Apologies for being flippant but Ive only just registered their logo. Coffee cup
I thought they were supposed to be scared of coffee cups or are they doing group aversion therapy.

Asking someone out for a cup of coffee is the strategy of two BPS supporters in Norway when they are criticised, and at least one of them is known to pester people with requests until they remove their criticism.Apologies for being flippant but Ive only just registered their logo. Coffee cup![]()
I thought they were supposed to be scared of coffee cups or are they doing group aversion therapy.
Weird.Asking someone out for a cup of coffee is the strategy of two BPS supporters in Norway when they are criticised, and at least one of them is known to pester people with requests until they remove their criticism.
“Post-exertional malaise and setbacks in chronic fatigue conditions: Cutting-edge neuroscience approach” COFFI Consumer dialogues People with chronic fatigue conditions can experience recurrence of symptoms, often precipitated by physical, emotional or cognitive exertion.
Termed post-exertional malaise (PEM), this can pose a big challenge to full recovery. This seminar explores explanations and management approaches for post-exertional malaise and setbacks in chronic fatigue conditions in a dialogue between research scientists, clinicians and consumers. COFFI is a global research collaborative dedicated to research to help explain, treat and manage fatigue and persistent somatic symptoms following infection.
The COFFI Consumer Advisory Group advise on COFFI’s research portfolio, and promote constructive public narrative around helping patients, researchers and practitioners work together for managing and recovering from these conditions.
Professor Silje Reme is a clinical pain psychologist at Oslo University Hospital. Dr. Becca Kennedy. She used an evidence-based neuroscience approach to chronic conditions while working at Kaiser Permanente.
Rachel Whitfield developed long covid during the pandemic and has now fully recovered. She has since told her story multiple times to the BBC and ITV as well as a variety of podcasts.
Fiona Symington lived with M.E/CFS for 14 years, and chronic pain for 25 years before recovering completely using mind-body medicine five years ago.
As has Paul Garner, their PAG leader.Rachel Whitfield developed long covid during the pandemic and has now fully recovered. She has since told her story multiple times to the BBC and ITV as well as a variety of podcasts.
The Jake who asks a question near the end is Dr Jake Hollis who wrote the two confused Guardian letters recently.
"Hundreds of years ago that might have secured their survival." Yep, really.
I sometimes wonder, is this crap still actual? As in, do people really still believe this is some form of conditioning? And not the simple fact that dogs are smart enough to learn associations and if you're enough of a jerk to make them learn that if you ring a bell and feed them, you can also yank their chain and ring the bell without feeding them. You know, like a jerk.Was scrolling through the YouTube video and saw this image, suggesting PEM is like Pavlov conditioning with dogs:
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But they're not danger signals, so the entire concept is pointless. I don't know why they keep insisting so, other than that it's necessary for their ideology. But symptoms do not signal anything, they are something, and it's not danger, it's illness. I have never once felt 'threatened' in any way by symptoms, or been on the lookout for danger, or any of this weird nonsense. This is simply not how humans behave.And that typically a predication error would help update the brain to understand that actually, you know, that these danger signals aren't warranted
I would like to see an on-the-spot demonstration of this idea that people can create their own symptoms with their minds. I'd like to see a proponent of this idea stand in front of me and make him/herself faintThere seems to be a deep lack of common sense in psychological theorisation that pops up in all these ideas.
We are told that a pathological state is explained by some normal regulatory process - like Pavlovian conditioning or predictive coding. Yet these processes lead to normality. So there has to be a second half to the theory that says why normality does not apply.
'How do we in in in an effective and appropriate way engage people in this idea that they can try this approach which seems entirely counterintuitive to their experiences, to what they are hearing online, to all of the information in their environment?'
I think that's possible by hyperventilating.I'd like to see a proponent of this idea stand in front of me and make him/herself faint
Without hyperventilating. Just thinking. Since the mind is so all-powerful...I think that's possible by hyperventilating.
Yep and it is always underlined that with conditioning the immediacy is the most important thing (followed by strength which isn't nearly as important) otherwise.. it just doesn't work at all.I suspect the behaviour of the BPS advocates seeing psychological/psychogenic explanations everywhere is closer to simple Classical Conditioning than the PEM experience of people with ME or Long Covid. Have these people ever communicated with people experiencing PEM?
Do they have any understanding of Classical Conditioning? Pavlov’s dogs salivated immediately not twenty fours later, their salivation did not continue for days or weeks when no food appeared, salivation was a normal modality specific food related response and the bell failed to trigger other unrelated autonomic responses. Please go away and study psychology 101 and actually ask patients about their experience.