



Prioritising the
Release of Pain!
Chronic Pain Release Therapy, known worldwide as Steven Blake's OldPain2Go®, is an innovative, effective, and practical approach that helps individuals release long-term pain, predominantly within a single focused session.
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Success Stories - Real People, Real Results!

Integrating the the latest neuroscience insights, with subtle brain–body communication techniques, our approach directly engages the automatic processes that often operate beyond conscious awareness, harnessing the brain’s natural ability to re-evaluate and reset unnecessary protective responses. This frees individuals to move beyond the burden of pain management and support more effective recovery and rehabilitation once pain is no longer a limiting factor.
Understanding How OldPain2Go® Works.
One of the most inspiring aspects of our work is sharing success stories from individuals and professionals around the world.
Our intention is that by making the complexity of chronic pain understandable, sharing our innovative and logical perspective, and demonstrating the remarkable real-world results of our effective, direct approach, we offer more than understanding - we offer hope, clarity, and a practical pathway forward.
Chronic pain is now at epidemic levels, affecting millions worldwide…
and science is revealing new hope.
We are in the midst of a significant shift in pain science, reshaping how pain is understood, explained, and approached. This evolution offers long-awaited validation for those affected by chronic pain and, more importantly, opens meaningful pathways towards rapid recovery.
chronic pain science
with Lorimer Moseley
Learn more about your pain
An introduction to Flippin' Pain™
Article
Thanks to advances in neuroscience, we now have a clearer understanding that pain is not simply a direct measure of injury but the brain’s interpretation of signals it perceives as potentially harmful. Prioritising survival, the brain continuously learns and updates its responses based on past experiences, emotional state, expectations, and the surrounding environment (biopsychosocial influences).
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Through this adaptive system, the brain forms neural connections linked to potential harm, allowing it to anticipate threats, trigger protective responses early, and prompt behaviours that minimise injury.
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What's Driving The Pain Now?
​When pain persists, fluctuates, or recurs beyond the expected healing period of three months, continues despite diagnosis or treatment, or where no clear damage is present,
this strongly suggests a shift in the underlying pain mechanisms. Pain that may have begun with tissue damage (nociceptive pain) or nerve injury (neuropathic pain) can become sustained by altered processing within the brain and central nervous system, known as nociplastic pain.
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In this state, the brain’s protective systems may remain active, triggering bodily responses such as muscle guarding, inflammation, and changes in nerve sensitivity. This can cause harmless stimuli to be interpreted as threatening, maintaining a cycle in which the brain’s protective predictions and the body’s responses reinforce each other, blurring the line between cause and effect.
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While this helps explain why an individual can experience very real pain long after an injury has healed, or even when no clear tissue or nerve damage is present, this feedback loop, combined with the overlapping and coexisting nature of these mechanisms, can make it difficult for both individuals and professionals to pinpoint exactly what is driving the pain, particularly since the person’s perception is the only reliable way to measure it.
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When pain becomes chronic, it is essential to consider all contributing factors, particularly the brain’s protective processing, which can maintain, amplify, or even generate the pain experience.













