04/22/2026
Threat = Pain Amplifier
Good morning Errbody!
Quick story about common low back pain that I think will be helpful for those dealing with nagging issues.
I had a new patient come in who'd been managing low back pain for three years. She'd "tried everything." But when I asked her what she thought was wrong with her back, she said something close to, "It's just broken down. I'm 47. This is just how it is now."
That belief was doing more damage than any disc bulge could ever be!
Here's something that surprises most people: pain research over the last two decades has consistently shown that the intensity of your pain does not reliably correspond to the amount of tissue damage in your body.
A 2015 study in the journal Pain found that catastrophizing, meaning how much you believe the pain is terrible and uncontrollable, predicts disability better than the actual physical findings on an MRI.
Our understanding of pain shifted dramatically once researchers started mapping how the brain processes threat signals, not just injury signals.
What's actually happening is this: your brain functions as a threat-detection system, not a damage-detection system. When you've been hurting for months or years, your nervous system gets better and better at producing pain in response to smaller and smaller triggers.
Add in the belief that your body is fragile, broken, or past the point of repair, and your brain treats normal movement as a potential threat.
Eventually you move less, avoid more, and the pain sticks around not because the injury is getting worse but because the system protecting you has gotten oversensitive.
Soooo, if this sound like you, what the hell do you do about walking yourself out of this loop?
START HERE (seriously do it!):
1. Write down three things you used to do before the pain that you'd like to do again. Not a bucket list, just normal life stuff. Walking to the mailbox. Picking up your kid. Sitting through a movie. This exercise isn't wishful thinking. It starts reconnecting your brain to the idea that those things are possible again.
2. The next time you notice pain, try saying to yourself: "This is my nervous system being overprotective. It does not mean I am damaged." This is not positive self-talk. It is literally more accurate neuroscience than the story most people are running. The brain updates its threat output based on the information you give it!
3. Do one small movement today that you've been avoiding because it usually hurts, and go slowly and deliberately instead of bracing for the worst. Notice if the expectation was worse than the actual experience. Usually it is.
Try these out and reply to let us know how it goes. If you need help with HOW to get back to those things on your list, book a "Treatment" and we'll really dial it in.
Talk soon,
Dom
Click here for an update from Charge Health & Chiropractic!