Module 5 - Memory of pain - He mahara ki te mamae

Reviewed
September 2025
This resource relates to the following topics:

Download resource

Download DOCX Download DOCX Download DOCX Download DOCX Download DOC Download DOCX Download DOCX

Details

Reviewed
September 2025
Updated
September 2025
Format
Online only
HE code
PMP5
Language
English

The full resource:

The focus of this module is the brain and its capacity to remember and learn and its role in chronic pain. Here is a brief introduction video 

In this module:

  • The focus is on the brain and its capacity to remember and learn
  • The memory of past experiences influences our experiences today
  • Noticing and recognising those patterns is the first step to influencing or changing them
  • Memory will influence your chronic pain
  • You can influence your future memories

Humans have large brains and this allows for an amazing capacity to lay down memories and also to learn.  Let’s firstly consider why this is so helpful and how this impacts on your everyday life. This video outlines how a pain experience can become neurosignature that contributes towards you feeling pain despite no threat or danger in the body now. As previously mentioned, we use the example of an acute injury to show these processes, but they will be the same whatever the reason for your chronic pain. 

Neurotags video

There are things we remember and as well as other, more hidden ones – read here on the role of implicit memories. Memories and chronic Pain HE3228 

This video shows that one neurotag can trigger the pain experience and how this was changed over time Phantom limb pain - the Baker and the Bread

To understand the role of memory and influence your pain, here are things you can do:

Hear patients share what exploring memory meant for their pain journey – watch Listen to the neurosignature stories

Read more about this from other centres, see The Memory of Pain – PainScienceCenter.com

For any ‘Professor T’ fans – this quote is from his recent series: “Memories have the power to frighten and the power to soothe.  They are possibly our most powerful tool.”

And remember:

[image: Neurons that fire together wire together]

Product Limitation