Pain management.
A patient unraveling.
For pain that has stayed past its welcome. We combine manual therapy, movement, breath, and nervous-system work to quiet what is loud and rebuild what has gone quiet.
Pain that has stayed is different work.
Chronic pain is not a louder version of acute pain. It is a system that has reorganized around protection. The work is undoing that reorganization, gently, in the right order.
Manual therapy to quiet the tissue. Movement work to restore confident motion. Breath and nervous-system tools to lower the alarm. Sleep and load tuned to what the body can actually do today. We layer these slowly because the system is sensitive, and we pace by what your body shows us, not by what the protocol says.
Quiet the system first
Adding load to a sensitized system often makes the pain louder. The early visits are usually about reducing input: manual therapy, breath, gentle movement, before we introduce any new demand.
Layer the right tools
Most chronic pain responds to a combination of inputs rather than one. We bring manual therapy, movement, breath, education, and pacing strategy together in the same hour.
Pace by the body, not the calendar
Chronic-pain plans flare when they are rushed. We progress by what your body is telling us session to session, not by an external timeline.
Where this work actually fits.
We work with patients whose pain has outlasted its diagnosis, including those who have already tried multiple courses of physical therapy or medication without durable relief.
Chronic low back and neck pain
Pain that has lasted six months or longer, often after multiple prior treatments. The most common presentation we see in this program.
Fibromyalgia and central sensitization
Diffuse, system-wide pain syndromes. We work patiently, in coordination with your physician, and pace conservatively.
Post-surgical pain that lingers
Pain that has persisted beyond expected healing windows after spine, joint, or abdominal surgery. Cleared with your surgeon before we begin.
Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS)
Coordinated with your physician. Slow, careful manual and movement work, especially in the early stages, where touch tolerance matters most.
Persistent headache and migraine
Cervicogenic, tension-type, and migraine patterns that have not responded fully to medication alone. Often coordinated with neurology.
Pain after a long course of failed PT
Patients who have been through standard physical therapy and feel worse, not better. The plan starts with reducing load before we add anything.
Initial evaluation
- Full evaluation paired with same-visit hands-on treatment
- Most patients feel pain relief by the end of the first visit
- Personalized treatment plan in writing
- Hands-on treatment same visit
- Take-home program emailed after
Follow-up session
- Continued manual therapy and movement work
- Program progression and review
- Same therapist, every visit
- Package rates available for courses of care
You probably want to know.
I have tried PT before and it did not help. Why try again?
Chronic pain requires time, attention, and the ability to layer treatments thoughtfully. That is what this clinic is built for.
Do you coordinate with my pain management doctor?
Yes, and often. With your consent, we send notes after evaluations and at meaningful milestones. We are happy to discuss your case with your physician.
Will I get worse before I get better?
Sometimes there is a small flare in the first one or two visits as the system reorganizes. We pace to minimize that. Most people start to feel small wins within the first three sessions.
How long until I am off pain meds?
That is a conversation with the prescriber, never something we adjust. Our job is to give the body and nervous system better options so the conversation about medication can change over time.
Hands-on care, crafted around you.
Every plan begins with a thorough evaluation. Thirty minutes of direct one-on-one time with your dedicated therapist, within a sixty-minute visit. No rotations, no rush.