Our counseling approach has been designed to assist you with tapping into your full potential throughout your pain management experience. We will provide you with the added insight you need to set personal or professional goals, which will give you the life you really want.
We understand that managing chronic pain can be difficult, and setbacks happen. Some challenges are beyond your control, but many can be improved with the right support. We're here to help you get back on track with your physician's treatment plan in a compassionate, nonjudgmental way—you're not alone in this journey!
We provide workshops aimed to foster a sense of community and provide valuable support for individuals grappling with chronic pain by creating a space for shared experiences and collaborative strategies.
Pain is an all-too-familiar problem and the most common reason that people see a physician. Unfortunately, alleviating pain isn't always straightforward.
At least 100 million adults in the United States suffer from chronic pain, according to the Institute of Medicine. The American Academy of Pain Medicine reports that chronic pain affects more Americans than diabetes, heart disease and cancer combined.
Understanding and managing the thoughts, emotions and behaviors that accompany your discomfort can help you cope more effectively with your pain — and can actually reduce the intensity of your pain.
The Evolution of Pain: From Injury to Illness, From Mystery to Meaning
For centuries, pain was seen as a signal—an alert system warning of injury or disease. But what happens when the pain doesn't go away? When the wound heals but the suffering lingers, shapeshifting into something deeper, more complex, and harder to treat? Until recently (2005), many healthcare systems—and the public—viewed chronic pain through the wrong lens. Fortunately, that view has shifted dramatically over the past two decades.
Welcome to the new age of pain science.
From Broken Bodies to Rewired Brains
Then: Before 2005, the dominant belief was straightforward: pain stemmed from tissue damage or inflammation. Fix the body, and the pain would resolve. But for millions living with persistent pain, that fix never came. Their agony was often dismissed, pathologized, or treated as purely psychosomatic.
Now: Modern neuroscience tells a different story. Pain is no longer seen as a mere symptom—it’s recognized as a disease of the nervous system. It’s shaped not just by what's happening in the body, but also by how the brain processes, amplifies, or mutes those signals. This shift reframes chronic pain as a neurobiological disorder involving maladaptive neuroplasticity, central sensitization, and disordered pain modulation pathways.
Central Sensitization and the “Wind-Up” Effect: The Hidden Mechanisms
Then: Terms like “central sensitization” or “wind-up” were rarely mentioned outside of research labs.
Now: These concepts are foundational. Central sensitization describes how the central nervous system becomes hypersensitive, overreacting to stimuli that wouldn't normally hurt. Repeated pain signals can cause a 'wind-up' effect, making future pain feel worse due to spinal cord plasticity. This isn’t imagination—it’s a physiological reality.
The Brain: Not Just a Receiver, But a Conductor
Then: The somatosensory cortex was thought to be the primary processing center for pain.
Now: We know that chronic pain involves the limbic system—the brain's emotional command center. Structures like the amygdala, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and insula modulate how we feel pain, not just where it hurts. Neuroimaging has uncovered “pain signatures” in the brain that correlate with chronicity, catastrophizing, and emotional trauma.
Beyond the Physical: A Biopsychosocial Revolution
Then: Psychological factors were seen as separate—if not secondary—to physical pain. This left many patients feeling invalidated or told it was “all in their head.”
Now: We understand that trauma, anxiety, depression, and fear-avoidant behaviors are part of the pain experience. The biopsychosocial model integrates mind, body, and context, shifting treatment from one-dimensional fixes to holistic healing.
The Rise of Interdisciplinary, Patient-Centered Care
Then: Treatments focused almost exclusively on medication, injections, or surgery. Patients were passive recipients of care, waiting for a fix.
Now: Multimodal pain management is the gold standard. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), mindfulness, physical rehabilitation, neuromodulation, and patient education about pain neurobiology empower individuals to play an active role in their healing. It’s not about curing pain—it’s about reclaiming function, agency, and life.
Pain is Not Just a Symptom. It Is the Disease.
This is the most transformative shift of all. Chronic pain isn’t simply prolonged acute pain. It is its entity, marked by changes in the brain and spinal cord that persist long after tissues have healed. Recognizing this doesn't just open new treatment pathways; it restores dignity to millions whose pain was once invisible.
A Call to Action
Understanding pain differently means treating it differently! It’s time for clinicians, patients, and policymakers to align with modern science. The traditional lens, focused only on broken bones or inflamed joints, is no longer sufficient.
Chronic pain is real! It is biopsychosocial-spiritual. It is brain-based. Not mind over matter, but matter over matter. And most importantly, it is treatable through connection, compassion, and cutting-edge science.
-Dr. Howard Schubiner, MD
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