can do just that.

Paul A. Henny, DDS

Read more on CoDiscovery.com

Moving past the chaos

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cha·os
noun
complete disorder and confusion.
synonyms: disorder, disarray, disorganization, confusion, mayhem, bedlam, pandemonium, madness, havoc, turmoil, tumult, commotion, disruption, upheaval, furor, frenzy, uproar, hue and cry, babel, hurly-burly; More

Working inside a dental practice can be chaotic at times, as an unexpected phone call or two …or three…can put problems on our schedule that we are not ready for. Additionally, we can have equipment failure, team member illnesses, power outages, and snowstorms, just to name a few.

To quote a bumper sticker I once saw, “Life is difficult, and then you die.”

This of course, is the cynic’s perspective with a little raw humor thrown in for good measure. But it does not need to be our mindset, and it certainly does not need to be our lifestyle.

There is no doubt that the practice of dentistry is full of unexpected curve balls, unproductive left turns, remediation, rebuilding, and struggle. For some, these things happen more often -and for others less.

If you are in the “more often” category, it becomes easier over time to feel victimized…by others…by situations…by our own decisions, hence – ourselves. It can become easier to feel helpless. It can become easier to feel hopeless. And from there, easier surrender to it all and just view everything as inevitable, so why, ‘rock the boat’…why not just focus on just getting through the day?

The practice of dentistry can quickly turn into the practice of drudgery if we have no over-arching purpose beyond income and paying the bills. This is why L.D. Pankey repeatedly talked about “The Cross of Dentistry.” And this is why Bob Barkley wanted every dentist to create their very own and deeply personalized practice philosophy.

Having and owning a deeply held philosophy is key, because the purpose of a philosophy is the pursuit of the truth. Therefore a philosophy is not THE answer…that’s dogma…rather, it is A PATHWAY TOWARD THE ANSWERS.

And the answers can be moving objects which need to be regularly re-evaluated, re-prioritized, and sometimes even abandoned.

So having a philosophy is like having a master tool we can use to apply to the problems we face each and every day. It helps us to respond instead of react. From there it reduces the chaos around us, because more things start to make sense to us- even when they first appear to be crazy and arrive unexpectedly.

If we can get ourselves to a place where our whole Care Team shares a philosophy, then we have reached the next critical level, as less direction needs to be given…people respond intuitively and appropriately. Often at this stage of practice development, you will watch things happen around you, and you will think, “Damn she was good at managing that crazy situation…I never could have taught her how to do that.”

The highest level of practice development is “Community,” where the Team has become a synergistic social organism focused on growing and advancing a deeply held and worthwhile purpose which is much greater than the sum total of the people within it. And that is when a practice transcends ‘doing’ and focuses more and more on ‘being.’

So, it all begins – and ends – with mindset. Mindsets either make things more clear and understandable, or they make every day feel like another chaotic fire drill.

We have a choice, we can “choose to choose.” We can choose to live and practice differently and in a way which is much more in alignment with who we are, and who we want to become through philosophy…that dusty old topic you perhaps thought was only the concern of academics and historians.

Paul A.Henny, DDS

Read more at Codiscovery.com

CBD Dialogue Pt.1

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It is likely that you have never heard of the work of organic chemist Raphael Mechoulam, PhD. And that is because the research he was doing was illegal in the United States. Regardless, Raphael and his team we trying to figure out why people got “high” when they smoked marijuana. In 1964, he and his colleagues finally hit the jackpot, when they successfully isolated THC in their Hebrew University lab in Jerusalem.

THC, as almost everyone knows, is the main psychoactive compound found in cannabis sativa. But that discovery was only the beginning, as they still did not know how THC worked, nor did they know where.

Those answers took twenty more years for Allyn Howlett and her colleagues at St. Louis University to find. Allyn eventually figured out that THC attaches to unique receptor sites in the body, now called CB1 sites.

The discovery of the CB1 receptor site, then led to the question: Why is there a receptor site in the body designed to associate with THC? And that answer soon came in the form of yet another discovery: Our bodies make special neurochemicals which specifically fit into these sites…and that there is another one called CB2.

These newly discovered neuroreceptors were found to work like dopamine receptors function in the dopamine system, and how serotonin receptors function within the serotonin system. And because Dr. Mechoulam had discovered THC in the cannabis plant, these newly discovered endogenous neurochemicals were given the name “endocannobidinoids.”

Soon thereafter, researchers found that there were over 100 phytocannabidinoids in cannabis, all with varying degrees of functionality, and some with no known purpose -at least in humans- as they do not interact with any of our neuroreceptor sites.

Dr. Mechoulam continued on with his research directly and indirectly through his graduate students, and eventually discovered a second major phytocannabidinoid in cannabis which has a number of unique influences on the human body. He named this compound cannabidiol, or CBD for short.

CBD does not attach to either CB1 or CB2 receptor sites, but instead facilitates the optimal functioning of those and several other neuroreceptor sites throughout the body.

Over the next few weeks, I will explore with you in brief segments, how CBD works and how the growing knowledge of the endicannabinoid system – a separate neurochemical system we did not even know existed within the body until around 1990 – will be changing the practice of medicine forever.

Paul A. Henny, DDS


Visions Lead Lives

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The year was 1975, and I was one year away from high school graduation, and nine years away from my dream of becoming a dentist. My father’s red and white midlife-crisis-eight-miles-per-gallon Oldsmobile 442 had been sold due to the recent oil embargo and “skyrocketing” gasoline prices peaking at $2.00, and the local McDonalds was hiring due to a change in their business plan, and a new nation-wide trend: breakfast would be served.

As a new hire, I was put on the grill to make an offering called “Egg McMuffins,” along with pancakes at 6:00 in the morning, and Big Macs and Quarter Pounders over the lunchtime.

The smell of grilled hamburgers permeating my hair and clothes every day, and my slippery work boots, from all of the grease on the floor, is still clearly impregnated in my mind.

All was well until one morning, when my one and two-at-time breakfast-making routine turned into a nightmare when a bus full of 60 people pulled up.

It was on that day, that I learned a lot about my temperament…that didn’t like to be rushed, and that I didn’t like to be put in situations where I wasn’t able to do my best. Speed, outside of track and field, was not my preference…and taking my time, and doing things right most certainly was.

Needless to say, when the summer had passed, and cross country season had resumed, I was ready to leave the McDonalds random-chaos experience behind.

Fast forward ten years, and I found myself in a similar situation as an associate in what I would regard today to be a “fast food” dental practice. The patients barely wanted to talk to me, and most of them were only interested in what their insurance would “cover.”

In the lab were case pans full of crowns and a couple of bridges which had been made two years prior- and never delivered. When I asked Ron, my employer, why the crowns were still there, he responded, “They never came back…they didn’t want to make the co-payments.”

So, it was on that day that I realized the practice of dentistry often wasn’t what I had imagined it was going to be like in dental school. It was a lot about insurance and a little bit about health. It was a lot about working fast, and hoping you would be paid. It was a lot about trying to do your best, and then having a lot people refuse to acknowledge your efforts.

I was crestfallen, and as a result came very close to leaving dentistry…that was until I stumbled onto the writings of Avrom King, who often talked about this guy named Bob Barkley from Macomb Illinois.

Because it was at that moment, that a vision started to emerge in my mind with regard to what dentistry COULD BE…that practicing dentistry didn’t have to be like working the grill at McDonalds…that the practice of dentistry COULD BE about profoundly helping others, and COULD BE structured in a way that I would be able to take the time and do things right…and carefully down to the very last detail, as well as feel good about what I had accomplished.

The rest of my professional story is related to a choice I made at that point in my life- the choice to never go back to practicing a fast-food lifestyle. And it led me through Peter Dawson, L.D. Pankey, Mark Piper, Frank Spear, Bob Winter, and many other amazing experiences in the pursuit of that vision.

What choices have you made with regard to how you want to be practicing dentistry today?

Paul A Henny, DDS

Read more on Codiscovery.com

All in a word.

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The word ‘ideology’ is commonly used in the context of religion or politics. It refers to a set of operational beliefs. In other words, an ideology represents the way in which a person or group of people perceive and attempt to function in the world.

Consequently, we dentists and others in the profession have ideologies as well. This can be seen most obviously in the various occlusal camps…centric relation vs. neuromuscular for instance.

Our patients have ideologies as well. They may have a belief system which tells them that all dentists will likely hurt them…that their family has “bad teeth” …that dentists are rip-off artists…that insurance companies are helping them to successfully manage their dental health…that no dentist should charge more than an insurance carrier wants to pay …that dental health and total health are generally unrelated…that they should be able to get whatever they want done and not have to personally pay for any of it.

This lays bare the obvious truth that an ideology is not the facts, it is a perspective, and a lens through which the world is viewed and information is interpreted.

Is centric relation always the best place a person should be restored? What if there can’t be a centric relation position? What if the disc is displaced, gone, or the condyles degenerated? Where then? Why then?

Such questions are where the habitual or dogmatic use of an ideology becomes unhelpful, even destructive or harmful. Wars are fought over this…people slaughtered…occlusions successfully or unsuccessfully changed… confusion…. disgruntlement.

This is the nature of life… disagreements… sometimes harmony… sometimes common ground found…sometimes not. People coming and going. Sometimes happy interactions – occasionally not.

And the best way to reduce conflicts, disagreements, confrontations – and worse, is to become more aware of our ideology… to become more self-aware of what beliefs and biases we bring into each relationship which are either helpful or not…constructive or not…advancing our goals or not… revealing our true intentions – or not.

Bob Barkley, when asked by Avrom King, that if he had one wish which could be granted to all dentists going forward, responded immediately by saying, “I wish every dentist would take the time to develop a personal philosophy toward practice.”**

Notice here, Bob did not say ‘ideology,’ and quite intentionally so. Because a philosophy is not an ideology. A philosophy is about a mindset which is committed to the pursuit of the truth. It is not dogmatic, hence it is not fixed. It is not rigid, rather it is flexible and adaptive. And it is all about learning and moving forward, while casting off that which we have discovered to be wrong or unhelpful.

On that topic, Bob said that the most important thing that a dentist should be doing is related to what they commit themselves to STOP doing… that through new realizations and learning they commit to abandoning old way of thinking, behaviors… and yes – ideologies.

So too must many of our patients abandon old beliefs and behaviors if they sincerely want to become more successful. And that is our responsibility as well… to lead others toward better decision-making and therefore higher levels of health.

Hence when Bob Barkley started to focus on what his patients were thinking, feeling, assuming, and expecting, everything else in his practice improved. In other words, when Bob focused initially on understanding each person’s ideology, he could then start to transform it through the use of HIS philosophy.

And the rest became history.

Paul A. Henny, DDS

**Bob Barkley learned this from L.D. Pankey

Read more on CoDiscovery.com

On leaving McDentistry

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The year was 1975, and I was one year away from high school graduation, and nine years away from my dream of becoming a dentist.

The local McDonalds was hiring due to a change in their business plan, and a new nation-wide trend: breakfast would be served.

As a new hire, I was put on the grill to make an offering called “Egg McMuffins,” along with pancakes at 6:00 the morning, and Big Macs and Quarter Pounders over the lunchtime.

The smell of grilled hamburgers permeating my hair and clothes every day, and my slippery work boots, from all of the grease on the floor, is still clearly impregnated in my mind.

All was well until one morning, when my one and two-at-time breakfast-making routine, turned into a nightmare when a bus full of 60 people pulled up.

It was on that day, that I learned a lot about my temperament… that I didn’t like to be rushed, and I didn’t like to be put in situations where I wasn’t able to do my best. Speed, outside of track and field, was not my preference…and taking my time, and doing things right most certainly was.

Needless to say, when the summer had passed, and cross country season had resumed, I was ready to leave the McDonalds random-chaos experience behind.

Fast forward ten years, and I found myself in a similar situation as an associate in what I would regard today to be a “fast food” dental practice. The patients barely wanted to talk to me, and most of them were only interested in what their insurance would “cover.”

In the lab were case pans full of crowns and a couple of bridges which had been made two years prior- and never delivered. When I asked Ron, my employer, why the crowns were still there, he responded, “They never came back…they didn’t want to make the co-payments.”

So, it was on that day that I realized the practice of dentistry often wasn’t what I had imagined it was going to be like in dental school. It was a lot about insurance and a little bit about health. It was a lot about working fast, and hoping you would be paid. It was a lot about trying to do your best, and then having a lot people refuse to acknowledge your efforts.

I was crestfallen, and as a result came very close to leaving dentistry…that was until I stumbled onto the writings of Avrom King, who often talked about this guy named Bob Barkley from Macomb Illinois.

Because it was at that moment, that a vision started to emerge in my mind with regard to what dentistry COULD BE…that practicing dentistry didn’t have to be like working the grill at McDonalds…that the practice of dentistry COULD BE about profoundly helping others, and COULD BE structured in a way that I would be able to take the time and do things right…and carefully down to the very last detail, as well as feel good about what I had accomplished.

The rest of my professional story is related to a choice I made at that point in my life- the choice to never go back to practicing a fast-food lifestyle. And it led me through Peter Dawson, L.D. Pankey, Mark Piper, Frank Spear, Bob Winter, and many other amazing experiences in the pursuit of that vision.

What choices have you made with regard to how you want to be practicing dentistry today?

Paul A Henny, DDS

Read more on Codiscovery.com

Whose Strange?

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Jim Morrison was one conflicted cat. With an off-the-charts IQ, model looks, Sinatra-quality voice, and inner pain that he knew exactly how to express through poetry, he took the music scene by storm in 1967, after a couple of years maturation with his band The Doors.

Jim, a Navy brat, and whose father was an Admiral, was well-educated, a ferocious reader, and a brilliant writer, digging deep into Nietzsche, Plutarch, and Rimbaud as a teenager. He later went on to graduate from the UCLA film school in 1965.

Personally, I was too young – only about ten years old – when the Doors became a national phenomenon with songs like Light My Fire, and LA Woman. It was later through purchasing a compilation album, that Jim captured my attention with the dark and searing pain of ‘The End,’ and ‘Unknown Soldier.’

And then there was ‘People are Strange.’

The first 30 times I heard ’People are Strange’, I heard it as an outsider looking in. Later however, I realized that I had it all wrong – it was a song about an insider looking out:

People are strange when YOU’RE a stranger
Faces look ugly when YOU’RE alone
Women seem wicked when YOU’RE unwanted
Streets are uneven when YOU’RE down…

When YOU’RE strange
Faces come out of the rain
When YOU’RE strange
No one remembers your name…

Indeed, many people seem strange, when we don’t know them, and vice versa. Because our reality -and their’s – is created through each of our perspectives. When we know little about others, we fill in the blanks with our biases and assumptions, which are often driven by our agendas…attention, money…whatever.

Similarly, “people are strange” to us in dentistry. Spend a minute on a dental social media site where people are writing openly about their experiences, and you will see it. Often mockingly, patients are talked about in ways that are almost sub-human. They refused to cooperate…they were obsessed about this, when I wanted to do that…they were so difficult to deal with, I couldn’t get a damn thing done.

There is a reason that L.D. Pankey toured the world with Harold Wirth teaching “Know your patient!” And that is because people are strange, when YOU’RE a stranger. And when we think they are strange, how can we possibly best serve them? And what if the only reason they seem strange is we never took the time to listen to them? What if the problem primarily had to do with OUR perspective?

What if the reason why they ”don’t remember our name,” is because we never bothered to take the time to make a personal connection? What if they never felt heard? What if their feelings and perspective were never acknowledged? What if they felt “alone”?

What if part of the problem is that we need to feel needed as well…and when we don’t feel it, we respond defensively, and make up rationalizations like: “Man, she was strange.”

Paul A. Henny, DDS

Read more on Codiscovery.com

On Self-empathy

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You have perhaps heard about the famous 1960’s experiment in psychology involving the “Marshmallow Kids,” in which a group a kids were confronted with a choice: they could eat one marshmallow now, or if they were willing to wait 15 minutes, they would be able to eat two.

This represented a test of each child’s level of impulsivity vs. self-control. Hence it measured their ability to tamp down immediate desires for the benefit of a longer-term goal.

This ability…the ability to reign in our impulsivity, has long been considered a higher brain function where the cerebral cortex overrides the “limbic brain” via “top down”management. A reward offered today is consciously denied to ourselves for a possible bigger reward in the future.

Neuroscientists have recently identified the location of this activity within the brain. It is called the supramarginal gurus, and is located at the right temporal junction.

This right hemisphere area is connected to our “limbic brain,” and therefore our emotions and our memories. But since it is right hemisphere, and therefore inductive and creative, it is also imaginative. And that is because the supramarginal gurus is where our capacity for empathy originates.

Our ability for empathizing with an other person’s situation, requires us to first have had personal experiences…memories…which allow us to closely relate how we felt at similar times to how the other person MIGHT be feeling. It is speculative…it is inductive, and most importantly, it must be tested to see if it is accurate and valid. And if it is, then we have connected deeper with the other person, and they “feel felt” as Daniel Siegel likes to say.

Now, let’s take this understanding one step further. When we delay our gratification for a future goal, a goal about which we will significantly benefit, we are functionally and on a neurological level, EMPATHIZING WITH OUR FUTURE SELF. We are imagining, through an interplay between our limbic brain and our supramarginal gurus, what we will feel like if we do this now instead of that.

And our ability to do this, as was seen with the Marshmallow Kids, has huge downstream implications, as people with high levels of self-control “win” at the game of life, much more often than those who do not. They are willing to forestall income for education first. They are willing to “pay their dues” in starting level positions and work their way up in an organization. They are willing to put aside money today, so that they can have more money tomorrow.

The same pattern exists in our patients, as only those who have the ability to see a better tomorrow for themselves-dental health wise- are willing to make sacrifices today to see it happen.

Yesterday, I had a long discussion with a seemingly healthy 27 year old who has his doctorate in Physical Therapy. He works-out regularly and is fit and trim. But he has also been diagnosed with mild sleep apnea, can’t tolerate CPAP nor a mandibular advancement appliance.

He has a deviated septum from a sports injury as a young child, and can’t breathe through his nose at night. He has no stable or balanced occlusal contacts. He has a narrow dental arch and over-uses his tongue to try and balance things out.

The idea of another round of orthodontics with palatial expansion and a nasal surgery is daunting to him, as he has a ton of student loan debt.

Consequently, the only way he will be able to make the best decisions for himself today, will be through his becoming more willing to make significant sacrifices in the areas of time, energy, money, discomfort, and inconvenience today – for a POTENTIALLY healthy future. And the only way any of that is likely to happen will be through my facilitation of HIS empathizing about HIS future self, though HIS visualization of what it all means to HIM.

I’ll bet that you have situations just like this happen every day in your practice as well, if your are committed to running a truly health-centered practice.

And when you do this YOU are empathizing with your FUTURE SELF. All of this was what Bob Barkley was referred to as “future focusing” with patients, which he accomplished through the Codiscovery process. And that included the facilitation of values clarification and self-empathy – cornerstones of all truly health-centered practices.

Paul A. Henny, DDS

Read more at Codiscovery.com

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