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Calling All Wellington Nonprofits: Quantum Foundation Taking Grant Applications

CALLING ALL SMALL PALM BEACH COUNTY NONPROFITS:
Apply today for a Quantum in the Community grant and share in $750,000!

(WEST PALM BEACH, FL) Applications opened June 4 for grassroots nonprofits in Palm Beach County to receive their share of $750,000. Thanks to Quantum Foundation, this year marks the 8th annual Quantum in the Community initiative to help local nonprofits which are working toward a healthier Palm Beach County by meeting the basic needs of residents through food, clothing, shelter, transportation and more.

“As a health funder, we provide assistance to organizations that support whole-health, and having basic needs met is essential,” said Eric Kelly, Quantum Foundation president. “These grassroots organizations are our link to making Palm Beach County a better place to live by meeting residents’ most basic needs. Our mission is for residents to experience a better life through quality health, and we believe these organizations are the cornerstone to success. This is our 20th year of grantmaking in Palm Beach County, and this is one of our favorite annual events.”

Strict criteria are set up for those nonprofits applying:
• Organization must be registered as a 501[C]3.
• Organization must have been working in Palm Beach County for at least 6 months.
• Annual operating budget may not exceed $500,000.
• Organization must provide basic needs like food, clothing, shelter, utilities and transportation to the county’s most vulnerable residents.

A committee of Quantum Foundation staff and board members will carefully consider each application. Each selected organization will receive a grant up to $25,000 of the $750,000 total. To learn more, visit the Quantum Foundation website www.quantumfnd.org/quantum-in-the-community. All applications must be submitted using the foundation’s online system by the July 27th deadline. Funding announcements will be made in the fall with a celebratory breakfast to follow.

In its 20th year of grantmaking in Palm Beach County, Quantum Foundation has assets of approximately $140 million and since its inception has awarded more than $125 million to hundreds of local nonprofit grantees. Every dollar the foundation grants stays in the county to benefit local communities. For general information, visit www.quantumfnd.org or call 561.832.7497.

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Science Center Expands Aquarium with New Mangrove Exhibit

SOUTH FLORIDA SCIENCE CENTER EXPANDS AQUARUIM
New Exhibit, “Mangroves and the History of Our Ecosystem,” Promotes Ecological Sustainability

(WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.) – The South Florida Science Center recently debuted the newest addition to its 10,000-gallon aquarium, “Mangroves and the History of Our Ecosystem.” Thanks to a gift from the Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties, the exhibit combines science and history to educate visitors about South Florida’s unique environmental habitats and how they directly impact the area’s quality of life.

The new exhibit showcases Florida’s estuaries and rich history while demonstrating the importance of Florida mangrove’s fragile and rare habitat. A custom tank shows the mangrove tree’s ability to adapt to both salt and fresh water environments and houses live animals including crabs and several species of fish. Through an interactive display with graphics, puzzles and games, a kiosk highlights the historical significance of mangroves throughout South Florida and the importance of the tree’s habitat to ecological sustainability.

“This exhibit is crucial to our mission to ‘open every mind to science’ and preserve Florida’s rich history,” said Kate Arrizza, CEO of the Science Center. “We are grateful to the Community Foundation for a grant from their Thomas Ladue McGinty Memorial Environmental Fund to make this incredible exhibit possible. We appreciate their generosity and hope to inspire all ages to learn about and preserve these treasures of our ecosystem.”

Mangroves have had a significant impact on development in Florida by protecting shorelines, serving as a buffer against storms, waves and floods and preventing erosion through a complex root system which stabilizes sediments in the soil. Mangroves host a wide variety of animals from mammals to birds, reptiles and amphibians. Many of the animals living amongst the plants get nutrients from leaves and roots.

“We are honored to fund this incredible educational project and be a partner with the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium,” said Daryl K. Houston, Community Investment Officer with the Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties. “The ‘Mangroves and the History of our Ecosystem’ exhibit provides an opportunity for the Science Center’s visitors to learn about the crucial role mangroves serve in protecting our shoreline and the habitat they provide for many different species.”

The Science Center’s 1000-square-foot Aquariums of the Atlantic area is the largest and most comprehensive fresh and saltwater aquarium between Miami and Orlando, taking visitors through the depths of the coral reefs and Florida’s diverse ecosystem of the Everglades, Gulf Stream and open ocean through daily touch tank interactions and educational components. More than 150,000 guests visit here every year.

The mission of the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium is to “open every mind to science” and in addition to its fresh and saltwater aquarium, the indoor/outdoor venue features more than 100 hands-on educational exhibits, a digital planetarium, conservation research station, Florida exhibit hall, Pre-K focused “Discovery Center,” an interactive Everglades exhibit and the 18-hole Conservation Course – an outdoor putting course with science-focused education stations.

The South Florida Science Center and Aquarium is located at 4801 Dreher Trail North in West Palm Beach and is open Monday – Friday from 9 a.m. – 5 p.m., and on Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Admission to the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium during “Travel Adventure” is $16.95 for adults, $12.95 for children ages 3 to 12 and $14.95 for seniors aged 60 and older. Science Center members and children under 3 are free. Planetarium shows and mini golf are not included in general admission pricing. For more information, call 561-832-1988 or visit www.sfsciencecenter.org. Like the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium on Facebook and follow them on Twitter and Instagram @SFScienceCenter.
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Arden Summer FunFest

Families and friends will have a field day at the Arden Summer FunFest on June 16. The free, fun-filled afternoon will include inflatable sports games, a corn maze obstacle course, face painting, food trucks, mini farmers market, prize giveaways, live music by Whiskey Six, and much more. The event from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. marks the exciting opening of the master-planned community’s playgrounds, event lawn and sports courts. All are invited to be among the first to experience the first phase of amenities, meet the agrihood’s new Farm Directors and explore the spectacular homes by Ryan Homes, Lennar, Kennedy Homes and Kenco Communities. Register at http://bit.ly/ArdenFunFest

Reception to Celebrate Local Artists with the Wellington Art Society

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Reception to Celebrate Local Artists
with the Wellington Art Society

 

The Wellington Art Society will host an Artist’s Reception on Tuesday, June 26th. The public is invited to attend and enjoy the local art on display at the reception, which will be held from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. inside the Wellington Community Center (12150 Forest Hill Blvd), and on the 1st floor of Village Hall (12300 Forest Hill Blvd).  

This combined reception will recognize local artists for their artwork which is on display at the Wellington Community Center and at Wellington’s Village Hall. Artists selected to participate in the rotating gallery exhibit will be recognized at the informal reception. The Wellington Art Society will also display original works of art and books, as well as offering door prizes and prints for sale. 

As another way to stay informed on the latest news and updates from the Village, residents are invited to sign up for Wellington information and updates at www.wellingtonfl.gov/enews.

For information about other Wellington programs, events, activities, and updates, please visit www.wellingtonfl.gov or watch WellingtonTV for the latest happenings.

I’ll Take the A-Train

Cultural Corner

I’ll Take the A-Train

By Angela Shaw

There was a time when trains were the main mode of long-distance transportation; the high-tech alternative to horse power. The steel leviathan’s golden era of dining cars offered linens, dishware and multiple culinary choices. Back then there were also spacious sleepers and game cars.

These days we all bring our own hand-held games when traveling, dining cars look like tubes on wheels serving a small selection of overpriced convenience meals, and sleepers are the size of closets. 

 

Personally, I think the dining car on the Amtrak—aka, the A-Train, because this isn’t Manhattan—gives the best view of Florida’s cross-state journey, which is where I now sit typing this month’s column.

The engine slows into a remote yard. A city of metal-sided warehouses with sagging roofs and broken windows declare that the depot flat-lined decades ago. A pyramid of Caribbean-colored oil drums stacked on their sides and railroad-tie graveyards are all that remains of this ghost town. We sidle next to an army-green tank car. Another line whizzes by, we accelerate.

Neighboring conversations distract my writing, but add to the trip’s appeal. A lady recalls the glory days of rail travel. A loud Australian couple chomping on chips and chicken sandwiches bark out a kind of Ted-talk on the New Zealander/Aussie national rivalry. New Zealanders consider themselves superior because they didn’t originate from a community of convicts, he explains. This Aussie couple touts their lineage to the second fleet of prisoners that Britain exported when their jails got too full. Followed by the quick disclaimer that no serious criminals were ever transferred—the murderers were quickly hung in the mother country. Just those of the misdemeanor type went down under. Whew! I was beginning to rummage for my pepper spray.

Besides the entertaining conversation, there’s no better way to enjoy the rhythms of countryside. Cattle—Look! A russet-colored calf!—rows and rows of orange trees, a stray farm or factory, fences, canals and more citrus fields. Non-stop rain has greened up the pastures where cows looking like black dots contentedly graze. Cotton-ball clouds create strange shadows on the serene expanse. Spring wildflowers preen their final ensemble before the summer mid-state sun bleaches their lemon-yellows and lavenders.

A brassy, southern accent wearing bright blue eye shadow crashes my reverie in decibels heard four cabs down. Her ex-bartender whisky croaking is lobbed back by the Aussie woman’s cockney-accent—a cacophony of butchered English requiring an interpreter almost. Her husband doses after his carb-laden lunch.

But, what does all this have to do with Around Wellington Magazine and Arts and Culture? Despite decreased use, the train culture has shaped, and is still shaping today’s culture with new lines popping up and old stations being renovated into hip galleries and eating spots.

Visionary investors on Florida’s east and west coast have been buying up decayed ship yards, defunct factories and out-of-commission rails and turning them into attractive community hang-outs.

The Grandview Public Market between Parker Road and I-95 is just such a place. Gravel-filled tracks have been transformed into walkways that connect patrons to cool breweries, unique shops, and unusual eateries. Dubbed the Warehouse District, its atmosphere bubbles with the history of freight transfer, bustling passengers, crowded platforms, and whirring factories. Strolling and dining at the Grandview Public Market layers yesterday’s commerce and humanity with the present-day.

Here’s how the GPM website describes the District:

Showcasing twelve chef-inspired vendors, GPM raises the city’s cultural profile with innovative cooking and dining in a meticulously renovated 13,000 sq. ft. epicurean playground. Guests enjoy an all-in-one experience seven days a week—breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

We believe the buildings that comprise the District are at the heart of the vision. Built between 1925 and 1968, each building tells its own story and offers its own authenticity and character. From loading docks, to column’s and domed wood-trussed ceilings, these buildings are works of art and part of the fabric of West Palm Beach’s industrial past.

After my Tampa mother-daughter beach weekend, I find myself waiting for the train in another dilapidated-building-turned-hot-spot called The Oxford Exchange. Portraits of great people peer over my latte and almond croissant. Inspired, one feels for a moment they might rise to the same stature as Teddy or Winston or Amelia or Virginia just by their mere proximity. But, as the caffeine high wears off, reality asserts that talent and tenacity, and typing are the only vehicles by which one might hope to move in their direction.

The Exchange features a bookstore, optical purveyor, kitchenware store, as well as an airy atrium restaurant where visitors study in tufted high back chairs or hover over laptops on farmhouse tables.

After a quick downtown shuttle, I step into the Tampa Union Station to await the A-Train to West Palm. The cathedral-high ceilings generate a reverent sense of awe. Long smooth wooden pews, reminiscent of the kind I filled growing up Baptist, are packed with lounging customers. I pick a seat next to a man reading an issue of Trains Magazine. “Ah, more material for my article,” I think. His name is Kemmer and he is aptly seated in this church-like station, a true railroad worshipper in his hallowed halls. Kemmer is traveling to West Palm for the sole reason of riding the Bright Line to its newest destination, Miami. “You gotta do your thing, you know?” he says.  Trains are definitely his thing.  A few months ago, he made the same pilgrimage to experience the line’s opening to Fort Lauderdale.   

In West Palm, you can hear the new whistle at Sub Culture Coffee on Clematis or over a macchiato at Johan’s Joe. The Bright Line’s super-speedy locomotive goes from West Palm to Miami and, soon, to Orlando.  I’m guessing Kemmer will be there for that inaugural ride.

If you missed the A-train or simply can’t make the trip, get your ticket to Grandview Public Market.  Jump on the latest rail yard trend. An artisan taco, European brew or rolled ice cream awaits you. View the galleries. Stroll the graveled rails.  Ride the modern-day train revival.

 

Three Timely Events by the League of Women Voters of PB County

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League of Women Voters of Palm Beach County Invites the Public to Three Timely & Informative Events During June & July

  • Gun Control: Mass Shootings Trend & Solutions June 9
  • State of the County with Verdenia Baker June 20
  • The Importance of the 2020 Census – July 18

 

(West Palm Beach, FL – June 7, 2018) The League of Women Voters of Palm Beach County is inviting the public to one Cool Topic Discussion and two Hot Topic Luncheons  during June and July. The discussion will be held at The Palm Beach Post Auditorium, 2751 S. Dixie Highway in West Palm Beach, and the luncheons will be held at the Atlantis Country Club, 190 Atlantis Blvd. in Lake Worth.

 

For both of the Hot Topic Luncheons, registration starts at 11 am and lunch is served promptly at 11:30 am.

 

Cool Topic Discussion

Gun Control

Mass Shootings: Trends & Solutions

Saturday, June 9  / 9 to 10:30 am

The special guest speaker is Dr. Tom Gabor, Ph.D., a criminologist, sociologist and international consultant now based in Florida, he was  formerly a Professor of Criminology at the University of Ottawa, Canada. With a doctorate from Ohio State University, Dr. Gabor has published over 150 works, testified in front of Parliamentary committees, and served as a consultant and expert witness on behalf of many international and governmental agencies. His most recent book is Confronting Gun Violence in America.

 

There is no charge to attend this Cool Topic Discussion in West Palm Beach, but RSVPs are still requested online at www.lwvpbc.org or by calling 561-968-4123.

 

Hot Topic Luncheon

State of the County with Verdenia Baker

Wednesday, June 20  / 11:30 am to 1 pm

As Palm Beach County Administrator, Verdenia Baker is responsible for carrying out the policies of Board of County Commissioners. A certified financial manager, she manages the daily operation of county government, which includes more than 6,300 employees and an annual budget of approximately $4.4 billion, serving more than 1.4 million residents. Palm Beach County is one of the few counties in the nation with AAA general obligation bond ratings from all three of the major rating agencies and most recently received an AAA revenue bond rating from Standard & Poor’s.

 

Tickets for this luncheon at the Atlantis Country Club are $25 per person until June 13, and $35 after that date. RSVPs are requested online at www.lwvpbc.org or by calling 561-968-4123.

 

Hot Topic Luncheon

Saving the Census

Wednesday, July 18  / 11:30 am to 1 pm

The three special guest speakers at this luncheon include Palm Beach County Mayor Melissa McKinley; Lisa De La Rionda, Palm Beach County’s Director of Public Affairs; and Patricia Behn, Deputy Planning Director, Planning Division, of the Palm Beach County Planning, Zoning and Building Department. Their key objective is to ensure that each and every resident of Palm Beach County is counted in the 2020 census, including hard-to-count populations such as young children, minorities, non-English speakers, the homeless, undocumented immigrants, and mobile individuals such as college students. Why? Because everyone in Palm Beach County and Florida loses if the census count isn’t accurate.

 

Tickets for this luncheon at the Atlantis Country Club are $25 per person until May 9, and $35 after that date. RSVPs are requested online at www.lwvpbc.org or by calling 561-968-4123.

 

About the League of Women Voters of Palm Beach County:

The League of Women Voters of Palm Beach County is a nonpartisan political organization of women and men of all ages and backgrounds, encouraging informed and active participation in government through education and advocacy. The League of Women Voters of the United States believes that voting is a fundamental citizen right that must be guaranteed. For more information, please visit www.lwvpbc.org or www.facebook.com/lwvpbc.

Grand Opening Party at The Beauty and The Beeeef

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Grand Opening Party at The Beauty and The Beeeef

Wellington, FL – On May 9, more than 300 guests mingled at The Beauty and The Beeeef to celebrate its opening at The Mall at Wellington Green. Partygoers – including Bachelor in Paradise‘s Nick Benvenutti – enjoyed butler-passed creative cocktails and hors d’oeuvres, interactive party games, and music by DJ Rey Verges.

Images courtesy of Eduardo Schneider Photography.

 

Norton Closing for Several Months to Finish Interior Construction and Reinstall Art

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Norton Closing for Several Months to Finish Interior Construction and Reinstall Art

Museum is partnering with Grandview Public Market to present programs while closed July 16, 2018 through Feb. 8, 2019 to finish expansion project

WEST PALM BEACH, FL (June 4, 2018) – With structural and exterior construction of The New Norton transformation project complete, the Norton Museum of Art announces an extended  closing during the second half of 2018 to put the finishing touches on the interior of the building and reinstall  art that has been in storage for more than two years. The extended closing will begin on July 16, 2018. The Museum will re-open to the public on Feb. 9, 2019 with a free day of activities and exhibitions.                                                     

Though the building will be closed for several months, the Norton will not be absent from the community. The following programs will continue at Grandview Public Market located at 1401 Clare Ave., West Palm Beach:     

  • Family Art Pop-Up, a new Museum program where children ages 5-12, and accompanying grown-ups, have lively discussions about art in the Norton collection followed by an art-making workshop.
  • Curators’ Conversations feature Museum curators previewing exhibitions that open in 2019.
  • Member Insights programs (for Museum Members only), led by Norton education and curatorial staff, offer opportunities to look closely, discuss, and learn more about masterpieces in the Norton Collection.                        

All programs are free, but advance registration is required. To register, or for more details, visit www.norton.org/grandview.

Grandview Public Market (GPM) is a food and market hall located in the city’s emerging warehouse district, and is housed in a mid-century building originally constructed as a frozen food facility for Tropical Shipping Lines. With a goal of creating a space where everyone can feel comfortable, fed, and entertained, the repurposed building has become a popular hub for chef-driven cuisine, music, cultural programming, and a curated selection of retail shops. “We work hard to maintain this feeling of inclusiveness,” said GPM co-owner Chris Vila, “and are delighted to share it with our growing community. In partnering with the Norton during its renovation, Grandview is excited to expand its cultural footprint and raise awareness of the wonderful programming presented at the Norton.”          

 

“The vision and energy of Grandview Public Market, and what it offers the West Palm Beach community, is exciting,” said Norton Deputy Director Sam Ankerson. “We look forward to presenting programs at this lively, innovative new venue, and exploring connections between art, learning, and good food!”

The following Museum activities and programs will continue at other venues:

  • Mini Book + Art programs will continue at Palm Beach County branch libraries 3:30 to 5 p.m. the first Tuesday of each month beginning in September.
  • Book + Art programs will take place 2 to 3:30 p.m. on select Saturdays at different Palm Beach County library branches beginning in September.
  • Afterschool Art Outreach, which provides year-round art classes to students ages 5 -18 at eight community centers throughout the county will continue and, instead of the normal visits to the Norton, will include free visits to other cultural institutions.
  • School Partnerships with Forest Hill Community High School, Jupiter Community High School, Palm Beach Day Academy, and four International Spanish Academy Schools will continue at the schools and incorporate art projects into the schools’ curricula.
  • ArtSpeaks, the annual, subscription lecture and luncheon series, will be held at the Colony Hotel in Palm Beach on Jan. 17 and 18, 2019, and also on Jan. 31 and Feb 1, 2019.

Before closing, the Museum will celebrate the completion of The New Norton structure and the reinstalling of art with a festive Art After Dark on Thursday, July 12 from 5 to 9 p.m.                                     

The Museum also will present its annual Bastille Day celebration from noon to 5 p.m. on July 14. As always, the day features all things French: great music, art activities for all ages, art tours and talks, films, food and drink. Local quartet Les Nuages (The Clouds) returns for an encore performance, delivering joie de vivre with a mix of Parisian love songs and French gypsy-jazz. The event is free. For details, visit norton.org starting June 1.

The final day to visit before closing is Sunday, July 15.

 

The Museum will re-open to the general public on Feb. 9, 2019 with exciting new

exhibitions and works from the Museum Collection that have been in storage during construction, including Persian Sea-Life, better known as “The Chihuly Ceiling,” as well as new gifts and acquisitions that will be on view for the first time! Visitors also can look forward to a new restaurant and a new museum store.                      

 

The Norton’s annual, free Chinese New Year celebration is scheduled for Feb. 16, 2019, and Black History Family Day is set for Feb. 23, 2019.                 

 

About the Norton Museum of Art

Founded in 1941, the Norton Museum of Art is recognized for its distinguished holdings in American, European, and Chinese art, and a continually expanding presence for Photography and Contemporary art. Its masterpieces of 19th century and 20th century European painting and sculpture include works by Brancusi, Gauguin, Matisse, and Picasso, and American works by Stuart Davis, Hopper, O’Keeffe, Pollock, and Sheeler.

 

The Norton presents special exhibitions, lectures, tours, and programs for adults and children throughout the year. In 2011, the Norton launched RAW (Recognition of Art by Women), featuring the work of a living female painter or sculptor and funded by the Leonard and Sophie Davis Fund/MLDauray Arts Initiative. In 2012, the Norton established the biennial, international Rudin Prize for Emerging Photographers in partnership with Beth Rudin DeWoody, in honor of her late father, Lewis Rudin.

 

In 2016, the Norton broke ground for a visionary expansion designed by architecture firm Foster + Partners, under the direction of Pritzker Prize-winning architect Lord Norman Foster. The project reorients the Norton’s entrance to the main thoroughfare of South Dixie Highway, reestablishing the architectural order of the museum’s original 1941 design. New features include a 42,000-square-foot West Wing that doubles education space, and increases gallery space for the Norton’s renowned collection. The transformation of the Museum’s 6.3-acre campus will create a museum in a garden, featuring new, verdant spaces and a sculpture garden.

 

The Norton is located at 1451 S. Olive Ave. in West Palm Beach, Florida, and during construction is free to the public through July 15, 2018. Hours are Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday noon to 5 p.m. and Thursday, noon to 9 p.m. Free parking and shuttle service is available at 1501 S. Dixie Highway. The Museum is closed on Mondays and major holidays. The Museum will close for an extended period beginning July 16, 2018, and reopen Feb. 9, 2019. For additional information, please call (561) 832-5196, or visit www.norton.org.

 

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Why is Cranio-Facial Pain Worse than Everything Else?

Why is Cranio-Facial Pain Worse than Everything Else?

By Dr. Jonathon Chung, Keystone Chiropractic

Outline:

  • Pain is weird
  • Chronic head and face pain and suicidality
  • Why head and face pain feels worse
  • The neuroscience of suffering

Pain is complicated. It’s even more complicated as a doctor because the expectation from years and years of conditioning is that when you have pain, then something about that painful body part must be damaged to cause it. When people are in pain, doctors are typically trained to identify things like a ruptured disc, broken bone, or torn muscle to validate a patients’ sense of suffering.

In this model, the more damage that is present = more pain. Less damage = less pain.

However, the experience of pain can be way more complex than finding damaged tissue. The experience of pain is an emotional response to ‘painful’ sensory receptors called nociceptors. Tissue damage can cause a lot of pain receptorsto fire, and trigger increased pain, but it is far from the only factor in the pain equation. We have to take pain into the context of cultural, social, cognitive, and experiential factors.

Which takes us to an important point.

The amount of pain you experience can also depend on what body part is injured. As we’ll see today, there are hardwired circuits in your brain that can make the experience of pain in the head/face a different and perhaps worse experience then pain from the body as a whole.

Chronic Facial Pain and Suicidality

Chronic pain is a known risk for suicidal ideation, and has been documented in numerous studies [source]. These thoughts have a higher chance of turning into behavior when you have chronic pain and a co-morbid mental health disorder [source].

This effect seems most pronounced when the source of the pain is coming from the head or face. Two disorders in particular are highly associated with suicidal thoughts and behavior; trigeminal neuralgia and cluster headaches. Trigeminal neuralgia has a high enough association that it was historically dubbed the ‘suicide disease’, while cluster headache has been known to be called the ‘suicide headache’.

Both of these illnesses are associated with some of the most intense pain that human beings can experience. The severity of the pain combined with the chronicity of the pain lead to a sense of despair because these disorders can be difficult to treat, so there is always a fear of the next attack.

Scientists have recently uncovered some neurological pathways that might explain why conditions like trigeminal neuralgia and cluster headaches can cause such disproportionate suffering compared to other body pains.

The Trigeminal Complex and the Limbic System

It’s been known that pain experienced in the head and face activate the emotional centers of the brain more than pain felt in the periphery of the body [source]. From an evolutionary standpoint, a higher state of pain in the head and neck region may have served a  purpose so that there would be extra vigilance in protecting this region of the body from injury. What was unknown was weather this heightened sense of protection was derived from a psycho-social factors, or if it was something that was hard wired into our nervous system.

Duke University scientists may have some answers. A 2017 study in Nature Neuroscience showed that neurons in the head and face have a direct pathway to the emotional circuits in the brain.

Scientists identified a direct connection between sensory fibers of the trigeminal nerve into a part of the brainstem called the parabrachial nucleus. The parabrachial nucleus has direct connections into the emotional hub of the brain in the amygdala, which is highly tied to fear and avoidance behavior.

Why is this important? Because direct, aka, monosynaptic connections are way more powerful sensory stimuli than indirect pathways.

Think of it this way:

Let’s say you were mailing a time-sensitive package that needed to get to its destination as soon as possible. Would you choose to overnight it by plane, or would you choose regular first-class mail?

You probably chose to overnight it right? Why? Because it’s going to get there faster, and because the person receiving it is going to perceive that package as more important because it was sent with all of this overnight labeling implying it’s importance.

These direct pathways are like your overnight deliveries, where the indirect pathways are like ground shipping.

Our brains place a higher priority on signals coming from these monosynaptic pathways.

While other body regions only use an indirect path to the parabrachial nucleus, the trigeminal distribution uses both indirect AND direct pathways to stimulate this emotional hub.

That means that firing from nociceptive pain fibers in the trigeminal distribution, or even pathways that share trigeminal distribution will have a higher chance of driving an emotional response than pain fibers from the shoulder, back, hip, etc.

The Emotional Brain’s Influence On Pain

How big of an influence does emotion make in the experience of pain? In this study, the researchers stimulated pain receptors in the paw or in the face of mice using a chemical called formalin. Using a technique called optogenetics, researchers can selectively activate brain activity in a mouse model using different light frequencies.

When light activated the direct pathway, the mice showed more intense avoidance behavior to the formalin on the face. When light was used to knock out this pathway, the mice didn’t react as strongly.

So you have the same amount of pain stimulus, the same mouse, and it experiences pain differently because the path to the parabrachial nucleus was turned off.

It suggests that our emotional brain’s connection to a painful stimulus plays a substantial role in the experience of pain.

Biology vs Psychology

There’s always a debate about nature vs nurture when confronted with the struggles of human existence. In recent years, it has evolved into a debate between biomechanical/orthopedic search to treat identifiable lesions vs a biopsychosocial approach which generally tends to lean heavily on the psycho and social components of the pain experience.

Here is some evidence that suggests that the two are inseparably linked together.

The experience of pain is intimately tied to our thoughts, memories, expectations, and current mental state. If the experience of pain is tied to some of these neural circuits, then changing our mind activating our different neural circuits in the brain can change our experience of pain.

It also means that fear/avoidance behavior, and repetitive responses to painful stimuli may reinforce the neural circuits that generate the same pain over and over again.

Changing thoughts and behavior can have a significant impact on the perception of pain and the feelings of suffering for a persistent pain patient.

That doesn’t mean that we are just telling people in the midst of a terrible trigeminal neuralgia or cluster headache attack that they have to suck it up and think differently about their pain.

It means that when people have persistent pain disorders, in the process of treating patients with various interventions, we have to help and guide a patient through the process of re-framing their pain and illness.

This is really hard for patients with persistent pain. It means that sometimes we are walking a line where a patient may feel like we are telling them that the pain is just in their head. Sometimes it means that the patient is going to ask the same question, or tell you the same symptom over and over again because they’re looking for you to just understand that what they are feeling and that know that they’re being heard.

Trying to help a patient disassociate themselves from their chronic pain emotionally is challenging. After all, most of us didn’t become doctors and therapists to be a patient’s psychologist. However, empowering a patient with a stronger belief in the resilience of their body can be extremely fulfilling, and in my opinion puts people on the path to recovery while they’re in the process of receiving quality care.

Wellington Back to School Supply Drive

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Wellington Back to School Supply Drive
 

Wellington’s Community Services Department recognizes the importance of education and that our future leaders are attending Wellington Schools.  To help students reach their full educational potential the Wellington will host a Back-to-School Supply Drive June 4 through July 20, 2018. 

Supplies may be dropped off at the following locations between the hours of 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM:

  • Village Hall (12300 Forest Hill Boulevard)
    •    Wellington Community Center (12150 Forest Hill Boulevard)
    •    Community Services Office (1092 Wellington Trace)
    •    The Lake Wellington Professional Centre (12133 Ken Adams Way)
    •    Village Park (11700 Pierson Road) 
     

The goal is to send students Back-to-School with pencils, paper, glue, rulers, folders, backpacks, crayons, notebooks, etc.

The collected supplies will be distributed to students who attend Wellington schools at the annual Back-to-School Community Block Party scheduled for Saturday, July 28, 2018.

If you have any questions please contact Community Services at 561-791-4764.

As another way to stay informed on the latest news and updates from the Village, residents are invited to sign up for Wellington information and updates at www.wellingtonfl.gov/enews.
 
For information about other Wellington programs, events, activities, and updates, please visit www.wellingtonfl.gov or watch WellingtonTV for the latest happenings.

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