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Chronic Pain Pacing: Stop the Boom-Bust Cycle Today

Chronic Pain Pacing: Stop the Boom-Bust Cycle Today

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In this episode, we cover Pacing basics. The conversation opens with: Chronic pain often leaves people managing activity in stops and starts because the body sends strong signals after too much movement. This pattern affects biology through inflammation responses, thoughts through fear of flares, behavior through overdoing then resting, and context through daily demands at work or home. Today we focus on pacing as one way to steady that rhythm. Pacing means breaking tasks into smaller parts and building in rest bef Listen for the key context, practical takeaways, and the most important points to carry forward.

Chronic pain often leaves people managing activity in stops and starts because the body sends strong signals after too much movement. This pattern affects biology through inflammation responses, thoughts through fear of flares, behavior through overdoing then resting, and context through daily demands at work or home. Today we focus on pacing as one way to steady that rhythm. Pacing means breaking tasks into smaller parts and building in rest before pain spikes. Researchers at the University of Washington have looked at how consistent pacing supports better function over time. Here's the thing, when you try a short walk split into two sessions instead of one long effort, the nervous system stays calmer. That said, everyone starts from a different point so adjustments matter. In fact, noticing what triggers your own ups and downs gives useful information. Meanwhile the goal stays practica

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