Living with ongoing physical pain is exhausting – especially when medical tests come back “normal” and you’re told there’s no clear structural explanation. You may have seen multiple providers, tried treatments, and still feel stuck with pain that won’t resolve.
If this is your experience, it doesn’t mean the pain isn’t real; it means the cause may not be structural. The pain itself is still very real and deserves treatment.
Understanding persistent physical pain
Pain is not only a signal of tissue damage. It is also shaped by the nervous system, stress, past experiences, and how the body has learned to protect itself.
When pain continues after an injury has healed – or appears without a medical explanation that makes sense – the nervous system may be stuck in a heightened state of alert. In this state, the brain continues to send pain signals even when there is no ongoing physical threat. Your pain is not “in your head;” it’s as real as if you were to be hit by car.
We sometimes refer to this as neuroplastic or nociplastic pain, but you don’t need diagnostic labels to understand what’s happening: your system is working overtime to keep you safe.
Reassurance often isn’t enough
Being told “there’s nothing wrong” can feel invalidating and confusing when pain persists. While medical reassurance is important, it doesn’t automatically calm a nervous system that has learned to associate certain sensations, movements, or contexts with danger.
Pain may fluctuate, migrate, or worsen during stress—even when you’re doing everything “right.” This doesn’t mean you’re causing the pain. It means your system hasn’t yet learned that it’s safe to let go of protection.
How can therapy help me with my pain or physical symptoms?
My approach to working with persistent physical pain focuses on both the present experience and the experiences that shaped it.
Our sessions might focus on:
- Understanding how pain is generated and maintained
- Supporting nervous system regulation and safety
- Reducing fear, vigilance, and avoidance around pain
- Gently exploring past stress, illness, or emotional experiences that may have contributed
- Rebuilding trust in your body and its signals through a variety of techniques
Rather than trying to push through pain or “think it away,” we work toward creating the conditions where pain no longer needs to stay loud in order to be heard.
With the right support, many people experience reduced pain intensity, less fear, and greater freedom in their bodies – even if symptoms don’t disappear overnight. If reading this spoke to you and you would like to discuss to see if therapy could help, contact me to schedule a consultation.
