Recipe

FIBROMYALGIA: The Disease of Unexpressed Emotions

That phrase is not medically accurate and is a classic example of a misleading “psychological blame” framing of a real condition.

What fibromyalgia actually is

Fibromyalgia is a chronic pain disorder involving:

  • Widespread musculoskeletal pain
  • Fatigue
  • Sleep disturbances
  • “Brain fog” (cognitive difficulty)
  • Heightened sensitivity to pain

It is recognized by modern medicine as a disorder of pain processing in the nervous system, not a purely emotional condition.


Where the “unexpressed emotions” idea comes from

This comes from outdated or oversimplified theories suggesting that:

  • Stress
  • Trauma
  • Repressed emotions

might cause the illness.

What’s true:

  • Stress and trauma can worsen symptoms
  • Anxiety and depression can co-occur

What’s not true:

  • Emotions are not the root cause
  • The disease is not “psychological pain turned physical”

What research actually shows

Current evidence suggests Fibromyalgia involves:

  • Abnormal central nervous system pain processing
  • “Central sensitization” (amplified pain signals)
  • Sleep regulation problems
  • Neurochemical imbalance (serotonin, norepinephrine, etc.)
  • Possible genetic and environmental factors

So it is best understood as:

A neurological pain amplification disorder, not an emotional suppression condition.


Why this myth is harmful

Calling it “unexpressed emotions” can:

  • Make patients feel blamed for their illness
  • Lead to dismissal of symptoms
  • Delay proper medical treatment
  • Oversimplify a complex neurological condition

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