20/05/2026
Many people living with chronic pain are not only dealing with pain itself, but also with the fear of pain.
After painful experiences, the nervous system may begin associating certain movements, positions, or activities with danger. Over time, movement can start to feel less predictable and less safe.
This can lead to what pain science often calls fear-avoidance:
avoiding bending, walking, lifting, twisting, exercising, or everyday activities because the brain has learned to anticipate pain.
This response is not irrational or dramatic. It is protective.
Pain changes behavior in intelligent ways.
At the same time, research suggests that long-term avoidance can sometimes increase sensitivity, reduce confidence, and contribute to ongoing disability and fear around movement.
This is where Graded Exposure may help.
Graded exposure means gradually and safely reintroducing movements or activities that have become associated with pain or fear.
Not through force.
Not by ignoring symptoms.
And not by "pushing through."
But through slow, supported, manageable experiences that help rebuild confidence and a sense of safety in the body.
In yoga, this may look like:
• moving more slowly
• reducing intensity
• using props and support
• practicing mindful breathing
• resting before overwhelm
• allowing choice and autonomy
The goal is not perfection. And the goal is not to convince yourself that pain is "all in your head."
The goal is to help the nervous system experience movement as less threatening over time.
Because healing is often less about fighting the body and more about rebuilding trust within it.
What daily movements or activities have you been avoiding because of fear or anticipation of pain? Let me know in the comments 👇
Series: Understanding Chronic Pain | Week 6/8
Disclaimer: This content is for raising awareness about chronic pain and doesn't replace medical care.