Dr Judith Orloff's Blog

Health Advise: The Healing Power of Tears

Dr. Orloff - Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Health Advise: The Healing Power of Tears

Share

Adapted from Dr. Judith Orloff’s new book “Emotional Freedom: Liberate Yourself From Negative Emotions and Transform Your Life” (Three Rivers Press, 2011)

For over twenty years as physician, I’ve witnessed, time and again, the healing power of tears. Tears are your body’s release valve for stress, sadness, grief, anxiety, and frustration. Also, you can have tears of joy, say when a child is born or tears of relief when a difficulty has passed. In my own life, I am grateful when I can cry. It feels cleansing, a way to purge pent up emotions so they don’t lodge in my body as stress symptoms such as fatigue or pain. To stay healthy and release stress, I encourage my patients to cry. For both men and women, tears are a sign of courage, strength, and authenticity.

In “Emotional Freedom,” I discuss the numerous health benefits of tears. Like the ocean, tears are salt water. Protectively they lubricate your eyes, remove irritants, reduce stress hormones, and they contain antibodies that fight pathogenic microbes. Our bodies produce three kinds of tears: reflex, continuous, and emotional.  Each kind has different healing roles. For instance, reflex tears allow your eyes to clear out noxious particles when they’re irritated by smoke or exhaust. The second kind, continuous tears, are produced regularly to keep our eyes lubricated--these contain a chemical called “lysozyme” which functions as an anti-bacterial and protects our eyes from infection. Tears also travel to the nose through the tear duct to keep the nose moist and bacteria free. Typically, after crying, our breathing, and heart rate decrease, and we enter into a calmer biological and emotional state. 

Emotional tears have special health benefits. Biochemist and “tear expert” Dr. William Frey at the Ramsey Medical Center in Minneapolis discovered that reflex tears are 98% water, whereas emotional tears also contain stress hormones which get excreted from the body through crying. After studying the composition of tears, Dr. Frey found that emotional tears shed these hormones and other toxins which accumulate during stress. Additional studies also suggest that crying stimulates the production of endorphins, our body’s natural pain killer and “feel-good” hormones.” Interestingly, humans are the only creatures known to shed emotional tears, though it’s possible that that elephants and gorillas do too. Other mammals and also salt-water crocodiles produce reflex tears which are protective and lubricating.

Read the Complete Blog here on how tears can improve your health.
Comments
Nathan EFT commented on 01-Aug-2010 09:38 PM
I agree, crying is great! We get programmed in our society that tears are manipulative or bad, but tears can be a good thing! Good reminder!
Faith Morgan commented on 05-Aug-2010 01:16 PM
I have found tears essential! I met Judith over ten years ago. Her wisdom has helped me through quite a few rough patches. The latest was being estranged from my child, by her choice. I missed my only childs wedding. When I reached the moment where I knew that, for her well-being, I had to step back. So many tears. Tears seem to literally contain the toxic parts of that sort of grief. When they start to subside, and only then, was I able to be "back" to the presennt around me. The wisdom and love that enfolds my true nature can be realized again.

Post a Comment




Captcha Image

Subscribe to
this blog’s feed

[What is this?]

Featured Posts

Recent Posts

Categories

Archive