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Unrecognizable athlete holding her knee in pain at the park.
Unfortunately, we鈥檝e largely got chronic pain wrong. (Photo: skynesher/iStock)

Have We Been Thinking About Pain All Wrong?

New research says yes. Fortunately, there's something we can do about it.

Published: 
Unrecognizable athlete holding her knee in pain at the park.
(Photo: skynesher/iStock)

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According to , more than 20 percent of Americans experience persistent physical pain that interferes听with their daily life. More than听听of Americans also experience chronic psychological pain听in the form of depression, anxiety, and other mental-health disorders.听

Unfortunately, we鈥檝e largely got chronic pain wrong. 鈥淐onventional thinking on pain may be incorrect at best and harmful at worst,鈥 says Kelly Starrett, a doctor of physical therapy and founder of the听, a gym and online resource dedicated to helping people relieve pain, prevent injury, and improve their physical performance.听

The first way we get chronic pain wrong, says Starrett, is that we assume听it occurs in the muscles or bones or, in the case of psychological disorders,听the mind. However, more recent work in the field of pain science this isn鈥檛 the case. Persistent chronic pain is a bio-psycho-social phenomenon. In other words, it manifests from a combination of issues arising in our bodies, minds, and communities. While acute pain (e.g.,听a broken wrist, a sprained ankle, or transient anxiety or depression) recedes with targeted treatments, chronic pain does not. Thus, Starrett says, it requires a much听more holisticview.听

Consider the following examples: mental illness听, while听persistent physical pain can be alleviated with psychological training, such as听. In order to address chronic pain in a meaningful way, explains Starrett, we鈥檝e got to focus on the entire system.

The second way we get chronic pain wrong is that we assume pain is always a bad thing, and thus we come to fear it. However, this couldn鈥檛 be further from the truth, says , a performance coach (and also my ). 鈥淧ain is a dramatic evolutionary advantage,鈥 Magness says. 鈥淚t is information. It tells us that something is wrong, or that something could go wrong. But sometimes a little bit of pain also tells us that we鈥檙e on the right track.鈥 Just think about it. Any meaningful attempt toward improvement鈥攂e it physical, psychological, emotional, or social鈥攗sually involves at least some discomfort, if not pain.听

According to , a professor of surgery and anesthesiology at Northeast Ohio Medical School and chairman of the pain center at Western听Reserve Hospital, persistent chronic pain that has no underlying current pathology (i.e.,whatever was wrong in the body has been fixed) is often perpetuated for two reasons: we become either听overly sensitive听to that discomfort and pain or insensitive听to it, both of which can lead to more long-standing and severe issues.听

On the oversensitive side, at the slightest bit of pain, our mind-body system freaks out, which in turn causes more pain. We enter into a vicious cycle of hypersensitivity, with pain begetting more pain. This is common to and . On the insensitive side, we endure too much pain without changing our approach or asking for help. The result, explains Narouze, is that the pain often gets worse. 鈥淥ne of the strongest predictors of persistent chronic pain is how long a person has gone without getting help. The longer that period, the more likely the pain will become chronic,鈥 he says. Learned helplessness is also common to , which, unsurprisingly, is associated with听听and听.

When we become oversensitive to pain, the solution is often forcing ourselves to experience it, so that we can retrain our mind-body system not to freak out.听A person undergoing this kind of 听learns that sometimes it is their fear and avoidance of experiencing pain that is causing their distress more than the actual pain itself. Exposure therapy is part of a broader model called cognitive behavioral therapy, which, according to Narouze, 鈥渉as the highest level of evidence, even more than medications, for helping with persistent chronic pain.鈥

When we accept too much pain, the solution generally involves learning that it鈥檚 OKto ask for help, that pain need听not be a given, and that we can take action to improve our situations. This is also a cornerstone of cognitive behavioral therapy and other evidence-based therapies, such as .听

In both circumstances鈥攐versensitivity and insensitivity鈥攑roblems arise when we respond inappropriately, either by not tolerating any pain or by tolerating too much of it. In both cases, pain tends to become worse.

In the final analysis, perhaps we need to stop thinking about persistent chronic pain in a vacuum and start addressing it more holistically; if we听stop focusing solely on the sensation of pain itself, we can start focusing on what it is telling us and how we respond to it, as individuals and communities.

Brad Stulberg () coaches on performance and well-being and writes听国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚听Do It Better听column. He is the bestselling author of the books听听and听. Subscribe to his newsletter听.

Lead Photo: skynesher/iStock

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