Have you ever been told that your pain is all in your head? It's more complicated than that when we consider how it affects our complete body and mind. We talked all about this on the On Call Empath Podcast.
I sat down with physical therapist, Dr. Alissa Wolfe, for a chat about why chronic pain education is so important but so hard to find in the health care system.
Dr. Redmond brings much needed clarity on the brain science behind pain, the factors that contribute to whether or not pain becomes chronic, and how the nervous system is intimately involved.
Kim Gross and guest Dr. Anna Redmond discuss chronic pain management, specifically catering to high-achieving women. Dr. Redmond emphasizes the connection between chronic pain and perfectionistic behaviors, explaining how focusing on values rather than pain can significantly improve one's quality of life.
Dr. Derrick Hines sits with Chronic Pain Educator, Dr. Anna Redmond to discuss the underlying reason for pain. Tune in to learn what types of pain exist, how your mind affects the way you feel pain, how to stop pain before it becomes chronic, and more!

In this episode of A Healthy Push podcast, Shannon Jackson chats with Dr. Anna Redmond, a chronic pain educator and trained pain psychologist. We sat down for a conversation on the relationship between chronic pain and anxiety.

This challenge stems from a potential lifetime of common acute pain experiences, the language used by their providers, as well as experiences over the course of their journey to find relief from chronic pain.
Many of the women with chronic pain that I saw in our clinic came into my office with defensiveness, guardedness, and disengagement. This is totally understandable when you consider a history of being told and perceptions of being told that their pain was “psychological”. I also considered the longstanding feelings of helplessness, frustration, and hopelessness that they must be carrying due to years of extensive evaluation, intensive treatments and the futility of “nothing works”.
I could also sense the fear of these women as I presented my treatment plan. I think that many of the treatments for chronic pain that we now encourage seem counterintuitive.
See what I mean?
What I’m getting at here is that the ONLY thing that matters in that moment, in the beginning of first meeting with a person who has chronic pain, is listening.
Find out what they’ve been told and how they understand their pain.
Then, use all effective strategies in your back pocket to help them reconceptualize their understanding of pain and pain treatment.
Consider this analogy:
Think of pain signals in your body as a pedestrian crossing train tracks. Sometimes pedestrians have to pass through and cross the tracks. Sometimes the gate is all the way open and pedestrians can cross the tracks. Sometimes the gate is all the way closed, and then it is not open for the pedestrians to pass through.
Consider that there is an area of the brain and spinal cord that acts as a gate. When the gate to your brain is open, pain signals have the right of way and full FREE ACCESS to your brain.
Medication or medical interventions might close the gate partway, but for most people they do not completely close the gate (Coakley & Schechter, 2013).
So what do we do? Since we know that pain is multidimensional and biopsychosocial, it makes the most sense to take a multi-pronged approach to addressing it. Other interventions such as education, cognitive skills, behavioral changes, distraction, positive experiences with movement, slowly and intentionally increasing daily activities are all examples of effective strategies to close the gate (and possibly keep it closed)!
Understanding this aspect about how pain is transmitted can really take the mystery out. This analogy also helps people feel like they have a lot of options and control. Tell me about the impact it had on you by emailing me at anna@drannaredmond.com or shooting me a DM on instagram!
Education provides the power to take the next step in managing your pain. You want to do the things you enjoy (or even basic daily activities) without flaring up your pain. For a limited time, you can grab my free video tutorial to get you started:
3 Simple Steps to a Balanced Day... Without the Flare-Ups.
This free video tutorial is dedicated to helping women with pain begin to find confidence to return to the moments, activities, and people they love the most.
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