Your Brain Is Not Broken — It’s Trying to Protect You
What the newest science tells us about chronic pain, unexplained symptoms, trauma, and why healing is more possible than you’ve been told.
You’ve been to the doctors. You’ve had the scans, the blood work, the referrals. You’ve been told everything looks fine — and yet you are not fine. The pain is real. The exhaustion is real. The bloating, the brain fog, the racing heart at 2 a.m. — all real. And being told there’s “nothing structurally wrong” can feel like the most isolating sentence a person can hear.
But here’s what that sentence actually means, if we translate it through the lens of modern neuroscience: the problem isn’t in your body’s tissues — it’s in the way your brain has learned to process signals. And that is, remarkably, very good news. Because brains can be retrained.
This article brings together some of the most exciting and hopeful science of our time — the neuroscience of pain, predictive coding, central and peripheral sensitization, the hidden cost of accumulated trauma, and a therapy called Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT) — to help you understand what might really be happening, and who is out there helping people recover.
Most of us grew up thinking pain worked like a telephone wire: tissue gets damaged, a signal travels up to the brain, we feel pain. Simple cause and effect. But decades of neuroscience have overturned this model entirely.
Pain is not a signal your body sends. It is a decision your brain makes.
Your brain is constantly receiving millions of signals from the body. It filters, weighs, and interprets them — and then decides whether to produce the experience of pain based on one central question: Is this dangerous? Pain is your brain’s alarm system. It’s designed to protect you, to make you stop, to get your attention. When it works correctly, it’s incredibly useful. When it misfires — that’s when chronic pain begins.
“If you can have terrible leg pain in a leg that is no longer attached to your body — as happens in phantom limb pain — that tells us definitively that pain can’t live in the body part alone. Pain is ultimately constructed by the brain.”
The proof of this is phantom limb pain: amputees who feel excruciating pain in limbs they no longer have. If pain were simply a tissue signal, phantom pain would be impossible. Its existence is scientific confirmation that the brain generates pain — and that means the brain can also learn to turn it off.
Here’s where neuroscience gets really interesting. Your brain isn’t just reacting to what’s happening — it’s constantly predicting what’s about to happen, and generating experience based on those predictions. This is called predictive coding (or predictive processing), and it’s one of the most transformative ideas in modern neuroscience.
Think of the brain like an incredibly sophisticated forecasting system. It uses every past experience, every memory, every context clue to build a model of the world — and then generates sensory experience based on that model. The actual signals arriving from your body are just used to confirm or correct the prediction.
Have you ever reached for a glass you thought was full, and nearly fallen forward when it turned out to be empty? That’s your brain’s prediction being wrong. The same thing happens with pain. If your brain predicts that a movement is dangerous — based on a past injury, a doctor’s worried expression, or years of fear — it may generate pain before any tissue damage occurs, or keep generating it long after healing is complete.
In chronic pain, the brain’s predictive model has essentially learned: “This situation = danger.” A particular movement, a smell, a season, even a time of day can trigger the pain alarm — not because damage is occurring, but because the brain expects it to. This is the mechanism behind so many people finding their pain worsens in anticipation of an activity, or flares during stress even without any physical cause.
Understanding predictive coding is liberating because it tells us: the predictions can be updated. The brain is not fixed. It is plastic.
Neuroplasticity — the brain’s ability to reorganize itself by forming new neural connections — is the reason we can learn new skills, recover from stroke, and adapt to change. But neuroplasticity has a shadow side: the same mechanism that lets us learn the piano can lock us into chronic pain.
Neurons that fire together wire together. The more often the pain alarm fires, the stronger and more efficient that neural pathway becomes. Pain becomes, in a very real sense, a learned habit of the nervous system. The brain gets better and better at producing pain — even when there’s no damage to justify it.
(real or predicted)
pain alarm
increases
strengthens
easily next time
Peripheral Sensitization
Peripheral sensitization happens at the level of the nerves in your body’s tissues. After an injury or sustained inflammation, nerve endings become hypersensitive — they start firing at much lower thresholds than normal. Something that wouldn’t ordinarily cause pain (a light touch, mild pressure) now triggers a pain response. This is why sunburned skin hurts when you put on a shirt, or why an injured ankle throbs even when still.
In most cases, peripheral sensitization resolves as healing occurs. But sometimes, the sensitization continues — or spreads to the central nervous system.
Central Sensitization
Central sensitization is where the alarm system itself becomes overactive. The central nervous system — the brain and spinal cord — becomes hypersensitive, amplifying all pain signals regardless of their source. Researchers describe it as the nervous system learning to be in a constant state of high alert.
Key research finding: In central sensitization, the nervous system’s “volume knob” gets stuck at maximum. Stimuli that are normally non-painful (a handshake, clothing fabric, a slight temperature change) become sources of intense pain. The nervous system has learned that everything is dangerous.
Central sensitization is now understood to be a major driver of fibromyalgia, chronic back pain, migraines, chronic pelvic pain, CRPS, and many other conditions that don’t respond to structural treatments — because the structure is not the problem.
For many people with chronic pain, the pain isn’t the only thing. There’s also crushing fatigue. There’s irritable bowel, bloating, nausea. There’s palpitations, dizziness, difficulty swallowing. There’s brain fog so thick it feels like thinking through wet concrete.
These aren’t separate, unrelated conditions. They are the body and brain speaking the same language of danger — just through different channels.
The autonomic nervous system, which regulates heartbeat, digestion, immune response, sleep, and dozens of other functions, is deeply intertwined with the pain system. When the brain’s threat-detection system is chronically overactivated, the autonomic nervous system is pulled into a sustained “fight-or-flight” state. The results ripple across every organ system:
This is why conditions like ME/CFS, Long Covid, fibromyalgia, POTS, and functional neurological disorder often travel together — and why many people’s symptoms shift and move over time. The common thread is a sensitized nervous system making threat predictions across multiple body systems simultaneously.
None of this means symptoms are “all in your head” in a dismissive sense. The physiology is real, measurable, and documented. What it means is that the origin of the signal is different from what was once assumed — and that changes where effective treatment needs to focus.
One of the most important pieces of the puzzle is this: the nervous system doesn’t distinguish between physical and emotional threats. A childhood of unpredictability, emotional neglect, or abuse is as significant to the nervous system as a car accident. And the body remembers both.
Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) — abuse, neglect, household dysfunction, loss — have been shown in large-scale research to dramatically increase the risk of chronic pain, autoimmune conditions, heart disease, and mental health conditions in adulthood. The more ACEs a person has, the more elevated their lifetime risk across every major category of illness.
This is not fate. It is neurobiology. A nervous system shaped by early threat learns to stay in protective mode. It learns to predict danger in ambiguous situations. It develops sensitized responses to stressors that a nervous system formed in safety might not even register.
“Childhood experiences shape illness later in life — not through weakness of character, but through the very real physiology of a nervous system trained to stay alert.”
Physical trauma matters too. A car accident, a sports injury, surgery, or a prolonged illness can all activate the same sensitization pathways. When trauma — physical or emotional — is layered upon other trauma, the nervous system’s threat response can become deeply conditioned, firing even in the absence of any current danger.
The nervous system of someone with unprocessed trauma is not broken. It is doing exactly what it learned to do. The work of healing is teaching it that the world is now safe.
Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT) is a relatively new, evidence-based psychological treatment developed by Alan Gordon, LCSW, at the Pain Psychology Center. It is built on a simple but radical premise: if pain is a learned neural pathway, it can be unlearned.
PRT helps people shift their relationship to pain from fear and avoidance to curious, safe observation. Crucially, it doesn’t ask people to ignore pain or push through it. Instead, it teaches a skill called “somatic tracking” — the ability to observe physical sensations with safety and openness rather than with alarm.
In a landmark randomized controlled trial, participants with chronic back pain were assigned to PRT, placebo, or usual care. After treatment:
• 66% of PRT participants were pain-free or nearly so
• Only 20% of the placebo group and 10% of usual-care participants achieved similar results
• Brain imaging (fMRI) showed measurable changes in the pain-processing regions of PRT participants’ brains
• Benefits persisted at one-year follow-up
PRT is often paired with Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy (EAET), which specifically works to process the emotional component of chronic symptoms — the suppressed anger, grief, fear, and needs that the brain has learned to express through physical symptoms instead.
The combination of these approaches represents a paradigm shift in how we understand and treat chronic pain: not as a structural problem to be fixed, but as a learned pattern of the brain and nervous system to be gently, compassionately unlearned.
The good news about this field is that it’s not happening only in research journals. A growing community of physicians, therapists, social workers, and recovered patients are sharing this science freely on YouTube and beyond — meeting people where they are and offering a way forward. Here are some of the most valuable voices.
Clinicians & Researchers
Dr. Crista Taylor is a practitioner working in the nervous system and chronic illness space, focusing on helping people understand the connection between their symptoms and nervous system dysregulation. Search “Dr. Crista Taylor chronic pain” on YouTube to find her educational content on the mind-body connection.
Recovery Coaches & Educators on YouTube
Beyond clinicians, a vibrant community of coaches — many of them recovered patients themselves — offer free, accessible education and hope on YouTube every day. Here is a starting list:
The pace of research in this field has accelerated dramatically. Beyond the landmark Boulder Back Pain Study (JAMA Psychiatry, 2022), several important developments are reshaping how clinicians and researchers think about chronic pain.
Psychophysiologic Symptom Relief Therapy (PSRT) for Long Covid: A 2023 study published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine found that a mind-body intervention was effective in reducing Long Covid symptoms — suggesting the same neuroplastic mechanisms at play in chronic pain apply to post-infectious conditions.
The nociplastic pain category: The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) has formally recognized “nociplastic pain” as a third distinct mechanism of pain (alongside nociceptive and neuropathic), acknowledging chronic pain that arises from altered nociception without clear tissue damage. This validates millions of people whose pain was previously dismissed as unexplained.
Neuroimaging findings: fMRI studies show that successful PRT treatment produces measurable changes in the brain — specifically in areas like the anterior insula and prefrontal cortex — demonstrating that the changes are not just psychological reports, but structural shifts in neural activity.
ACEs and chronic illness: Research continues to strengthen the dose-response relationship between childhood adverse experiences and adult chronic conditions — reinforcing the importance of trauma-informed approaches to pain treatment across all clinical settings.
The emerging picture is one of extraordinary convergence: neuroscience, psychology, immunology, and trauma research are all arriving at the same conclusion. The nervous system is the common pathway. And the nervous system can be healed.
Recovery from neuroplastic pain and nervous system dysregulation is not the same as recovery from a broken bone. It is not linear. It does not follow a predictable schedule. It often involves setbacks that feel like failure but are simply part of rewiring.
What helps, consistently, across clinicians and coaches and recovery stories:
Safety. Teaching the brain — through evidence, through experience, through the body — that it is no longer in danger. This is the foundation of everything.
Processing emotions. The unprocessed grief, anger, fear, and longing that the nervous system has been holding in the body needs somewhere to go. Journaling, therapy, somatic practices, and EAET are all pathways to this.
Moving toward life. Not pushing through pain in a way that reinforces fear, but gradually re-engaging with joyful activities that signal to the brain that life is safe and worth living. This is sometimes called “pacing with joy” rather than pacing with fear.
Community. One of the most underrated medicines is hearing from someone who had what you have and got better. The YouTube channels listed above are full of these stories — and they matter deeply to the brain’s sense of what is possible.
“Your goal should be recovery, not just coping. The brain that learned chronic pain can learn something new.”
If you are reading this in the middle of unexplained symptoms, chronic pain, or years of medical dead-ends — please know that this is a growing, serious, evidence-based field. You are not imagining things. You are not beyond help. And the science is finally catching up to where your healing can begin.
• Association for the Treatment of Neuroplastic Symptoms (ATNS): symptomatic.me — practitioner directory and patient resources
• The Way Out by Alan Gordon, LCSW — foundational PRT book
• Unlearn Your Pain by Dr. Howard Schubiner — research, exercises, and mind-body program
• The Pain Reprocessing Therapy Workbook by Vanessa Blackstone & Olivia Sinaiko — step-by-step workbook
• Curable App — curable.com — guided pain reprocessing program
• Freeme App — freemehealth.com — ME/CFS and Long Covid focused recovery program
• Pain Psychology Center — painpsychologycenter.com — PRT therapist network