
When your back hurts, the first thing you assume is damage: a slipped disc, a pinched nerve, maybe some degeneration or wear and tear.
It makes intuitive sense. After all, most pain in the body works this way—injury leads to pain. But chronic back pain is different.
To the surprise of many doctors and patients, research from Harvard and others reveals that there’s often no meaningful correlation between spinal structure and pain.
Multiple studies have shown that people with severe back pain often have “normal” imaging results—while people with scary-sounding MRI reports often feel totally fine.
A 2015 review in the American Journal of Neuroradiology found that:
And the numbers only go up with age.
Harvard Health Publishing summarized the problem like this:
“There simply isn't a close connection between the condition of the spine and whether or not people experience pain.”
— Harvard Health Blog
In wealthier countries with ergonomic workstations, memory-foam mattresses, and unlimited medical imaging, back pain is skyrocketing.
Meanwhile, in rural regions of developing nations—where people perform heavy manual labor all day—chronic back pain is relatively rare.
The contradiction has forced researchers to ask a new question:
What if chronic back pain isn’t primarily about injury…
but about how our nervous system processes stress, fear, and emotion?
A randomized trial published in JAMA Internal Medicine followed 320 adults with chronic low back pain. They were assigned to:
The results were striking:
Participants in both mind-based groups saw significantly greater reductions in pain—and the improvements lasted a full year.
Fear and emotional tension appear to amplify and sustain pain signals in the brain and body.
Which means:
We take this science seriously. The Makepeace Method helps you understand the role of the brain and nervous system in your pain—and gently teaches your system it’s safe to stand down.
No gimmicks. No pseudoscience. Just truth, clarity, and permission to heal.
Sources:
https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/mind-back-pain-201605049517
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For decades, patients with back pain have been told the same story: your spine is damaged, your muscles are weak, your body is broken. Surgery, injections, endless physical therapy — yet the epidemic only grows. But a small group of doctors and researchers dared to say: What if the problem isn’t in the back at all?

Researchers at Johns Hopkins discovered that once the brain learns to associate certain sensations with danger, it can keep generating pain even after the injury is gone. The good news: the brain can unlearn it too.

In a landmark study from the University of Colorado, two-thirds of chronic back-pain patients became pain-free after a brain-based program—no surgery, no medication. The treatment worked not by fixing the spine, but by retraining the brain.
You’ve fought hard and tried it all, but the burden was never yours to carry forever. Your brain is ready to reset, your body to feel safe again. Pain is not who you are - it’s time to reclaim your life.