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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?
These pioneers challenged mainstream medicine by pointing to something radical, yet profoundly human: the role of the brain, emotions, and nervous system in chronic pain. Their courage — and their research — paved the way for approaches like The Makepeace Method.
Here are some of the doctors whose voices still echo today:
New York University Rusk Institute
“The purpose of the pain is to distract the mind from repressed emotional issues.”
The trailblazer of mind-body medicine. Sarno’s clinical work at NYU showed that unresolved emotions could manifest as very real pain — long before neuroscience confirmed it.
Former spine surgeon, Swedish Neuroscience Institute (Seattle)
“Chronic pain is a neurophysiological disorder, not a structural one.”
A spine surgeon who walked away from surgery after realizing most operations didn’t cure pain. His shift toward brain-first treatment shocked his peers.
Wayne State University School of Medicine
“Chronic pain is a learned nerve pathway disorder that can be reversed.”
Through clinical trials, Schubiner demonstrated that pain circuits in the brain can be retrained — proving that healing is possible without structural fixes.
Boston University School of Medicine
“Pain and tension are all ways the body holds onto emotional injury.”
Author of The Body Keeps the Score, van der Kolk showed how trauma leaves a physical imprint long after the event has passed.
Neuroscientist, Johns Hopkins–trained, NIMH & Georgetown University
“Your body is your subconscious mind… it can be changed by emotions.”
A neuroscientist whose discovery of neuropeptides revealed how emotions literally live in the body’s tissues.
Physician & addiction specialist
“Repressed emotions, and self-denial, create the perfect storm for pain and illness.”
Widely respected for his work on stress and health, Maté revealed how personality traits like people-pleasing can quietly fuel chronic conditions.
PhD, Medical Biophysics, University of California, Berkeley
“Trauma sticks in the nervous system. The body remembers what the mind cannot.”
Levine’s work on somatic experiencing explained why the nervous system keeps replaying unresolved stress as physical symptoms.
Director, Stanford Forgiveness Project
“Forgiveness reduces anger, improves health, and quiets the body’s stress response.”
His research on forgiveness showed how unresolved anger and resentment keep the stress system — and pain — alive.
Adjunct Clinical Professor Emeritus, Stanford University School of Medicine
“When we change the way we think, we change the way we feel, including physical pain.”
A pioneer in cognitive behavioral therapy, Burns demonstrated how thought patterns affect both emotions and physical sensations.
Each of these voices challenged the conventional wisdom that pain must equal physical damage. Their findings converge on a simple, radical truth: chronic pain is generated by the brain and nervous system—and it can be unlearned.
The Makepeace Method brings these insights together into one structured, seven-day process. By combining neuroscience, emotional awareness, and practical tools, it helps people finally break free from pain.

Most people arrive at The Makepeace Method after months or years of chasing physical fixes — stretches, adjustments, injections, mattresses, supplements, MRIs. They’ve tried everything except the one thing that actually changes chronic pain: Understanding what the pain is.

Robert’s pain arrived after decades of pushing himself at work. His scans showed degeneration, but so do most for people his age. When he finally slowed down and addressed the stress behind his drive, the pain eased—not through treatment, but through understanding.

In 1996, Purdue Pharma introduced a drug it described as a breakthrough in pain management. OxyContin was marketed as modern, safe, and compassionate—a scientific solution to human suffering. What followed is now one of the worst public health disasters in history. More than a quarter million people in North America have died from prescription opioid overdoses.
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.