I think it's interesting that some folks in this thread who were skeptical (or worse to the point of ridicule for some) about my trying grounding to alleviate pain haven't commented about the success I am having. STILL NO PAIN ladies and germs.
edit: or at least none, zero pain in the last week or ten days. Getting better all the time. Even the fleeting-type pain never happens much and when it does, it might be like a minute, then it's gone.
I am very glad to read of your improved RA symptoms. But you should still count me as a skeptic. (It was my job to be so much of a skeptic during the last 20 years before I retired.)
Placebos work especially well on symptoms modulated by the brain, like the perception of pain. Placebos may make you feel better, but they will not cure you.
And … you are the best person around to fool yourself
.
Quoted from "
The Power of the Placebo Effect"
This gets magnified when only one person (N=1) is talking about his own perception of pain, as you are. It would help convince the skeptics like me if many more people (N=100 or more) were involved in the same effort.
I do get why you're interested in this. You are simply interested if grounding helps you and your RA pain. And, you enjoy doing DIY projects. But other readers may want to know if grounding really matters.
Here's an example of the kind of evidence skeptics like me want to see. I worked in research on new anti-cancer drugs. The ultimate test for any of these drugs is a large clinical trial. This trial was meant to see how well a new drug called Selpercatinib (Red trace, below) works in lung cancer when compared to the existing standard first-line therapy (Blue trace). Patients got either Selpercatinib alone or the control (oxaliplatin cytotoxic chemotherapy plus the antibody called Pembrolizumab, aka Keytruda). There were 300 patients in each arm of this trial, and they were followed for about 3 years. The graph shows how many patients in each arm survived without their cancer growing (progression-free-survival). Clearly, Selpercatinib works better. (I now take this drug for lung cancer, so this is quite important for me.)
I do appreciate how you report your observations as you run this DIY experiment. But please understand that whole body grounding to treat RA symptoms has to clear a higher bar before it gets widely accepted.