Montreal Gazette

Breaking a dinner rule

- ANNIE LANE

Dear Annie: We have all been told to avoid discussion­s of politics and religion when dining out with friends, and for many years I found this easy to practise. But lately, it seems that many of my friends insist on talking about politics. Some are in favour of our current president, and some are opposed. The one thing they both have in common is that they are adamant that they are right and the other side is wrong!

Whenever I suggest we talk about something else, they want to know where I stand and insist that I agree with them. Frankly, I don’t have strong political opinions and just want to change the subject. But when I have said that, they always jump on me. Do you have any suggestion­s for how I should handle these political zealots from both sides of the political spectrum? —Peacemaker in Pittsburgh

Dear Peacemaker: Your intuition is so good — that taking sides in a political argument during dinner is fraught with danger. In his classic book How to Win Friends and Influence People, Dale Carnegie pointed out that arguing during dinner is a lose-lose propositio­n. If you lose the argument, you lose; and if win the argument, your guest feels inferior and you lose again. There is a reason that we have been advised for many years — long before the current political controvers­ies — to avoid discussion­s of politics and religion at dinner with friends.

Dear Annie: Several years ago, I suffered from severe back pain. I had sciatica that went from my lower back to my foot. I remember trying a hundred different treatments, including shots, and any relief was only temporary. Then a friend told me about Dr. John Sarno, a pain treatment specialist at New York University. I read his book Healing Back Pain: The Mind-Body Connection, and it changed my life!

I was never his patient; I never even met the man, but gradually — as I followed his treatment advice — my sciatica disappeare­d.

I am writing this letter now because I read that John Sarno died June 22 at the age of 93, and I hope you will print my letter as a message for any of your readers who are suffering from chronic pain. That includes headaches, back pain, sciatica, fibromyalg­ia and gastrointe­stinal problems.

I am writing this to alert any of your readers who are in chronic pain to check out the works of Dr. John Sarno. His advice could change your life, too.

—Grateful in Green Bay

Dear Grateful: Thank you for your inspiring letter. Dr. Sarno has many devoted fans like you, yet his treatment is still considered controvers­ial by some in the medical establishm­ent. He died one day before his 94th birthday and the release of a new documentar­y about him, called All the Rage (Saved by Sarno).

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