
Back pain can seem like a mystery. It strikes out of nowhere. It moves around. It shows up when you least expect it and lingers long after any injury should have healed.
If you’ve been chasing solutions with no lasting relief, here’s a possibility you may not have considered:
Not because it’s “all in your head.”
But because it’s being driven by your brain.
Not everyone is ready to hear that. But if you’ve made it this far, I’m guessing you’re at least open to the idea.
So let’s see if this fits.
Here are a few signs that your pain may be neuroplastic—meaning, it’s being generated or sustained by the nervous system, not structural damage.
This one is harder to admit, but it’s often the key:
If so, your body may have been expressing what your mind couldn’t.
This doesn’t mean your pain isn’t real. It is real.
But it’s being sustained by a kind of emotional and neurological short-circuit.
And the good news is—you can start to rewire it.
I’ve worked with people who:
In each case, the moment they saw the emotional pattern, the pain lost its grip.
When you stop fearing the pain…
When you stop searching for damage…
When you start listening to your nervous system instead of fighting it…
That’s when the healing begins.
If so, you're not alone, and you’re not broken.
This is the exact path I went down myself. And it's what led me to build the Makepeace Method to help others like you.
If you want to explore this further, my course walks you through the entire process—one clear, daily lesson at a time.
And many people start to feel relief on Day One.
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.