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Author: Sam Visnic

Best Foam Roller For Runners – Upgraded Self Massage In 2022

took at look into the current foam rollers for runners that is available and at the request of my readers, did a full analysis of the top options with pros and cons. In this post, I’ll give you the low-down on the best foam roller for runners based on technical analysis, cost, ease of use, and a variety of key factors.

Best Foam Roller For Runners – 2022 Top Rated Winner!
Double Up Roller
The best foam roller for runners clearly is the DoubleUp Roller. The versatility of this tool, ease of use, and ability to adjust pressure to get the exact right therapeutic response is unmatched. Rolling for runners will never be the same with this newest kid on the block.

While technically not a foam roller, I came across this gadget and had the chance to try it out recently. I loved it so much I bought it for my office.

The thing I love about it most is the ability to adjust the pressure from super light to extremely heavy with virtually no effort on my part. The force multiplier (the design of the tool) is engineered to make it super easy to apply and maintain a degree of pressure for the needed time to get a soft tissue release.

Those with a lot of sensitivity and/or low tolerance to foam rolling will absolutely love this tool. A++!

DoubleUp-Roller-Pros-Cons

 

Choosing A Foam Roller For Legs

The list of types of foam rollers is ever growing, each with their own variations.  Some have great value, while others have bizarre shapes and selling points without any real additional value.  When selecting the best foam roller, you need to have in mind what your specific needs are, and choose the roller that has the unique qualities you need.

OPTP Soft Foam Roller

The OPTP Soft Density Pro Roller is a great introductory self massage tool.  One of the primary complaints about rolling is the level of discomfort, especially when you first start out.

It takes time and repetition to adapt to the pressure, and this can be extremely difficult to accomplish if it’s just too painful.  The OPTP soft roller is a good solution to this problem.  There are 3 options these rollers come in; firm (blue) and soft (pink).

While you can’t always reduce your bodyweight on the roller, having a super soft roller can buffer the intensity to at least make it tolerable.  OPTP has a great reputation in the therapy industry for making quality products, so you can’t go wrong with this one.

The only problem with this roller is the potential to outgrow it.  Once you adapt to the pressure, you may want to upgrade to a more firm/dense roller, so $57.95 is a tough pill to swallow before having to potentially spend more within a matter of a few weeks or months.

OPTP Pro-Roller Soft Density Foam Roller

OPTP-Roller-Pro-Cons

High Density Foam Roller

The high density foam roller is what I call “old trusty”.  It’s the one found in gyms all across America and what most runners are familiar with.

High density foam rollers are the standard runners roller but do absolutely leave much to be desired.  It’s a good balance point between the super soft OPTP roller, and the much more aggressive Rumble Roller.

This roller is still a tough one to get started with for the novice with increased sensitivity to working on very common tender regions such as the IT bands, and also the hip adductors.

When it comes to actual foam rollers, this is simply the best foam roller for runners.

High-Density-Foam-Roller-For-Legs

High-Density-Foam-Roller-Pro-Cons-min

Rumble Roller

The Rumble Roller is a more aggressive option.  Frankly this is one of my least favorite recommendations.  Foam rolling legs is tough enough in some areas with just a regular soft roller, so having spikes combined with a hard dense surface isn’t helping things along.

The thought process that often underlies this “no pain no gain” mentality is the belief that foam rolling breaks up scar tissue, adhesions, and “knots”.  This is not true, which I explain in depth in this article.

That said, some people really like this roller, so I wanted to include it as an option for the person that really likes a super aggressive option.  It is also worth nothing that Rumble Roller offers a firm and extra-firm option.

Rumble-Roller

Rumble-Roller-Pros-Cons-min

Foam Roller Alternatives

The problem with foam rollers in particular is the difficulty in using them to access specific areas of the body effectively.  This is an especially important concerns for choosing the best massager roller for legs.  Foam rollers apply even flat pressure to an area, when the reality is you need someone to accommodate all the “corners”, without having to constantly re-position yourself on the roll.

This is where foam roller substitutes can be most effective.  Different tools have been created to make the soft tissue therapy process faster and more effective.

Idson Muscle Roller Stick

The muscle roller stick is a classic for self massage therapy, and out of the bunch, it is simply the easiest to drop into your bag and go.

When space limitation is the greatest concern, this tool is the go-to compromise.

When it comes to therapeutic value, however, this tool has probably the lowest value.  Poor leverage, coupled with a lot of work to apply deep pressure, makes this one more of a supplemental tool rather than your primary.

 

Foam-Roller-Alternative-Stick-min

Muscle-Stick-Pros-Cons-min

Trigger Point Nano Foot Roller

No foam roller alternative section can be complete without giving at least one solid review of a product to address the foot.

Many runners deal with foot issues such as plantar fasciitis, and foam roller options aren’t going to do the job alone (although the Double Up Roller can cover this area quite well).

The Trigger Point Nano Foot roller is one of the top options.  This little roller comes in two different densities, regular and extra firm, and gets the job done when it comes to effectively rolling the bottom of the foot.

The finger-like knobs are needed due to the varying surface of the foot.

Best-Foot-Roller-For-Runners

Trigger-Point-Nano-Pros-Cons-min

This completes my review list for the best foam roller for runners.  After reviewing the options, its tough to get a one-thing-for-everything solution, so I selected the Double Up Roller as my winner.

Although it’s not an actual foam roller, in my opinion, it accomplishes far more than it’s competitors.

Hip Adductor Myofascial Release Techniques

Adductor Muscle Release Techniques

The hip adductors are a group of 5 muscles.  These include the adductor brevis, adductor magnus, gracilis, pectineus, and the adductor longus.

These muscles can be addressed individually, or more commonly as a group when performing adductor release techniques.

Hip Adductor Anatomy


Adductor Myofascial Release Techniques

Foam Roller Release Techniques For The Adductors

Also be sure to check out the DoubleUp Roller review I did, which is a superior tool for doing self-release of the adductors. You can also find more foam roller alternatives here.

Can’t Touch Your Toes? Stop Stretching Your Hamstrings!

Why You Can’t Touch Your Toes and Why You Should Stop Stretching Your Hamstrings Excessively

  • Common misconception: Stretching hamstrings alleviates back pain
  • Reality: Stretching hamstrings excessively is not the solution to back pain or limited flexibility

Understanding Hamstrings and Their Functions

  • Primary functions: Hip extension and knee flexion
  • Role in posture: Anterior pelvic tilt and its effects on hamstring length

Testing Hamstring Length

  • Supine leg raise test: Assessing hamstring length while laying on the back
  • Proper testing: Monitoring lumbar spine and pelvis for accurate results

Strengthening Hamstrings Instead of Overstretching Them

  • Most people need stronger hamstrings, not more flexibility
  • Goal: Sufficient hamstring strength and relaxed spinal extensors for proper movement

Techniques to Improve Flexibility and Posture

  1. Posterior pelvic tilt techniques
  2. Forward reaching with deep inhalation for posterior mediastinum expansion
  3. Stretching hip capsules on both sides

Neuromuscular Release and Factors Affecting Flexibility

  • Clearing neuromuscular causes of tension first
  • Other neurological influences: Jaw position and respiratory function
  • Less common factors may require further evaluation

Take Home Points

  • Understand the difference between lengthening hamstrings and the need to stretch vs. strengthen them
  • Include hamstring release for optimal results

Infraspinatus Release Techniques | 5 Of The Best Solutions

The infraspinatus is the most associated muscle to the “rotator cuff” of the shoulder. The infraspinatus muscle is located on the backside of the shoulder blade. It helps rotate the arm and shoulder, and can be a source of pain.

This muscle has a crucial role in shoulder stabilization along with the teres major and subscapularis, and is related to injury and important to address in all shoulder pathologies.

In this post, we’ll cover the top infraspinatus release techniques along with common trigger points.

Infraspinatus Muscle – Origin, Insertion & Function – Human Anatomy

Infraspinatus Release

Infraspinatus Muscle
Origin:
 Infraspinous fossa of scapula
Insertion: Greater tubercle of humerus
Function/s: Shoulder joint: Arm external rotation;
Stabilizes humeral head in glenoid cavity
Functional action: Decelerate internal rotation and adduction of the humerus
Innervation: Suprascapular nerve

Infraspinatus Trigger Points

The infraspinatus often harbors very sensitive trigger points can be found especially on the lower portion of the shoulder blade that refer to the front of the shoulder, and can mimic the pain region often described on evaluation.

This is a potential contributing factor to shoulder pain.

Infraspinatus trigger points can be de-sensitized by a number of neuromuscular techniques, ranging from static compression, to spray-and-stretch, and also muscle energy techniques applied to the rotator cuff muscles.

 

How To Stretch Your Infraspinatus Muscles

Stretching the infraspinatus can be difficult to do, especially if the shoulder already has increased range of motion.  Stretches should only be utilized if they do not add additional stress to the shoulder capsule and no underlying rotator cuff pathology exists.

Massage techniques and “pin and stretch” may be more directly impactful on this muscle to reduce shoulder pain.

Infraspinatus Massage Technique

Tennis Ball Self Myofascial Release For Infraspinatus

Conclusion:

If you’re dealing with shoulder pain, it’s important to consult a doctor to rule out any serious underlying issues. But with these simple techniques, you can start to release the infraspinatus and get relief from your shoulder pain.  Additionally be sure to support your rotator cuff with back and shoulder exercises to build overall strength.

Teres Release | Most Effective Myofascial Techniques

The teres major and minor are shoulder muscles that can be commonly associated with a variety of aches and pains in this region along with the infraspinatus.

Therefore, they should be addressed through myofascial release techniques, stretching, and exercises aimed at restoring optimal function.  Below you’ll find my top recommended teres release techniques.

Teres Major Anatomy And Function

Teres Major

Teres Major Muscle
Origin:
 Inferior angle and lower part of the lateral border of scapula
Insertion: Intertubercular sulcus of the humerus
Function/s: Medial rotator and adductor of the humerus
Functional action: Decelerate external rotation and abduction of the humerus
Innervation: Lower subscapular nerve and thoracodorsal nerve

Teres Minor Anatomy And Function

Teres Minor

Teres Minor Muscle
Origin:
 Lateral border and adjacent posterior surface of scapula
Insertion: Greater tubercle of the humerus
Function/s: External rotation and adduction of humerus
Functional action: Decelerate internal rotation and abduction of the humerus
Innervation: Posterior branch of axillary nerve

Teres Trigger Points

Trigger points in the teres major and minor are very common and can be very tender.  They can be a challenge to find with direct pressure in to the muscle, but can be easily found when using a “pinching” approach directly into the belly of the muscle.

Teres trigger points tend to refer to the shoulder and can also go down the arm. Neuromuscular therapy techniques such as static pressure, or muscle energy technique are very helpful for quickly releasing these points. After release, be sure to strengthen the area with the best back and shoulder exercises.

Teres-Trigger-Points

How To Stretch Your Teres Minor

Stretching the teres minor is easy.  Stand up with your back next to a closed door. Hold the door handle. Take a small step forwards, and then lean forwards. You should be able to feel a stretch around the outside of your shoulder blade.

It’s important to go easy with this stretch, especially when you’re first starting out, and always go only to comfort.

How To Stretch Your Teres Major

To stretch the teres major, stand up and place your arm up towards your ear. Wrap your arm over and around your head. You should feel a gentle stretch just beneath your arm pit. Pull against your arm, and side-bend.

Teres Self Myofascial Massage with Foam Roll

Both teres muscles can be worked with a foam roller for myofascial release.  This sidelying position makes the work more tolerable as the majority of your bodyweight is on the floor.

The most important part of this rolling technique is to make sure you continue to raise the bottom arm toward the sky to lengthen the muscles as you’re rolling them in order to maximize the teres release.

How To Modulate Inflammation With Nutrition

 

 

In this episode I talk with Nicole Visnic about inflammation, it’s role in pain, how to test for it, and what works to reduce it. If you’re dealing with chronic pain, SIBO, or any other type of inflammatory issue, then you’ll definitely want to listen to this one.

Who Knows This?? podcast website: https://whoknowsthis.com Anchor.com podcast home: https://anchor.fm/whoknowsthis

Episode Highlights:

2:56 – Can you give us a little history around your work in nutrition and how it led to your current approach to nutrition?

8:20 – We hear the word “inflammation” a lot when it comes to the body. Can you tell us what that specifically means when it comes to mind for you in your work?

18:10 – Inflammation is tied into pain. What is your experience in helping people with pain reduce inflammation and the results you have seen?

23:45 – Is being “overweight” a problem for having inflammation?

26:54 – Are there any specific tests you can run to determine how much inflammation you have?

30:30 – Most people deal with inflammation by taking things like anti-inflammatories, but I think we generally know taking a lot of this stuff isn’t good, but what particularly happens when we keep dosing ourselves with things like ibuprofen to reduce inflammation?

32:49 – Inflammation in the gut is a hot topic right now, and in particular something called SIBO. Can you give us a rundown on what SIBO is, and what are the common symptoms associated with it?

41:08 – So what do you do to reduce inflammation in the body? What are your general recommendations?

47:36 – What’s most exciting in your field of work right now? What’s new and awesome and on the horizon?

Nicole Visnic is a seasoned clinician with a track record of helping thousands of clients achieve their health goals. She has spent the last 12 years working in an integrated medical clinic in Santa Monica, CA, developing solutions to complex conditions like chronic fatigue, and functional gastrointestinal disorders.

Nicole’s multi-layered assessment processes identify underlying imbalances and biopsychosocial factors that influence dietary habits and overall health. She translates the information into customized nutrition and lifestyle programs that are designed to address the root causes of chief complaints.

She guides and supports her clients throughout their health journey using innovative motivational strategies to increase dietary adherence, and maximize results. Nicole earned her bachelors degree in health education from Winona State University, and her masters degree from the University of Bridgeport in human nutrition.

She is a certified clinical nutritionist through the clinical nutrition certification board. Earlier in her career she served 6 years in the Air Force National Guard, managed corporate wellness for Honeywell Aerospace, and worked as an adjunct psychology instructor at Brown Mackey college.

Her work in the military, corporations, and academia, along with being a wife and mom, gives her the ability to appreciate and relate to a diverse range of clients.

Nicole Visnic’s website: https://analyticalnutrition.com

Chronically Living Podcast Interview w Kelsey Harris – Hypnotherapy For Chronic Pain

<strong>Want to listen on Apple Podcast instead?</strong>
<a href=”https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/why-should-i-try-hypnotherapy-for-my-chronic-pain-with/id1521945719?i=1000538183781″>Go HERE</a>

Kelsey Harris: What the heck is <a href=”https://releasemt.wpenginepowered.com//hypnosis-chronic-pain/”>hypnotherapy for chronic pain</a>? Is this like stage hypnosis? Why would I want that? And how could it ever help me with my chronic pain? I don’t know if these are questions that you’ve been having, but they are definitely questions I had. And so I decided to invite Sam Visnic, who among other things helps his patients through the use of hypnotherapy, to chat with us on Chronically Living. I’m Kelsey Harris, chronic illness warrior and psychotherapist. On Chronically Living and how to make the most of it, we’re providing tangible ways to improve the wellbeing of Spoonies. So get ready to make the most out of your life, even with that pesky chronic illness.

Sam Visnic: My name is Sam Visnic, and by trade, I am a <a class=”wpil_keyword_link” href=”https://releasemt.wpenginepowered.com//” title=”massage” data-wpil-keyword-link=”linked”>massage</a> therapist, but I focus on the clinical side of things. My expertise is working with people with chronic pain, and I also design corrective exercise programs for people as well who are in this state. And I do a smattering of other different types of techniques and therapeutic things that will help people along their journey to be able to get back to living their lives after they’re currently struggling with, or just trying to move past chronic pain.

I think I pretty much just started off, I was always the skinny kid, teenager who needed to get into the gym, and lifting weights just became something I was really into. This is when you could go to the bookstore and read at Barnes &amp; Noble and Borders anyway, I would just go down the aisle where all the fitness books were and I would just start reading. And in particular, I really liked the books that were more on the scientific end of things, rather than just loose fitness things. And I started reading about theories about strength training and all the physiological processes that happen in the body, and I got really interested in that.

Once I graduated from high school, parents kicked me out, said, “You have to get a job.” So I thought, “You know what, I love fitness, I’m going to become a personal trainer.” So this led me into a direction, I ended up getting a job at a Big Box Gym. And as a trainer there, you start realizing very quickly that virtually everybody there has some kind of problem, they have back problems or they have knee issues. And in interviewing these people, and that was one of the benefits of working at this size of a gym, I got to talk with hundreds of people.

Most of them had already gone to the doctor, been to physical therapy, etc, and they were just left up to their own devices to do stuff, but they were very apprehensive. They were what I call stuck in the gap now, which is they’re outside the medical system, they’re not really a surgical candidate but they’ve been through therapy. But then they go to the gym and they keep having setbacks. They couldn’t do a lot of exercises, they’re having pain. And I got really good at just modifying exercise programs.

And throughout the course of this, not only could I get people exercising without having pain, but I started realizing a lot of their issues were getting dramatically better, and they were overcoming these issues. And so, of course, that led me into like, “What am I doing here that’s actually making a difference that these people weren’t getting improvement elsewhere?” This is right at the time where the whole fitness field was changing into this whole, what we call functional movement direction, people exercising on Swiss balls and all this kind of stuff and looking at posture.

So that started me off in that process. And for me, I’d always skip to the back of the books that I was reading and look at all the references and find out who was putting out this information, and that led me to a few mentors in the fitness field that were way ahead of their time, I would say, in focusing on dealing with people who had orthopedic problems, whether that was athletes or just everyday people, and they taught me a lot. And they were, at the time, and this was 20 years ago, they were talking about what we now know and call the biopsychosocial model for pain, is all of these different factors that contribute to why somebody might be having pain.

It wasn’t just a mechanical, structural phenomenon, it wasn’t just, “Hey, fix your posture and do some core exercises,” there’s nutrition, there’s lifestyle, there’s all these things. When I started off in this work, I was doing fitness, designing exercise programs with people, and of course doing hands-on therapy with massage, and I learned a lot of techniques within that for pain. But then slowly, sequentially, I branched out into these different fields and these and arenas with the intention of basically taking those tools and integrating them back into my basic practice so I can help people overcome these sticking points that they were dealing with. So that’s how it happened.

Kelsey Harris: The biopsychosocial model for pain and disease, so that’s biology, psychology, and then environmental or social influences, has generally been vigorously studied and is the accepted model of illness at this point, both for physical and mental illness. So I appreciate that Sam brought it up today. Sam is actually here to talk to us about hypnotherapy. Now, before I lose you, I will admit that I have in the past been skeptical about hypnotherapy as well, but I think that’s because of a lack of understanding of what it is, and of course, the media’s portrayal of hypnosis. So let’s get right into the meat and potatoes of today’s episode.

Sam Visnic: This is one of my favorite topics. And it’s funny, I feel like I don’t get a chance to talk about it so much because there is just an enormous stigma associated with hypnotherapy. And I’m really interested in helping people overcome this. So I’ve been involved around hypnotherapy fields and personal development and so forth for as long as I’ve been doing this, and I would say that hypnotherapy is, put simply, something that really people can latch onto. It’s really about helping you to have an experience of being able to access different aspects of your mind or resources that you normally have in different contexts, which you don’t have in others.

We oftentimes experience this a lot, it’s a very natural phenomenon, it’s somebody who seems to be somehow very resourceful in a certain context, but they’re not resourceful at all in another context. And what’s the difference between these two things? A lot of it is like a meta or an above state of consciousness that they’re in. So when you’re in a different state of consciousness, you have access to certain internal resources, when you’re in another state, you don’t. So a lot of times, if people don’t know how to do this, we do it just naturally and we don’t even realize that we are shifting states of consciousness all the time, and we don’t really know how to command that in a deliberate fashion.

When we talk about <a href=”https://releasemt.wpenginepowered.com//hypnosis-and-chronic-pain-the-future-of-relief/”>hypnosis</a>, we’re really talking about the deliberate shifting of those internal resources and conscious states with a process. We are doing it all the time, the difference is that we’re now going to learn or be facilitated by an external party, a hypnotherapist or a counselor, to be able to help them move within those states on purpose, and that’s really what it’s all about.

Kelsey Harris: Okay. I can get behind the states of consciousness thing, but how exactly does this work?

Sam Visnic: If we think about how a natural hypnosis state, and there’s so many of them that we could just pick one, have you ever gotten your car after work and then you just started to thinking, and you just started to zone out and you get home and you realize, “Whoa, I got home and I made all the turns, that I did everything, that I stopped at all the lights”? You were almost completely trekked out when you did this. And where you really trekked out of reality? Not really. What was happening is, your focus was on something, and some of these automatic processes were just taking place, you know how to get home, you knew all of the stops, your body was responding to things. So this is a hypnotic state.

So how do we induce a hypnotic state? How did you get into it to begin with? You were probably just going inside and starting to focus on something and you were fixated with your focus on something in an internal way that pulled in a lot of your resources. So we can become hypnotized by actually taking advantage of that processes to become highly engaged in something. And a lot of times, it can be through an internal experience and we can think about something, a time and a place, for example, that we felt really relaxed, or something like that, and really engage in that experience.

Or, we could do something simple like when we go through self-hypnosis processes, which is to externalize our focus to things that we weren’t normally paying attention to. And when we bring all of those things into our awareness, it can absorb our attention a little bit and shift our internal state. So that’s the job of the hypnotherapist, is to actually help you with that, what we call induction process, to help to shift your internal focus in a way where it does alter your consciousness, and you’ll get a physiological shift as a result of that. So your biochemistry changes as a result too.

Kelsey Harris: There definitely seems to be some overlap with other psychological phenomena. For example, being really engaged in an experience, especially one you’re passionate about, is often called flow. We can also be mindfully engaged in really any experience, whether or not we like it. There are some differences with intent here though. Now, I would assume that hypnotherapy requires some training and it’s not just some random dude on the stage hypnotizing people like we see in the TV and movies.

Sam Visnic: There’s so many different things within the field of hypnotherapy. The standard thing that we tend to associate with hypnotherapy is watching a stage hypnotist bringing people up onto the stage and then making them do wonky things. But that also starts to come with a lot of presuppositions with that, in terms of like that people can somehow be controlled or manipulated or to be made to do things against their willingness to do so. And that, your listeners should know it’s all false. There’s nothing you can force somebody to do via hypnotherapy that they don’t want to do.

And when we look at those kinds of things on stage hypnosis and so forth, we have to remember that those hypnotherapists are… I just shouldn’t call them therapists, hypnotists, are actually looking for people that are more likely to respond and participate in the show and they’re very much willing to go along for the ride. And that is not how hypnosis works in, I would say, a more clinical or practical setting. So when you talk about hypnosis, we do have to differentiate between those entertainment hypnosis kinds of trainings, and we’re talking about the self-development or the clinical version of hypnosis.

Most often, this requires training. And when you go into that training realm, there’s a little bit of a rabbit hole that we go down with this, because when we talk about hypnosis, hypnosis is not an actual field. What it is, is you can think about it more as a technique, and it’s a very deep technique. There’s lots to it, but it’s usually connected to specific disciplines. So for example, you, as a clinician might use hypnosis for a much different reason in different applications than somebody who might be using hypnosis for more self-development reasons. So we do make sure that there is a distinction between those things.

And hypnosis can be used to treat mental health disorders, it could be used in lots of different things like that in the clinical setting, and that is clearly within the domain of a clinical psychologist, psychotherapist and so forth, a mental health professional. And then we have other realms where it’s more about self-development. And a lot of things like, for example, may want to stop smoking, or somebody might want to help with reducing cravings so they can lose weight. These are the things that are usually associated with hypnotherapy.

And in my case, in particular, I don’t really focus much on those other things, I focus on utilizing hypnosis and techniques for hypnosis to assist people with shifting their awareness and their focus around in their body, creating sense of calm and relaxation so they can have less pain. So these different contexts determine how you learn hypnotherapy. In particular, as a non clinical mental health professional, I did my training and I went out, and I have had a certification, I think, for hypnotherapy for almost 20 years.

And these things are a dime a dozen, you can find them out all over the place where you go in and they teach you rapid techniques for hypnosis and give you the overall view of how it works, and you leave with the certificate, and they say, “Hey, have fun with this.” That’s not really that great. Obviously, hypnosis in my opinion is not so much about the training, I think the training is very, very important, but it is a discipline that takes a tremendous amount of time to learn and practice to become really, really good with it.

So to me, first of all, I wanted to have good trainings, and I have read tons and tons of books in hypnosis. I learned a lot from the books, because again, it’s a lot of application. But when I wanted my credential, I went to and I said, “Who’s got the most hours in a program that’s accreditive?” And I actually found that there’s very few. One of them is out here in California, in Tarzana, the Hypnosis Motivation Institute, which I decided to go with them. It’s about a 350 hour program, plus you do a lot of additional time with hypnotherapists that have been practicing for a long time to refine your skills.

And on the clinical side, I believe that there are a number of associations that do that. But again, when I look at those, they’re very limited on hours. I think a lot of them are 70 to 100 hours. So as you can see there, that’s a very short amount of time with the breadth of information that’s involved within hypnotherapy. So as you can tell, it’s very quickly treated like a skill-based set that somebody might have, and if they really want to pursue it, they’ve really got to put in the hours in order to master it. We always want to check the credentials of people and see where they’ve had their training done professionalism and so forth, very, very important before you embark on that journey.

Kelsey Harris: Hypnotherapy is a technique that can be used for many purposes. I have heard about it being used in the mental health field before, though, as I mentioned earlier, I didn’t actually know much about it. And as Sam mentioned, I actually have heard about it being used for cravings, for nicotine, food, etc.

So how does hypnotherapy work for chronic pain?

Sam Visnic: Yes. So let’s talk about chronic pain in general. So there’s a lot of different disciplines that work with chronic pain. In my discipline in particular, I start with a movement focus, but chronic pain, as we know now, and I’ve written a book on this to talk a lot more about it, but we now know so much more about chronic pain than we did 10 years ago, 20 years ago. The research is exploding. And in particular, what we’re starting to see now is a movement toward more of the brain being the primary focus when it comes to pain. And there’s a discipline or a field and particular that’s called pain neuroscience education, which I’ve been utilizing for about a decade or so, but been extraordinarily helpful.

And what we’re starting to realize is that pain in particular, we understand acute pain, so we look down and we see an ankle if we roll an ankle and it’s swollen, our brains easily make sense of this. And that tissue heals and then the pain goes away. But about 20% of the time, people will develop chronic pain after the tissue has healed. And that’s really the differentiating point. So when the tissue has healed, in particular, I would say that I think most experts agree that at months, every tissue in the body has healed. So if you have pain after six months after some kind of injury, or even if you don’t have an injury and you’re developing pain, but six months, you’re now in the chronic realm.

And what we say is with chronic pain, that we’re not dealing with the tissue issue, what we’re dealing with is a pain issue. And we’re dealing with pain and we’re talking about nerves have become sensitized throughout the pain process that have not returned back to their normal status or normal homeostasis. So this problem is that these nerves and the brain are communicating in a way which is keeping that nervous system threatened or under guard. And when that happens, there’s a lot of processing that’s going on in the brain in different quadrants of the brain to determine what’s to the extent that area is threatening, and that is making the decision on how much pain you will experience.

So when we’re talking about this, there’s multiple things that we have to do. Educating people on pain is first and foremost, the most important thing that I have ever done with clients, that I found it to be the most valuable. So the more you understand about what’s happening when chronic pain exists, the more, for most people, crave wanting to know that, “Why am I hurting? Why is this problem not going away?” So that’s very important. So once we do that, then goes the process of determining how much of chronic pain is a bottom-up thing that we need to do or a top down.

Bottom up is, how do we change the information that’s going from the nerves to the brain? Well, <a class=”wpil_keyword_link” href=”https://releasemt.wpenginepowered.com//temecula-massage/” title=”massage therapy” data-wpil-keyword-link=”linked”>massage therapy</a>, we use movement, we use all sorts of techniques. But then we have this whole other element, which is top down, how is the brain taking that information and processing it? Now, pain education is the number one way we can change that because we can consciously learn more about pain, and that frames the pain differently. We start to think about it differently when we understand it. But there’s also another element of this as well. So we have a lot of other, what we call biopsychosocial elements regarding pain that are non-conscious.

We have things that the longer you’ve had pain, the more you react much differently, and you change your behavior much differently in your environment. Our relationships with our spouses have now usually become a part of our pain experience. The way that we behave or engage or disengage from social environments may change, so all these behavioral things. And what can happen is that we can also start to become in a greater state of what we call vigilance as a result of these things. Our nervous systems become more sensitized to things that could trigger our pain, and there’s a lot of subconscious ones that we don’t know.

So when somebody is stuck in this cycle of chronic pain, once we’ve gone through the basics of doing the movement work, and then we’ve done pain education and so forth, we still have this task, and this is really the challenging thing, especially with more complex chronic pain, is that, how do we address this increased state of vigilance in that person’s nervous system? And this is where the hypnotherapy work comes in, where we can start to train the brain on how to decrease its vigilance through using these types of techniques.

Kelsey Harris: From a clinical standpoint, this makes a lot of sense. One thing Sam mentioned was pain related or illness related behaviors, which actually make pain worse, even though we’re doing them to try and make our pain better. Top-down approaches, which is what I use as a psychotherapist, are what target these. I think we need an example of a technique within the broader technique of hypnotherapy to really understand this concept.

Sam Visnic: So you could start with very broad things. And this goes into a topic where we talk about general relaxation and I think that’s really, really important. So if somebody has just in a constant state of vigilance generally in all areas of their life, we might start off with a general relaxation approach with hypnotherapy. We hear this a lot, and it’s the one thing that’s probably my pet peeve from health practitioners to tell people that their problem is they’re just stressed and they need to reduce their stress. Okay, well, that’s not particularly helpful. If we understand, we all know that stress contributes to things, but the problem is we don’t know what to do about it.

We either have two options when it comes to stress, we change those factors externally, and some people, that’s not possible, they don’t just quit their job or get a divorce or whatever, that’s not what we do. But also, we can change our internal response to that. But a lot of times, it’s challenging in those contexts to do that. So what we have to do is remove ourselves from a situation and try to get ourselves in a space where we could learn how to relax. A lot of people start doing things like meditation and so forth, another version of that, but self hypnotherapy might be a good way to do that where we’re in a vigilant state and we’re amped and we’re wired. How do I get ourselves out of that state?

And one of the ways that we could do that is a very easy self-hypnosis technique. And it would be called the three, two, one. One of the aspects of our consciousness is we use our representational systems, our sensory systems in order to create our experience. So we have touch, we have taste, we have smell, etc. We use our senses. But in particular, there are three more potent ones that we can use. Number one is your vision, number two is your hearing, and number three is your kinesthetics, is what you feel in your body.

And these are separate, distinct systems that are sending different information to our brain. So a self-hypnosis technique that would be very easy to change your state of consciousness, it also works very well for sleep induction and all sorts of things, is to just sit in a comfortable, relaxed position, and what you would do is you would just look at something that’s out in front of you slightly higher than eye level, and you would just open up into your peripheral vision. First of all, opening up peripheral vision reduces focus, and reducing focus means reducing tension. We’re oftentimes staring at screens all the time.

So we just open up into our peripheral vision. It’s called our ambient vision, it’s a very primitive component of how our brain uses our vision. And what we would do is I would ask somebody to notice something that was often to their peripheral vision that’s interesting that they hadn’t noticed before. And I would have somebody do that personally, but obviously, I would walk them through that as well the first couple times. For example, I have that massage bolster off in my corner here. So I say, “Did you notice that massage bolster over there?” And they’ll bring their attention to something, they probably didn’t care about it and wasn’t paying attention to it.

And then I would define something about it, like, “Notice that it’s blue.” You don’t have to think anything else, just notice it. And now I want you to pick something else in your awareness or in your visual fields that you didn’t notice before, and then pick a quality about it, maybe the shade of that brown door over there. And then I want you to pick a third thing. So we would repeat that process again. Now, after three visual items, I would go to three auditory things. I would say, “I want you to notice the speed of my voice as I talk, and it changes. I want you to notice the tone of my voice, maybe the depth, voice inflection going up and down, a very specific what we would call quality.”

And then I would go to three physical things that they would feel. I want you to notice which hip you’re shifted more toward when you’re sitting. Are you more weight on the left or more weight on the right? And notice perhaps the feeling of your left heel against the floor, if it is on the floor, I can’t see you right now. The slight feeling of the air conditioning, maybe as you feel it on the skin. And then two, taking a deep breath. I bet you might have been holding your breath as we were talking. So we would go through three things. And then I would recycle back through to two visual auditory and kinesthetic, and then I would do one of each.

As we’ve cycled through those things, we’ll oftentimes get a shifting of conscious awareness because we’re occupying all of our sensory resources to pay attention to something, and we’ll oftentimes be in at state than we were prior to doing it. And a lot of people feel more relaxed, especially if they’re in a more wound up state, because their senses are being occupied in a cluster of, I would say, a state of mind that had a cluster of sensory experiences, what we’re facilitating that state and keeping them in it.

So that’s how I might use something like that and start with a general state to try to get them to relax first so they have an experience of it. And once they do that, they now have a tool. I helped taught them do it, where they can repeat it on their own. And then as sessions would go by, maybe even depending on the first session, how much we did, we would continue to build upon that skillset to be able to train their nervous system how to access a specific state, like for example, relaxation. And then we would progress it into more specific context in which they need additional resources that might be related to times where their back hurts more or whatever.

Kelsey Harris: In some ways this is similar to grounding techniques that I use with clients. It also seems to have some overlap with mindfulness and meditation, but it is different.

Sam Visnic: I would say, and the research shows that mindfulness and meditation and hypnosis from a brain perspective are achieving the same outcomes, they’re doing the same thing. The process is different. And if I were to ask that question now I would say, the best thing that comes to mind is like in fitness, let’s say that strength training, Pilates and calisthenics, what’s the difference between these things? Well, they’re all fitness and they’re going to increase fitness. They’re different processes and they may work on specific things, but so far as I can tell in my experience with hypnotherapy is that hypnotherapy tends to be a little bit more on the planned therapeutic side of things.

So when somebody comes in, if you look at the average book on hypnosis or hypnotherapy in the clinical realm, the book is like this, there’s so many techniques, there’s a lot more to, I would say, how you go about hypnotherapy, which techniques you use, the circumstances you use it in, and it’s really a vast, vast skillset. And I have not seen the same thing from more meditation and mindfulness-based practices, although I’m sure that there is growing an amount, but probably because hypnosis has been around in that realm for a lot longer. But the process I would say is more specific.

Session one has particular outcomes, session two, more documentation, more notes, those sorts of things. So in that regard, I would say that the skillset is probably more vast and probably more specific.

Kelsey Harris: Now, you might be wondering at this point, am I a good candidate for hypnotherapy? Every technique, there are some people who fit better for it than others.

Sam Visnic: I’d say first and foremost, it’s the people who are willing to participate. This is probably the thing that is the most amazing to me is that somebody calls me and says, “Well, I would give it a shot, I don’t think you can hypnotize me.” And I’m like, “Well, why?” I get that. I think that everybody can, in my response to that, out here in a second, but why would you go and entertain going into a therapeutic process that almost right away you’re feeling resistant toward? If you’re willing to give it a shot and say, “Hey, I’m willing to play ball,” then yes.

But it’s almost going into that saying, “I’m walking in here with resistance. I’m intentionally going to try it and not let you hypnotize me.” Well, I don’t want to play that game. I want people who actually want to participate and get the results from it. It’s almost like saying, somebody comes in and I’m going to do massage and they’re like, “I bet you can’t relax me, I’m just going to stay there tense.” And you’re like, “Well, why would you do that?” So first and foremost, let’s get away with that. And two, we always run into these things, which is something you’ll inevitably run across is this factor of being hypnotizable.

And I find this very entertaining that they run these studies. And to some degree, there are people that are clearly more suggestible in terms of being able to relax. Some people, they love it so much. You say, “You relax,” and then they just relax. Okay, that’s simple. And other people, it takes more work, but everybody is to some degree, I think, because this word hypnotized is so weird, and again, the stigma associated to it. To say that somebody can’t be hypnotized is almost like saying that person can’t focus. And that’s just not the case.

If you’ve ever been to a movie and you forget about what’s happening all around you when you’re engaged in the movie, you’re hypnotized. So I don’t see why somebody would not be hypnotized. It’s just the process that you use. Some people might need a different sort of induction in the hypnotic process than others, but everybody certainly is capable of getting results from hypnosis. So the other thing that I would say when it comes to hypnotherapy, particularly when we’re talking about chronic pain is that we have to put it into a proper context. And the proper context is making sure that that work is being done in an appropriate person.

Now, hypnotherapy, when you look at the research on this, and then at first, when I started looking at all of this, I was like, “I bet you, there’s not much going on here.” And there is a vast amount of research on hypnotherapy, especially in medicine. There are in particular, I think one of the areas where it seems to be most useful is in when people have allergies to anesthesia and they can’t be put under. Now, imagine how horrible that is? So they start with things like, for example, people having teeth pulled or having root canals done with hypnotherapy, and people can do this.

To me, that’s a hard sell for me, I would love to see that happen. But it is amazing how when the mind is actually distracted that you can do these types of small procedures and do them successfully. So I think in context, I am not somebody who does that kind of hypnotherapy, so I definitely have to have the right professional. But in context where for example, people need to see their doctor, I still see people who call me every day that say, “I have sciatic pain shooting down my leg and I can barely walk.” And I’m like, “Well, this is probably not an appropriate application for you to come in and get massages or for me to do hypnotherapy, you need to see your doctor.”

So people need to make sure that they’re medically cleared for underlying pathology and so forth. And two, I do believe that most people need to be part of a more integrated program when it comes to doing things. For example, there’s a reason why it’s not something that I would start with necessarily on day one. With my clients, I do it because I know that it fits within what they’re doing. We’ve done movement work, we’ve done massage work, but then there’s some factors over here that need to be addressed. So I will address those things.

On occasion, there are people where are being handled by physical therapists and healthcare providers and they have all of those things covered. And then what we’re going to do is we’re going to add the hypnotherapy on top of that, and that could be very successful. But I think it needs to be part of a more holistic program or an integrative program rather than being the only thing that somebody is doing. And I think that that is not necessarily something I would say I wouldn’t work with somebody with, but I would highly recommend that they do that and make sure that they’re working with those different elements to cover all the biopsychosocial aspects and that we’re not hanging our hat and setting improper expectations on what that hypnotherapy process is going to do because again, those other areas need to be covered.

So I think that those are the key things. And the other thing that I would say is, there are some exclusions and making sure that in particular hypnosis, depending on the practitioner that you’re working with, needs to be evaluated with what that person has going on. In particular, if there’s a mental health disorder, somebody’s dealing with complex issues, have been diagnosed with things like anxiety disorders, depression, and so forth, they really need to be only doing these things under the guidance of a proper healthcare professional who’s licensed to treat and work with those issues.

And it’s not something that you would work with over here, although certainly in the past I have worked with mental healthcare professionals that don’t do hypnosis and they say, “Absolutely, go ahead and help them with the chronic pain stuff.” And I give you the go ahead, “I think this person is fine with that,” and just keep it in the container over here to what you’re working on, which is completely fine.

Kelsey Harris: I am personally a big fan of integrative health programs. I’ve been to entire clinics where I can see my physiotherapist, chiropractor, massage therapist, naturopath, and go to psychotherapy. And I could also give them all permission to work together to make sure I was getting the best care. I think it makes sense that this could be one of the techniques used in that program that focuses on the whole biopsychosocial aspects of our health.

I always like healthcare professionals to give us the technique we can try at home so that we can at least start on the self-help part of things while we explore actually seeing a professional. Here’s what Sam has for us.

Sam Visnic: I think self-hypnosis is probably one of the best things that people can start with. I had mentioned one of the techniques, if you start with the self-hypnosis the 3-2-1 technique, it’s probably the most widely known technique because it’s so easy to do. But I do think that working with somebody is very helpful on this as well, because there is some confusion a lot of times over setting expectations. So what am I supposed to feel? Am I doing this right? We get up all those questions. Am I supposed to do this 3-2-1 technique and then I just pass out or zone out?

No, that’s not what happens, but as you get better at doing self-hypnosis techniques or working with somebody and being hypnotized, which I think is a great experience for a lot of people to have. If they feel apprehensive about it, or nervous, or weird about it, then I would say start with self-hypnosis because once you start doing that, you’ll feel comfortable with it. And then when you go and see a hypnotherapy, you’ll already know what to expect. Again, you’re not put out, you’re not in la-la land. When you’re doing these things, you’re definitely paying attention, but it’s very much like a guided meditation or a mindfulness, a series where you’re actually just going through the motions.

You’re being led in a nice little journey and it’s being planned with the intention of what it is that you’re trying to get. But start with simple things like the 3-2-1 technique. There’s probably some other techniques that are available on YouTube and so forth. And pretty soon, I had just started putting up pages on my website for this. I’m starting to offer more hypnotherapy out there for people who are coming in the door with the intention of wanting to have that service.

Kelsey Harris: I’m curious about client outcomes. What are some successes that Sam has seen come out of using hypnotherapy?

Sam Visnic: In particular is the integration between pain neuroscience education and hypnotherapy is one of the things I’m most excited about, because there’s a lot of knowledge there that goes into it, and I’ll give you a quick example, most people are not aware that things like diagnostic imaging is something that is a real problem right now in the field of structural based, what we think is structural pain. So somebody actually goes to the doctor and they say, “My back hurts,” or whatever. Oftentimes rather than just being reassured and clearing out red flags and so forth and telling the person, “Hey, you’re okay, just take it easy for a few days,” oftentimes it’s jumping right ahead to doing a visual diagnostic like an MRI or an X-ray, which oftentimes lead leads to findings that are not really related to the pain that the person has.

For example, if you take 100 people off of the street and you run an MRI on them, about 60% of people are going to show some kind of abnormality on a scan. So they have some arthritis or they have a minor disc bulge. And these are actually very normal findings, but most people to don’t know this so that when somebody is told this and say, “Yeah, you have a disc bulge.” And you go, “Okay, doc, well, what do I do?” And they go, “Well, it’s not nothing. Don’t worry about it.” What are you supposed to do with this information? Now, you leave here and you were just told that there’s something wrong with your spine and there’s nothing you can do about it.

So now you have an education gap. And some people will just dismiss it and say, “Oh, doctor says I’m fine.” Other people will start to develop fear or apprehension, so they may not forward bend. They might be afraid because they look up online and say, “This disc is going to explode if I do a forward bending activity.” So for example, in these cases and some more extreme versions of what we call centralized pain, some people will develop so much that they’ll actually the thought of forward bending stimulates the pain in their lower back.

So we haven’t even done the movement and they’re starting to actually feel pain. This is called central sensitization. And when this occurs, this is a fantastic opportunity to insert some hypnotherapy. And what we would do is with some light induction. And what I would have them do is to create a safe space where they feel good and confident, and they realize they’re vividly imagining something and it’s not really happening. And what I would have them do is to progressively see themselves doing forward bending in their mind in a safe way.

And what this would do is to start to reduce that vigilance in the nervous system to that repetitive forward bending. And then when we take them out of that state of consciousness and then we stand up and test, what do we see? We see more range of motion and we see less pain. So that is times where I’ve seen fantastic, fantastic results. And these scenarios, even though that might sound like a rare occurrence, is far more common than you can imagine, especially when people end up in my office where they’ve end up seeing 10, 15 practitioners already, and everybody’s doing the same thing, do some planks, do some core work and that’s why your problems will go away if you just strengthen your core.

It’s a little bit more complicated than that, but in those types of situations, you can imagine if somebody has that much fear and apprehension about forward bending, they’re not going to make it very far in the physical therapist office if they’re just forcing them to try to bend through it without dealing with that internal state.

Kelsey Harris: It’s a little unnerving to think that we’re being told that there are things wrong with us that aren’t actually causing us problems, and especially for people who already have a chronic pain or a chronic illness, tear that, “Oh yeah, there’s this other abnormality, but don’t worry about it.” Well, let’s be honest, it’s easy to have health anxiety when you have legitimate health issues. I asked Sam about the similarity between this technique and some other psychotherapeutic techniques, but you’ll have to subscribe to the show’s Patreon page to get that part of the interview. Are you ready for our Lightning Round questions?

Sam Visnic: Oh boy, here we go.

Kelsey Harris: All right. What are the top five songs that describe your life?

Sam Visnic: Top five songs. Wow. I’ll tell you the first one that comes to mind and maybe it was just this thing, Welcome to the Jungle. I always remember Guns N’ Roses, favorite, favorite band. And I just remembered that that song just had some internal personal meaning to me that was more along lines of graduating high school, here you go, have at it, do whatever. And you’re like, “Oh, this is going to be easy.” And you start to realize how complicated the world is. And but if you work hard enough and you push it, you get what you want. And that has some personal meaning to me.

Let me think. Bob Seger, Against the Wind. Are you starting to see a theme here?

Kelsey Harris: I see the theme. Yes.

Sam Visnic: What else comes to mind? Kenny Chesney, The Good Stuff. You know that song?

Kelsey Harris: Yeah. Nice.

Sam Visnic: I’ll take that one. Give me a second here. Tears for Fears, Everybody Wants to Rule the World.

Kelsey Harris: Nice. Good song.

Sam Visnic: I have to do something on this realm. So I’m going to say The Fray, You Found M. How about that?

Kelsey Harris: Oh yeah. Nice song.

Sam Visnic: There you go. Sorry to give you an interesting little mix of those things.

Kelsey Harris: Very nice. What’s one thing you can’t go a day without doing.

Sam Visnic: Drinking espresso. That’s a must. If you want to talk about putting in a state, it’s hypnosis in a cup for me. There you go.

Kelsey Harris: All right. What’s one thing you plan on doing in your life that you haven’t yet?

Sam Visnic: I’m going to say, I’ll go with something short term here, I’ll be starting my own podcast. I’ve been told probably number of times I have a radio voice, I don’t know if that’s true, but also I like to ask good questions much like you. So I’d like to take a stab at that, because I like it. I like to talk and I like to ask people lots of questions and find out more about what they do and what they’re all about. And that’s just been something… I might have had a little bit of apprehension about it, but I’ve really just held back from it, now I think I should just go for it.

Kelsey Harris: Yeah, you definitely should do it. So much super fun and that’s great. I highly recommend. Describe your perfect day.

Sam Visnic: Sleeping in. Not over sleeping in, maybe till about eight o’clock. Getting up and drinking espresso. Let’s not forget that part. Hanging out with my kids watching cartoons. I could hopefully some cartoons from the ’80s, not cartoons of what today. So something I can get them into, but hanging out with them for a few because they’re always so fun in the morning, taking them off to school. And to me, spending time in my day, doing the projects I love. I absolutely love seeing people.

I know it seems weird, but working with people with chronic pain is just immense in terms of what I love to do and helping people navigate that terrain, getting them out of pain or at least helping them cope with their issues much better so that they can get on with their life and enjoy things. And spending extra time pursuing some of these extra projects. I love researching. I love reading and learning a lot more about all of the things that I did not know about throughout the years and thinking about all those clients that I think I could have gotten better outcomes with and still chasing the solutions to what I could have done to help them better in the next time I see this case.

And learning more about hypnotherapy and just becoming better and better at it. And also chasing, again, some of those projects like podcasting and so forth, I think. And to me, I could spend, I’m absolutely a workaholic when in that side of things, my wife is as well, she’s a clinical nutritionist. So for her, it’s just all day, every day, we would love to do this. But we do have to cut out and then go home and spend more time with my kids doing sports and so forth. And just having family time at night. And then at the end of the night, you got to have a binge show, whatever that show is, at least put an hour in on it.

And there’s been some great ones now, I think are great, and heading off the bed, keeping things super simple. And I think I’m fairly close to that lifestyle now.

Kelsey Harris: Yeah. That’s great. And how do you inspire your clients to make the most of their lives?

Sam Visnic: I would have to say, probably the most important thing is to teaching people about the fact that they can not only be aware of their own thoughts, feelings, and emotions, and so forth, but how much they can change those things regardless of how they think that those things are so resistant and they have a life of their own, as to say, “You’re never stuck in any state of consciousness, if you are, just step outside of it. And then you’re already in another one.” And I remind people that that’s the case and your states of mind are the way that you access resources.

So if you don’t feel motivated, then you can change that. If you feel like you’re associated or stuck in feeling and the experience of your pain, you can disassociate from that, and you could always associate into something else that’s a better state. And that leads to different behaviors and outcomes, and how you experience your life. I think if you could get that down and really focus on that every day in a lot of different ways and context, your life is going to be far better off.

Kelsey Harris: Yeah. That’s great. Sam, this has been awesome. Where can we find you and follow you?

Sam Visnic: Website, the easiest way, releasemuscletherapy.com. And as you probably could tell, a lot more than just muscle stuff, but I have a lot of stuff on there too about that. Pretty active on Instagram, so the handle is @releasemuscletherapy as well, and YouTube. And YouTube you’ll find me at Sam Visnic, So youtube.com/samvisnic. You’ll see a lot of content on there. You’ll be seeing a lot more about this topic in particular, see me moving into hypnosis very carefully as to avoid all of that excess stigma, and hopefully be able to collaborate with professionals like yourself to get more great content on this topic out there.

Kelsey Harris: Fantastic. All right. And I’ll make sure that’s all linked in the show notes as well. So thank you again so much for coming on. This has been really, really informative. I really appreciate it.

Sam Visnic: Thank you. I loved it.

Kelsey Harris: Hypnotherapy sounds like a really interesting option. Actually, thinking about it, because it affects the brain in the same way that mindfulness and medication do, it might be a nice alternative for someone who doesn’t like, or for whatever reason is opposed to mindfulness or meditation. Obviously, there are advantage to doing this with the train professional, but I also think I’m going to try the 3-2-1 technique on my own this week and see how it goes. If you also happen to try it out, make sure that you take myself and Sam on Instagram so that you can let us know how it goes for you as well.

So let’s take a moment for our self-reflection. What did you notice about your thoughts and feelings during this episode? Let’s try a little perspective taking, did they change at all from before you listened to the episode to now? And what are you noticing as you take another step back and think about your noticing? Everyone, thank you as always for listening. And please don’t forget, you can support the show on Patreon. You get a number of perks, including shout outs, extra content from the episodes such as this one. And two, ebooks to help you improve your wellbeing.

And there’s just one tier right now, it’s $5 per month and all the money just gets reinvested back into the show so I can make it even better for you. All right. Have a great week and keep on making the most of it. Special thanks to Nicole Skura for the original music, and to Charity Williams for the original artwork.

If you’re looking for additional uses for hypnotherapy, especially for gastrointestinal issues, check out <a href=”https://analyticalnutrition.com/hypnosis-for-sibo-and-ibs/”>hypnosis for SIBO</a>.

21st Century Pain Solution Podcast Interview w Dr. Wayne Phimister

 

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Dr. Wayne Phimister: Well, welcome everybody to this special episode of the show. My guest today is Sam Visnic. Sam, welcome.

Sam Visnic: Thank you so much. I’m very happy to be here and looking forward to this chat.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Okay. Sam is a massage therapist who does things and thinks things slightly different from what he was trained to do a few years ago. It’s great to have you on and to dive into these deeper issues of how do we find solutions? How do you find solutions, Sam, for your patients and clients with chronic pain? I’ll just put the floor over to you and tell us a little bit about your background and how you got to this point in your career.

Sam Visnic: Yeah, I think that what you said there as the intro, there is a little bit of an understatement. I’d say massively, actually, I think differently from my field. I started off in this field. I was a personal trainer. This is pretty much all I’ve ever done. Once I got out of high school, I was about 18, 19, I took my turn at being a personal trainer and I really loved lifting weights and the science of weight training and so forth. I was really working on myself. I was interested in body building and I got involved in a gym.

What you quickly learn when you work in a gym atmosphere is that everybody is messed up to some degree. Everybody’s walking in the door with a knee problem or a back problem or whatever, right? At the time, this is when the fitness field started booming, and this corrective exercise realm where people were playing with Swiss balls on the exercise floor and all this kind of stuff. This company, National Academy Sports Medicine, starts talking about posture and muscle imbalances and all this kind of stuff.

It was really a big boom in the field and nobody really knew much about this. Here I was at the gym, a hungry young trainer, and I was trying to get every client that I could get. A lot of the other trainers did not like working with people who had back issues, had knee issues. I’m like, “Hey, I’ll take them.” It was perfect opportunity to start working with people. What I generally found was, is that over working with, I think, hundreds of clients in this … I got lucky that there was so much volume that I could work with, is that a lot of these people, when you just modified exercises and you started getting them moving again, guess what?

They started telling me their aches and pains were gone and they had said, “I’d been to physical therapy. I did yadi yada, and it wasn’t working until I started working with you.” Didn’t take long before I started catching on to something that I was doing that was working really well. That field, I went down that rabbit hole and learned everything I could. I studied with a few mentors who were big in the movement field, and they said, “Hey you’re not going to get good at this work unless you start putting your hands on people and you start learning to work with tissues and so forth,” and that got me to massage school.

Of course, the majority of the stuff I learned in massage school, to be honest with you, is virtually useless to me because I was working more on the clinical side of things and I was working with massage therapists and coaches who were showing me things. One particular discipline was neuromuscular therapy, which is basically a lack of a better way of putting it is a very thorough massage system. It’s like here’s how you treat every single muscle in the body, and we were taught to look for trigger points and all this sorts of stuff, and that’s what I did.

I did a combination of movement work and neuromuscular therapy, and I got a knack and a name for being the guy that when you didn’t get better with therapies and you didn’t know who to see next, people would just say, “Hey, go see this guy, Sam.” Right? I kept working with more of these population that had failed from other therapies. I got used to having to be forced to be creative to try to figure out why these people didn’t get better when they had done chiropractic, injections, they had done all sorts of things and they didn’t really well or it didn’t work at all.

I had read more, and for 20 years I’ve been on this hunt for learning much more and everything I could about chronic pain, and especially in the last 10 years, you know it’s been very, very interesting now. A lot more information and accessibility to information on the internet, and that’s brought me to where I am today and sitting here in front of you.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Awesome. Well, I love your story because that’s exactly my story as well. People fail the therapies, they get me, including surgeries, they get me and then I do my little thing, and then I work with neuroplasticity, I work with inflammation and I’ve got all these different approaches to get to the root causes. The root causes. Okay, let’s go back a little bit, because I’m fussing personally about what are you doing then that makes that difference with those clients that are not getting to seem better from their chiro and their massage?

Sam Visnic: I would say that there’s many very versions or iterations of this in my career because I’ve done so many different things. I’ve swung really far into manual therapy. I’ve swung really far to exercise. I’ve become a little bit of a Jack of all trades within that small world, and every time I’d go overboard with something and I would learn something real deep, I would get a certain level of clientele better because they were usually who I was working with, and then I’d get a new crop of clientele, didn’t do anything for, and then I went and learned something else.

You and I in that realm have been the same. It’s like I had to learn nutrition, lab testing. I did internships with a medical doctor who taught me how to read labs. I did stuff like that. But every client, it was a different story. We all now know that the pain experience is very unique, and there’s many different factors within that individual’s biopsychosocial realm that is contributing to their pain experience. When I work with people now, I have a specific process that I go through with them to try to basically put people into little bit more of, I’d say, a container or a path that I could figure out which of these things are probably going to work best with them.

But also over the years, I’ve learned to network with better and better colleagues and professionals who are far better at things than I am now. Now I stay on my own track with more movement and teaching pain neuroscience and so forth, and I outsource that work. It really depends upon the individual. If you’re asking where I am now, is that what you mean?

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Yeah.

Sam Visnic: Yeah. Okay. Okay. Things have changed a lot now. What I’m always looking for is I know that the message that I’m always putting out there for people, I work with a very specific type of client, and almost always it’s the ones who have at least gone through the general standard care procedures. They’ve been to their doctor. They maybe have or have not been diagnosed with something, disc bulge or whatever, but they’re generally, let’s say, either they have had surgery and they’re out of the system or they’re nonsurgical case, they’re booted to physical therapy.

They’re usually done their rounds with a couple of therapists, may have done some chiropractic or acupuncture, right? They usually, by the time they come to me, have said, “Here’s the story. The story is I’ve done all of this stuff, I’m better than I was, but I’m still dealing with this and I can’t get back to doing the things I want to do.” This is where my story is. As I say, these people are stuck in the gap. The gap is they’re not really medical, but they’re definitely not go do whatever you want. They’re right here in the middle.

I have to bridge them and I have to figure out what the factors are that are stopping them from bridging. When they come in, I look for the factors. I wrote a digital book on this, which was really my contribution to looking at all the research I could find on what basically leads to the chronicity of pain, and those are the factors that you talk about a lot as well. It’s like we’re going to do a questionnaire. How well do you sleep? That’s the number one thing I care about. Number two, how much do you know about pain? Right?

Number three, all the other factors that contribute to causing problems in those two. How much caffeine do you drink? What do you eat? Do you drink water? What’s the basic stuff? Then we go into sorting out and figuring out what their beliefs are in pain. Now, because I found in my work, and let’s say I’ve been doing pain education for those who I’m sure are probably a good at number [inaudible 00:07:58] understands what that means. But in 10 years, I don’t think I’ve ever come across somebody who knows virtually anything about pain. A couple of people here and there may have heard about pain education before, but that’s it.

Their extent to their education is purely a structural mechanical explanation for why they have pain. Again, they’re here just thinking that we’re going to do another structural mechanical therapy. I have to teach them about that. Usually on the first visit, we schedule a little bit longer amount of time, but I start to educate them on this pain thing. I’m saying, “I know that you’ve had pain. A lot of these therapies have failed, but let’s talk a little bit about what leads to the chronicity of the pain. Because the people that you’ve seen so far, I want you to understand …”

Because some of them come in and they’re frustrated or angry with their healthcare practitioners, and I have to assure them, “Hey, these people are not idiots. They did their job and they did the things that were necessary to make sure that you’re safe. But now here you are with this lingering issue, and I’m going to explain to you why this is happening, what inputs are contributing to this so you can tell me which factors that I’m telling you seem to be relevant to your situation, and we can figure this out together.”

I think that conversation right away starts to dramatically shift the direction of the therapeutic work, and because we’re also … I really just don’t like having people walk in the door as a traditional practitioner, go put them on the massage table and start to get to work, because that’s the therapeutic work that’s working from the bottom up sending that information to the brain, but I have no idea how that brain is going to process that input. I have to get an idea of what is going on inside of there so that I can manage expectations, I can adjust my sensory input that I’m helping that person receive, so that their brain can reprocess their experience, and hopefully make the changes into the direction that we want to go.

It’s such a game changer that I almost like talking more about the front end process because it changes everything, and I really do think that with more of a proper front end process to most therapeutic protocols, they will work dramatically better. Now, of course, there’s a lot of techniques and so forth that can work better or less in different scenarios. But I think across the board, if we did that more on the front end, almost everything would work at least a good amount better.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Okay. Brilliant. Thank you for doing that. You mentioned education is paramount.

Sam Visnic: Yes.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Lifting that veil of fear and ignorance around, well, what the hell’s going on in their life, with all these therapists and they’re not better. I want you to pretend that I’m the patient. I’ve been through a year of rehab. I’ve been to all these different therapies. I’ve got chronic neck and back pain, had an MVA two years ago, and I’m saying, “Sam, come on, educate me because nobody’s telling me how I can heal.”

What would you say to me in this situation? You just give a classic … Nothing too extreme, but just the basics. How would you present that? Remembering that who we’re talking to today are people exactly in these situations where they’re likely sitting thinking, well, yeah, tell me because I need to know, right?

Sam Visnic: Yes. I think fundamentally, the big understanding that I start with is to help people understand that pain is not a thing. What it is is it’s an interpretation, it’s an alarm system that our nervous system has. It’s a byproduct or the end result of information processing. What I tell people is you don’t have any pain fibers in your body that we know of. What we have is we have nerve fibers that send information, and that information generally speaking is neutral.

Again, there’s some stressful types of information, but that’s not really the interpretation until it gets to the brain, right? We have this nociception in one particular way of putting it that goes to the brain. The brain has different quadrants that basically start to process that information. What is the quality of this information? What’s the intensity of this information? Do I remember this information from the past? We’ve all had that experience where you say, “Whoop, I felt that before, this means my back’s going to go out.”

I think if you’ve had that, you’re getting that part of the brain that remembers things. If you feel something you’ve never felt before that feels like a little bit of a strain or something, you might delete that. You don’t even think about that, right? This information has to get processed in different parts of the brain. The brain, those different areas, have to sit down at the meeting table and everybody gives their input and says, “What are we going to do about this? Is this threatening or not?”

If it’s threatening and it’s something that we need to take action on, then they all agree to turn the alarm on, and the alarm on is something that’s such a noxious signal, a noxious feeling to grab your conscious attention to tell you to pay attention and to do something. That is pain in a nutshell. But the brain, while it can make a decision to create threat, it can also make a decision to ignore it, and that’s the question. From there, we would talk about scenarios where we’ve always seen those CNN stories where some construction worker goes into the emergency room with a nail in his head and he doesn’t …

He’s completely, “What? What’s going on?” He has no idea what’s happening, but yet there’s clear tissue damage going on in an acute manner. [inaudible 00:13:04] feel it. Or I talk with people about those references saying, “Have you ever had a huge bruise that you found on your body and you didn’t …” What? What? I don’t remember this. There is damage. Why didn’t the alarm go off? Because at the time, your brain perceived that information to not be relevant.

We can, at the subconscious level in our brain, choose to experience things or not as threatening. The real question is what we want to determine for you throughout the course of this work together is to understand how your brain is interpreting that information and get it to stop doing that and to start doing something else. In that regard, this is a behavioral change program. How we do that is through lots of different modalities. I’m a massage therapist, so I’m going to use hands-on techniques.

Also, do a lot of exercise work, because unless you’re going to strap me on and take you home so I can massage you 24/7, there’s going to be some things that you need to be able to do yourself. The more you can help yourself, the more in between these visits you can start to break that behavioral pattern, send lots of safety information to your brain, and we can start getting your brain to do something different and reinterpret and evaluate the situation in a way that’s more productive in terms of getting you back to your life.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant. Because we need to reprogram the brain with safety as the fundamental physiological belief.

Sam Visnic: Yes. Some people will resist pain education because you could see them sitting there like, “Why is this relevant?” Then I show them a picture, [Adrian Lao’s 00:14:39] book for therapeutic neuroscience education. He had that piece in there. It was really great. I have a slide of it where I show the MRI of the brain. There’s a woman with chronic low back pain. They had her lay in an MRI, scanned her brain, looked at the brain activity and there was a lot of quadrants lit up. Then what they had her do is to move around in a way that agitated her back.

Then they rescanned her MRI. It was lit all over the place. Then took her out, did about 20 minutes of pain education, teaching her this stuff in a probably very limited way. Put her back in the MRI machine, and guess what happened? You see that brain nice and quiet, okay? Always reminding people that education itself is therapeutic. You will literally, not only when you just left brain logic understand things, but when you start to let that information permeate your awareness and you start to evaluate your experiences differently, it literally changes things.

That’s before we even get to the stuff on the table. One of the things I like to talk about a lot is chiropractic because I have a lot of people who have been to chiropractic before. It’s an easy thing. I say, “Hey, the first time you went there,” and the standard … Not all chiropractors do this, but telling you, “Hey, your back is out and we’re going to put it back in.” I’m like, “I don’t know about you, but that sounds terrifying.”

Backs just pop out, and what happens if you miss when you try to put it back in again? I’m like, “What did you feel when you did that?” They’re like, “I don’t know. I was weirded out by it.” I’m like, “It’s terrifying, right?” That raises some degree of threat, and the only reason why you were going to go along with this is because your friend told you that it was good or you had good reviews, right? There was a mix of emotions.

But what if they had told you that what they were doing to your back was like this. Couple of, “How’s that feel?” They go, “Well, that’s no big deal.” “I’m going to do that to your back and it’s going to feel good. It’s going to cause a change in these things called mechanoreceptors and all this stuff. It would be less threatening. Then when you lay on the table and you receive the therapy, would you be more relaxed if you knew what was going on?”

They said, “Well, yeah.” That’s what we want to do. We want to keep lowering that alarm system so that you feel less and less threatened by movement, by therapies and so forth that are safe. That’s just a perfect example of the more you know, the less threatened you feel, the less the alarm is going to fire and the better response you’re going to get from those therapies, even if this therapy is exactly the same. Yeah.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: People are listening today and thinking, okay, this is great, Sam. What are kind of resources, I know you’ve mentioned your ebook, but resources are really good and simple, maybe websites, that you’ve come across that would be really helpful for our audience to learn this? Because they’re probably on their own looking for answers and no professional’s actually pointed them in the right direction. What’s your recommendation for that?

Sam Visnic: Yeah. I think I’ve found a couple of YouTube videos and I have them and we’ll probably stick them in the show notes and whatever, but that have these nice cartoon drawings that talk about pain, and what’s actually going on and it gives you a nice visual representation of what’s occurring. I think those are fantastic. There’s a lot of pain education lectures online. They’re very long. I don’t think most people are going to sit through 90 minutes of Dr. Mosley talking about pain neuroscience. But if you want to, you can go with that as well. I also have a pain neuroscience lecture that I will give, a short lecture.

I think it’s about 35 minutes on a video that I can add as well. But simple stuff, just going through, and I feel like sometimes it’s just mind blowing having 15, 20 minutes of this for the average person who suffers from chronic pain, because that’s the reason why my book is called what it is. It’s like, “Why didn’t my doctor tell me that?” Because I have a number of doctors that I work with well, and they go to sit in conferences and so forth and they know all this. It’s just a matter of the communication that’s … Because of time, and I’m sure you know all of those other things that go on there, they’re like, “Wow, I wish I would’ve known this, because this seems very …”

But it’s also overwhelming. Small amounts at a time. Learn a little bit, think about it in terms of how it is showing up in your experience of your pain, and then learn a little bit more. It’s not something that necessarily you have to just have your head explode and read five books on this all at once, because it’s hard to process all of that. Especially if you’ve been in pain for a long time, there’s a lot of things swirling around to try to understand.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: It’s wonderful how when we do get a little bit of knowledge and then we take that forward, say, to our massage therapist or physiotherapy exercise and routine or kinesiology program, and then all of a sudden, it just builds and builds and you move forward in a compounding way, and all of a sudden you just take off, like what you’ve discovered in your career over the years. I think that’s important thing for patients and people to know, is it’s just small steps. It’s the only way to do it really, and it’s doable. It’s all doable for all of us to different degrees. Anything more to say with that?

Sam Visnic: Yeah.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Because that’s really is your baby, as people head off into this therapeutic world with new education.

Sam Visnic: I think that that’s a really, really critical point, is that there are sometimes that people will come in and the first session just changes everything. It’s like the veil has been lifted. I’ve had a couple of clients in particular. I remember one of them who had been told, “Hey, you’re never going to …” She was a swimmer and she was a collegiate level swimmer, very, very good, and she had a neck injury and she was told she would never swim again.

After reviewing her case and working with her, I was like, “Well, I don’t really understand why you were told this.” I had done pain education with her, and sit across from me and say, “Is it weird that my pain level’s actually reduced now since we’ve had this conversation?” I’m like, “It’s not weird, but that doesn’t give you a license to go out and go swim two hours right now. Right? We still got to do a graded exposure therapeutic program for you.” But it’s important to notice that that happened.

I think the next week that she came in, she had told me her pain had reduced 20%, 30% at that point, and she had tested and went out and actually gotten in the water for the first time in two years and she swam for about 10, 15 minutes. I did not tell her to do that. I was more like, “Okay, go slow.” I think within a week or two after that, she had about an hour swim, and she’s like, “I think we’re done,” and I’m like, “You might be.” That is not the usual case because there’s so much more that’s going on with most people.

But that happens. It can happen. But the average person is, like you said, a little bit at a time because we also … Pain is complicated, we know. It makes sense to us when we roll an ankle and your ankle is swollen up like this, our brain can square that up, “Well, that’s why I’m in pain. Duh.” But what happens when everything looks fine, but yet we’ve been told a lot of stuff, especially that there’s mechanically things wrong with us, and when we move, it seems to be very mechanical, even though I’m being told that it’s not mechanical, right?

It takes a lot of things like discussions and reviews of experience to break that apart. I think that sometimes even I’ve had discussions where people, where I say, “What’s the scariest movement for you to do?” They say, “Well, bending forward,” and I’m like, “Okay. Well, I want you to just go ahead and stand up,” and they stand up and I say, “Now, vividly imagine in your head bending over,” and they start to bend over and they go, “This is making my back hurt.”

I’m like, “You did not bend over. You thought about bending over, and just the thought of it was enough to fire your brain’s threat level.” How much of this is mechanical? How much of it is fear of there being a mechanical problem? That starts to go, “Well, I guess that’s an interesting thing,” and they’ll go, “Well, how much is it? Is it all in my head?” No, it’s not all in your head. You have fear and apprehension and it might be there because you do hurt when you bend forward, but we’re not going to know until we start to reduce the fear and apprehension.

Let me give you a graded version of forward bending that doesn’t actually move you into the zone where you feel threatened, and let’s do this for a couple of repetitions, a couple times a day, and see what happens over the next week. Oftentimes, they come back and they go, “I did it that way and it didn’t hurt.” “Well, how do you feel now?” “Well, actually my back feels a little bit better.” Okay. This is time. We got to learn to trust the experience. I also try to get people to not 100% trust my judgment.

They need to be able to feel the what’s going on inside of their body and work with that, because that is the way that … Especially with people with complex pain issues, I’m not there all day every day to help them with this and to reinforce these things. They’ve got to learn to work with their own nervous system and to feel whether that threat is really there for a reason or whether that threat is just their nervous system trying to protect them, and there’s really nothing going on there that they need to be concerned about.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: One question about your colleagues, and my colleagues as well, because I work with naturopath docs and I work with massage therapists and chiros and a whole holistic type approach environment. I’m just thinking, in the future, the way surely is for us all to be of knowledge of this, and then in our own little way, to be integrating and helping our patients deal with fear and some tips and this and that.

This maybe not, in the pure training, save a massage therapist, but their self learning. My question is, how would you recommend a massage therapist listening to this, who’s watched a few of those videos by Lamar Mosley or other [inaudible 00:24:23] Howard Schubiner’s got a few out right now. It’s great too, from Michigan. But they’ve watched a few of this and they … How do they integrate that so that their clients can move forward?

Sam Visnic: I think that there, first of all, is the challenge in most of these fields, from my perception, is there’s a tremendous amount of resistance right from the get-go, because this is just so unfamiliar. Because most schools of thought have really … People feel comfortable with what they have been taught to do, and this operates outside of that, and especially when there’s a lot of reinforcement of certain techniques. Especially in my world, it’s a lot about biomechanics.

When you challenge that with saying, “This is what’s really going on,” and that person might be spending a lot of time and energy and personal investment into things like [inaudible 00:25:15] about posture and muscle imbalances and so forth. They don’t know quite how to square all of that up, and that becomes a challenge for them to try to integrate this. I noticed this a lot early on in my field when I did massage school, and I was taking neuromuscular therapy courses at the same time.

There were a lot of colleagues of mine who were sitting in these courses with me doing neuromuscular therapy. This is very thorough work, very great work for people who haven’t had very thorough massage work done with chronic pain. Yet, when I’d follow up with them, most of these therapists had not gone toward the direction of doing neuromuscular therapy. Even though they took the courses, they were still doing spa-based treatments and massages, and they had a real hard time graduating into this because they couldn’t hold the space there.

To me, I said, “Just stop doing those other kinds of massages and start operating in the way that you want to operate. If you think that neuromuscular therapy is the thing that’s going to help people, then that’s what you do with your practice.” I think that leap oftentimes has to happen with things like the neuroscience education work, which is when you take this on, you’re like, “How else is this going to look in my practice? How am I going to implement this?”

I think that’s really hard to imagine sometimes without some degree of mentorship and working with somebody who’s already doing that, because it was hard for me to imagine this. Before I started teaching, I was like, “How do I teach people pain neuroscience on a first visit? How does this work?” I fumbled around a little bit, but I listened to some other practitioners, followed people that were actually helping me saying, “This is what I do on session one. This is what I do on session two” and trying to do that.

But I think I’m a type where I’ve learned something, I just start implementing it. I’m a little bit quicker to that, and I realize not everybody else does that. But you have to get a mentor to say, “Who’s actually doing this in practice?” And follow through with that. I think it’s very possible for massage therapists to start altering their language with their clients, at least. It doesn’t have to change what they’re actually doing. They could be doing all their massage techniques, but it’s the way that they’re speaking to people and being aware of what they’re reinforcing in terms of beliefs and what they’re trying to help move people toward that can be a little bit more empowering.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Yeah. I can relate to that a lot because as I jumped off the family practice bandwagon about five years ago and I was just purely doing trigger point injections and CBT or ACT, just different brain approaches to pain, and then I fell into this world of inflammation and food and supplementation and then cohort therapy and nasal breathing and the Buteyko breathing method, which I came across. I just, like you, just integrated it and start doing it.

You don’t really know what you’re doing to begin with, but one case and then the next, and before you know it, you’ve got a little system and you’ve done it once, you can do it again and it just keeps evolving. I think there needs to be that willingness to step out into the unchartered waters to an extent, but also getting a mentor is really important. Books and authors that you follow are pioneering. A lot of people have done it for years and years and years, and they just write it down in books. You’re not going to hear this in the medical literature, but you’re going to read it in books. That’s for sure. Jumping forward with that is really important.

Sam Visnic: It’s messy stuff. It’s not like … That’s been one of the things that … My wife is a clinical nutritionist and she’s probably the most experienced person I’ve ever come across now in the nutrition field just by the volume of patients that she sees, and her specialty is gastrointestinal problems, an inflammation. When we started having these discussions with her over time, and she’s taking a lot of this biopsychosocial information and translating this into nutrition practices, it just transformed everything for her.

In her way, the way that she has to implement this information is vastly different. We’re talking about the same thing, but trying to translate into how we communicate with people and then work within a team. But I can tell you one thing that’s been phenomenal is that when health practitioners are on that same page with that, it’s a lot easier to have discussions about biopsychosocial elements that feed down into the actual therapies than it is for health practitioners to argue back and forth about therapies and techniques, because we’re all just working on the same meta frame. You know what I mean?

Not sure exactly where I was going with that, but essentially just the idea of taking this framework and starting to do more integration and bringing things together, versus what the fields tend to do, which is to create more separation, right? Which we’re doing different things, and now all these factions have to fight against each other because their therapy or techniques are right and the others are wrong, rather than looking at everything. That’s what I’m far more interested in.

You see all these different therapeutic techniques and they always works sometimes. But the question is, what is amongst all of those techniques that when they are successful, what are the common elements? We look at those things as the research shows like therapeutic alliance is so important, dramatically influences the quality of the therapeutic work, building the relationship with your health practitioner, and those are the things that seemingly seem to get missed along the way, right?

Those are the things that are valuable and that we need to focus on as well. For me when I was taught that, those were game changers for me, and highlighted some of my weaknesses in the things that I needed to do a better job at. But again, I didn’t get to that point on my own. I had to learn that from other people, read lots of books. I wish the road had been a little bit faster. I’ve connected with people who had already done this a little quicker. But eventually, I’m getting there closer and closer.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Yeah, exactly. I think for people listening to this, if you’ve got a great therapist that you like, for whatever reason, ask them who do they refer to? What suggestions do they have, maybe outside their field? Because they most likely have got contacts and to go to that next level as well. Because I think once you open yourself up to solutions, like you and I have done, and as patients do, clients do, then solutions come to them. It’s just the way it works. Right? As long as you’re open, open doors will come, and we just need to know what the next step is in that path.

Sam Visnic: Yeah. For me, what’s moving forward with this is just further securing experts within their fields who think the same way, but are also just like that inch wide mile deep knowledge. Working with people is like who is the top person on sleep? Who’s the top person on orthotics? That person might go, “Why are you … I don’t know what you’re doing over here,” and I’m like, “Hey, don’t worry about it. I’ll quarterback this situation and then I’ll send the client to you for this and send them back when they’re done, and I’ll take them to the next person,” all in the hopes of just continuing to work toward and get that person the elements that they need in order to complete their total health picture.

That’s always the challenge in the work, is just trying to find … I moved to a new area here. I’m in Temecula, California. I was in Santa Monica where there is tremendous amounts of health practitioners of all sorts. Here’s a little bit more challenging, but virtual visits and all of that stuff has made everything so great too. They give access to great practitioners. They’re a phone call away, and as long as you don’t need manual therapy, at least the consultations are good and help you set you forward in the right direction so that you can find somebody locally and you can ask good questions of that practitioner to get the services and stuff that you need.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Exactly. Okay. Just to wrap this up, any final thing you would love to share? Just maybe a story or an inspiration for people that are going, “Wow, that’s great for you guys, because you seem to know what you’re talking about. But I’m struggling back here and back and beyond.” Any comments for them?

Sam Visnic: Well, my biggest message that I always want to tell people out there who are dealing with chronic pain, especially because we oftentimes get to that point where [inaudible 00:33:29] saying, “I have tried everything,” and I will say you have not tried everything. Because everything is really not so much external. It’s not always the techniques and the so forth that you need. What it is is that understanding of pain and working within your own body.

The parts that you might be missing are the parts that maybe are so far into you like the cognitive behavioral therapy approaches. I’m a big fan of hypnotherapy, because it’s all about that connection with that part of your subconscious, that part of your nervousness which is feeling threatened. We just haven’t barely scratched the surface on how we’re going to be able to start working with, dealing with some of those subconscious factors. There’s a lot of techniques now that I think that are up and coming.

Again, hypnotherapy in particular, I think is going to make a huge, I’d say, resurgence as a … It used to be a popular therapy, and there’s tons of research on it. Mark Jensen out of the University of Washington is putting out a lot of information about that, as being a very valid therapy for chronic pain. I know you do the ACT therapy, right? These are things that a lot of people haven’t tried, or I don’t think they’ve fully participated and given it a good trial.

[inaudible 00:34:45] say a trial. What I’m going to say is … I think you can help me out here. But really getting into it, going full speed with it. I think that these things are the things that are probably the least utilized by people because there oftentimes tends to be a good amount of resistance to them. But I think those are the things that are going to be the most helpful, especially when people have felt like they’ve tried everything.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Perfect. Well, listen, I’m going to invite you back on the show to talk about this hypnotherapy, because I know that’s one of your passions and you’ve connected that as an additional approach to pain. I hope that you’ll come back, and let’s talk more. Anyway, Sam, it’s been great to have you on today. Thank you so much, and well done and congratulations for what you are up to in your life and how you’re just heart, soul and strength moving forward with the whole point of educating the masses, as well as helping heal the masses from their pain. Well done.

Sam Visnic: Thank you. Thank you so much for doing what you do. We’re all on the same page with this and trying to move this message forward. I feel like we’re pushing the rock or the ball up the hill here. At some point, it’s going to be mainstream. We’ll be able to help so many more people, but we’re still at the early stage of this. Of course, thanks for all your listeners for tuning into this too, and just being a part of this.

Dr. Wayne Phimister: Thanks so much, Sam.

Sam Visnic: Thank you.