Emotional Pain and Chronic Physical Pain in Nanaimo: Uncovering the Hidden Connection

Chronic pain isn’t always just physical. For many men in Nanaimo, unprocessed stress, grief, or anger can quietly show up in the body as headaches, back pain, or constant tension. In this post, I explore how emotional pain fuels physical symptoms — and how counselling can help you find real relief.

You’re Not Just Imagining It: Emotional Hurt Can Manifest as Pain

If you’ve been dealing with headaches, back tension, or other ongoing aches that don’t seem to have a clear medical explanation, you’re not alone. Many men I meet in Nanaimo come in feeling frustrated or even dismissed after years of chasing solutions. What they often don’t realize is that their body might be expressing what their mind has been holding in — unspoken grief, unrelenting stress, or suppressed anger. It’s not “all in your head” — it’s how your nervous system and body work together.

A Local Perspective: Why This Matters for Men in Nanaimo

As a counsellor working here in Nanaimo, I’ve seen how high-pressure jobs, financial stress, and family responsibilities can pile up without a healthy outlet. For many men, talking about emotions isn’t something they were taught — so their bodies often speak for them.

What’s Really Going On in Your Body

Your brain doesn’t separate emotional and physical pain as neatly as you might think. The same neural circuits that process a stubbed toe also light up when you experience rejection, grief, or shame.

When you carry unprocessed emotional pain, your body can stay in a heightened state of stress. Over time, that can disrupt your immune system, fuel inflammation, and make you more sensitive to pain signals.

This isn’t about blame — it’s about understanding that your pain is real, and emotional stress might be part of the puzzle.

Diagram showing parts of the body linked to emotional pain

Expert Insight: Why Suppressing Stress Can Make You Sick – Gabor Maté Explains

In this short excerpt from an interview on When the Body Says No, Dr. Gabor Maté draws a powerful link between emotional suppression and physical illness.

He explains how chronic, unacknowledged stress can disrupt your immune system, fuel inflammation, and contribute to chronic pain. You’ll also hear how the habit of “being nice” — avoiding conflict, putting others first, never expressing anger — can quietly take a toll on your health.

Quick Self-Check: Where Does Your Body Show Emotional Distress?

Take a moment to scan your body:

This simple exercise can reveal whether your pain might have emotional roots worth exploring.

A man struggling with chronic physical pain

What Actually Helps — Beyond Medication

When pain has an emotional component, treating only the body can feel like chasing symptoms. While medical care is important, many men find deeper relief when they address both the physical and emotional layers together.

Here are a few ways to start:

  • Somatic awareness — Learning to notice where emotions live in your body without trying to immediately “fix” them can help reduce tension and pain over time.

  • Stress release practices — Gentle movement like walking, stretching, yoga, or breathwork can signal to your nervous system that you’re safe.

  • Emotional expression — Talking through unspoken feelings, journaling, or creative outlets can keep emotions from getting “stuck” in the body.

  • Counselling support — In sessions, we explore what your pain might be trying to tell you, working at your pace, without judgment or pressure.

This isn’t about deciding your pain is “all mental” — it’s about adding new tools that can make a real difference in how you feel.

Standing portrait of Andrej Klimo, Registered Therapeutic Counsellor in Nanaimo

How We’ll Work Together at Lantera Counselling

In our work together, we’ll explore the possibility that your chronic pain is not just a medical issue, but also a messenger. I’ll help you identify patterns like overcommitment, emotional suppression, or unacknowledged stress — and we’ll use approaches like Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Internal Family Systems, AEDP, and somatic awareness to address them.

You set the pace. You choose what you’re ready to explore. And if talking about feelings is new for you, that’s okay — we’ll start wherever you’re comfortable.

You can begin with a free 15-minute consultation to see if this feels like a good fit. There’s no commitment — just a chance to talk.

Common Questions (FAQ)

Does this mean my pain is “all in my head”?

Absolutely not. Your pain is real. Emotional stress can change the way your nervous system processes pain — which means addressing emotions can be part of real, physical relief.

It varies. Some men notice changes in a few sessions; for others it’s gradual. The goal isn’t a quick fix, but lasting change.

Chronic stress, subtle emotional neglect, or years of suppressing feelings can still impact your body. You don’t need a dramatic event for this connection to be relevant.

No — this is a complement, not a substitute. You can continue seeing your doctor while we explore the emotional side.

Imagine Living Without That Hidden Weight

Picture waking up without that same dull ache, or being able to enjoy a walk along the Nanaimo waterfront without your back tightening up. When emotional pain no longer drives your physical tension, your body feels lighter — and so does your life.

Portrait of Andrej Klimo RTC at the start of a counselling session in Nanaimo

Ready to Talk? Start with a Free 15-Minute Consult.

If you’re ready to explore whether emotional pain might be contributing to your chronic physical pain, let’s talk. 

I offer counselling in-person from my Nanaimo office and online for clients across BC, including Parksville, Ladysmith, and Victoria.

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Man sitting alone on a couch looking depressed – Lantera Counselling in Nanaimo

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Stressed man holding his head in frustration, representing burnout symptoms

Counselling for Burnout in Nanaimo

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Book recommendation:

When the Body Says No: The Cost of Hidden Stress by Gabor Maté

Explores how suppressed emotions and chronic stress affect both body and mind, offering insights into healthier ways of coping.