Pain recovery made possible.
Chronic Pain Therapy
Are you struggling with chronic pain that medical practitioners haven't been able to resolve? Have you explored countless approaches and consulted numerous specialists without finding relief for your unexplained symptoms? It's common to discover that viewing pain solely through a medical or physical lens isn't enough. If you've found yourself here, you may have realized that a different approach is needed. As a chronic pain therapist in Los Angeles, I specialize in treating chronic pain from a mind-body perspective. This approach can help reduce the fear associated with pain and, ultimately, diminish the pain itself.
As a pain psychologist in California, I utilize evidence-based practices, including Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) to help folks recover from chronic pain.
I have the most advanced level (Mastery) training in PRT from the Pain Reprocessing Therapy Center. Together, we will address neuroplastic or primary pain symptoms with proven, evidence-based strategies.
Understanding pain science through psychoeducation is a critical part of our work together. By reinterpreting pain as a danger signal, we can manage, reduce, and even eliminate chronic issues such as:
Persistent back pain or post-surgery pain
Neck pain
Headaches and migraines
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Chronic joint pain and carpal tunnel
Inconsistent symptoms like tingling, numbness, cramping, and tightness
Unexplained physical symptoms with no medical diagnosis (negative tests but continued pain)
Pain from past surgeries or injuries
Medication-resistant pain
Chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia
If you're looking for a pain psychologist or chronic pain therapist in Los Angeles, I'm here to help you on your journey to relief.
Individual therapy with a pain psychologist
Online or in-person.
50 mins | $285 | Book Consultation Call
Frequently Asked Questions
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Yes. Chronic pain is always real — and it is always processed by the brain and nervous system.
In some cases, pain persists because the nervous system has become sensitized, even when there is no ongoing tissue damage. This is sometimes referred to as neuroplastic pain.
Evidence-based treatments such as Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT), help calm the nervous system and retrain the brain’s pain response. Research shows that when the brain stops interpreting signals as dangerous, pain can significantly reduce — and in some cases resolve.
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Normal imaging does not mean your pain isn’t real. All pain is real.
Many people with chronic back or neck pain can have normal scans but can be in tremendous pain.
Conversely, people with abnormal imaging and scans can have no pain at all.Abnormal scans do not equal pain. Just like normal scans do not equal no pain.
Pain exists when the brain and nervous system remain in a state of protection or high alert in the absence (or presence) of abnormal findings.
When medical causes have been appropriately ruled out, we examine closely what may be maintaining those pain pathways. We then work together to find ways to train the brain and shift that pattern safely and gradually.
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No. Your pain is real. All pain is real.
All pain is generated by the brain — even the pain from a broken bone.
When we talk about mind-body or neuroplastic pain, we are talking about how the brain and nervous system can continue producing real pain signals even after the body has healed, or when there is no structural damage at all.
The goal of therapy is not to dismiss your experience, but to help your nervous system feel safe enough to reduce the pain response.
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This approach may be helpful for:
Chronic back or neck pain
Fibromyalgia
Migraines and chronic headaches
Pelvic pain
IBS and other functional pain disorders
Nerve pain without progressive disease
Pain that moves or changes locations
Pain that began after stress, injury, or illness and never resolved.
…and many others
We can schedule a consultation call to determine whether this approach is appropriate for your specific situation.
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Many people who seek PRT and a mind-body approach have already tried multiple medical interventions.
If structural causes have been ruled out or fully addressed, yet pain continues, we can explore what might be keeping that pain pathway on.
This does not mean prior treatments were wrong. It simply means we may need to address a different mechanism — the brain’s learned pain pathways.
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Sessions focus on topic such as:
Education about how chronic pain works
Identifying nervous system triggers
Reducing fear and threat responses
Building emotional awareness and regulation skills
Gradually retraining pain pathways
This is not about blaming you, digging for trauma unnecessarily, or suggesting your pain is psychological. It is a structured, evidence-based approach tailored to your experience.
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Not necessarily.
While stress and past experiences can influence the nervous system, therapy focuses on what is relevant to your current pain experience. We move at your pace and prioritize safety and stability. You will never be forced to discuss anything you do not feel safe to discuss.
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The first step is scheduling a consultation. We will review your medical history, prior treatments, and current symptoms to determine whether this approach is appropriate for you.
If you’ve been told “everything looks normal” but you’re still in pain, there may be a clear explanation — and a path forward.