{"id":4705,"date":"2023-09-13T12:13:27","date_gmt":"2023-09-13T11:13:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/unityphysio.co.uk\/?p=4705"},"modified":"2023-09-18T16:08:01","modified_gmt":"2023-09-18T15:08:01","slug":"what-is-pacing-how-can-it-help-with-persistent-chronic-pain","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/unityphysio.co.uk\/what-is-pacing-how-can-it-help-with-persistent-chronic-pain\/","title":{"rendered":"What is Pacing & How Can it Help with Persistent\/Chronic Pain?"},"content":{"rendered":"
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There isn\u2019t an agreed definition of pacing, I would define it as flexible way of structuring your day in a way that supports both function and wellbeing. \u00a0Pacing essentially means breaking down tasks and activities into manageable chunks with consideration of the different types of activities, including enough short rest breaks in your day and flexibly adjusting things each day\/throughout the day as needed. \u00a0<\/span>Pacing needs consideration of different activity types, for example what activities are more physical\/cognitive\/emotional and how they impact you. \u00a0It needs a number of things which I will touch on in this blog, especially awareness, compassion, noticing what’s present in our experience within our body (what’s embodied), flexibility, knowing our values & what’s most meaningful, and exploration.<\/span><\/p>\n Pacing is helpful for us all and more so when living with persistent pain and\/or other health conditions. \u00a0A quick note here, pacing for persistent pain is different to pacing for ME\/CFS and long covid (where post exertional malaise is present), there are similarities but its a different. \u00a0This blog is focusing on pacing when living with persistent pain.<\/span><\/p>\n The way I suggest exploring pacing with the people I work with includes discussing what pacing is and is not, there are some examples of what pacing isn’t below, perhaps the commonest misconception is that it means doing less. \u00a0I also encourage an understanding of nervous system regulation through a cognitive understanding and an embodied understanding (body based). \u00a0Part of this includes developing a toolbox of strategies and practices that support compassionate awareness & nervous system regulation, both I see as key aspects of pacing.\u00a0 \u00a0I often use the window of tolerance model by Dan Siegel, polyvagal theory by Stephen Porges and the three circles model from compassion focused therapy by Paul Gilbert as part of exploring understanding nervous system regulation in an embodied way. \u00a0I explore what’s meaningful with people and what their values are for a number of reasons, including because it helps people make choices about which activities to prioritise and engage in.<\/span><\/p>\n As already mentioned pacing can be misunderstood (and often is), here are some of the things pacing is not:<\/span><\/p>\n Pacing is not a rigid daily plan, it\u2019s a way of flexibly adjusting our day as we move through it. \u00a0It is helpful for us to bring a non-judgemental compassionate awareness to how we are relating to our world (both the internal and the external), which is changing moment by moment. \u00a0From a place of being the compassionate observer we can take conscious wise action, where it’s possible to meet what’s needed (part of pacing). \u00a0A quick note here, there isn’t really any division between our internal world and the external world (not something we are exploring in this blog).<\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n Avoiding doing things that tend to increase pain because of worry of a pain flare is not pacing and doing this over time this increases threat in systems, decreases our tolerance levels for the activity being avoided and often also for different activities. \u00a0It increases sympathetic nervous system activation (fight-flight), essentially there is more threat in systems and a sense of safety is lacking or has significantly decreased (pain is part of our threat system). \u00a0Tolerance levels decrease for a number of reasons, mainly due to an increase in sensitivity levels to different stimuli and a decrease in fitness levels. \u00a0Stimuli that becomes overreacted to (sensitivity) often includes sitting and standing still, moving a certain way or when systems are super sensitive all movements can trigger a protection response, doing certain activities and even thinking about doing a particular activity. \u00a0A quick note here about cause and pain, rarely does one thing cause pain or an increase in it, it\u2019s complex and there are many variables we don\u2019t see.<\/span><\/p>\n Another thing that pacing doesn’t mean is ignoring pain and pushing on regardless, this tends to ramp up the protection responses and sensitises systems more. \u00a0This is the opposite of avoiding activities, it is sometimes referred to as the boom-bust cycle (not a term I use unless someone is using it and relates to it in a helpful way). \u00a0Both avoidance and regularly exceeding tolerance levels by too much are both problematic. \u00a0A quick note here, choosing not to do something that doesn’t come from a place of threat may well not be avoidance. \u00a0Doing a lot more than tolerance levels tends to result in having to do less for a few days, or even longer, it increases sensitivity and the threat in systems.\u00a0 Doing a lot less also increases sensitivity and threat in systems, along with tending to decrease strength and fitness as well. \u00a0However, doing a little more with a sense of safety, understanding your nervous system and using practices that help regulate your nervous system can help to gently nudge tolerance levels over time.<\/span><\/p>\n Pacing is not another thing to be \u2018done\u2019, it\u2019s a way of flexibility adjusting to how we are and what feels needed throughout our day.\u00a0 The way I see it is that pacing becomes a way of being that supports both effective function and our wellbeing. \u00a0For example, compassionately relating to ourselves and others, taking regular pauses in the day (these are needed for everyone, whether living with pain or not) and having nurturing daily practices that are part of a way of being and living, these could be seen as helpful habits.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n (Image: my Grandad when he was 90 doing a meaningful activity – time in nature with one of his grandchildren – made possible by having something to sit on & only walking a very short distance)<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Pacing encourages people to work around their normal tolerance levels, this means knowing your baseline for different activities and where your soft limit\/soft edge\/soft boundary is.\u00a0 This means knowing what level of different activities is generally ok (the baseline) and also having an embodied knowing (an awareness from what’s present in your body related to your whole experience). \u00a0Knowing your soft boundary includes knowing the whispers from your body that indicate you are near this point and indicate that taking a rest break or changing tasks would be helpful. \u00a0I have found it helpful over the years, with myself and working with others, to combine the cognitive understanding of a variable baseline with an embodied knowing of the signs we are near our soft boundary or soft limit. \u00a0One reason combining these is helpful is because our baselines are always changing and are impacted by many factors\/variables, for example lack of stress and increased stress, and our body will reflect dysregulation consistently – we can come to deeply know it’s whispers when we listen compassionately.<\/span><\/p>\n Pacing can help in many ways, here are some of the ways it can help with managing and changing pain:<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n It can be helpful to have an understanding of why pain doesn\u2019t necessarily equal harm, knowing that we are safe to do things even with pain. \u00a0Having an understanding around this is one thing that can help people to pace activities and create a sense of safety.<\/span><\/p>\n As already mentioned listening to the body and integrating enough rest, along with having daily practices that help to regulate the nervous system is important. \u00a0Many things can help to regulate the nervous system and help with pacing when living with pain, for example, breath practices, meditation, gentle yoga or other mindful movement, singing\/humming, time in nature. \u00a0Exercise and including this in pacing is important, finding what’s helpful for you needs exploration, there is a link to an exercise and persistent pain blog I wrote in the resources at the end of this blog.<\/span><\/p>\n It is important to explore what is restful for you and the sort of rest that certain things offer, there are a number of different forms of rest which I am not going to go into in this blog. \u00a0The picture below is child’s pose, this is often referred to as a pose of rest in yoga and is known to be calming, grounding, restful and restorative. \u00a0It is important to remember just because something is said to be calming and restful it doesn’t mean it will be for you, this highlights again the importance of embodied awareness (what is showing up in the body). \u00a0Understanding what is showing up in your body and how your nervous system is responding is part of developing an embodied awareness. \u00a0I encourage people who attend my 8 week Creating A Healing Path workshops for people with pain\/fatigue\/anxiety to do this. \u00a0Even though we didn’t specifically cover pacing people reported pacing better and being more able to engage in what was meaningful to them, you can find the link for more information on these workshops at the end of this blog.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n As already mentioned pacing is not rigid, it needs flexibility as everything is changing moment by moment. \u00a0Our internal and external environments are constantly changing, our tolerance levels and nervous system state are in a constant state of flux (with everything else), it another reason why having an embodied awareness matters. \u00a0We need a cognitive understanding combined with an embodied awareness of what practices and strategies are helpful when, along with the different ways that we can adapt them. \u00a0Without a body based understanding (embodied awareness) we will be running on cognitive understanding alone and missing out on what our nervous system is communicating and the wisdom of our body.<\/span><\/p>\n Here is a common example of how our tolerance levels and nervous system state are always changing, imagine that you haven\u2019t been sleeping well for a few nights and you keep on doing things in the usual way. \u00a0There are some common impacts of this, including: increased fatigue, increased stress, making poorer food choices, getting hooked in unhelpful thoughts, and increased pain which may also stop you sleeping (one of the many cycles in pain). \u00a0\u00a0Lack of sleep in itself sensitises systems, increases threat system activation, increases the perception of pain, our baselines and soft boundary change, and it impacts our concentration and focus. \u00a0So, rather than keeping doing things in the usual way we need to explore what\u2019s helpful and adapt what we are doing.\u00a0 This might look like breaking things down into smaller chunks than usual, having more rest breaks during the day, including more meditation, or having a few minutes outside a few times during the day, and doing less exercise than normal (the body responds differently to exercise with lack of sleep and it responds differently with persistent pain too). \u00a0Making these adjustments like these are examples of pacing.<\/span><\/p>\n When there is something that\u2019s important for you to do and you know it\u2019s over your tolerance levels one way to manage this is to engage in what gives more safety messages to your body via your nervous system for a few days before the event, during it if possible, and again for a few days after. \u00a0 \u00a0Factoring in more rest afterwards and even before the activity\/day can be helpful.<\/span><\/p>\n Remember what is helpful on one day, or in one moment won\u2019t be exactly the same as what’s needed in another. \u00a0This is why we need an embodied awareness (body awareness) and a toolkit of practices and strategies that we have explored and used regularly. \u00a0This helps us to select what feels most helpful and then notice how our nervous system and body are responding, adapting what we are doing from this as needed.<\/span><\/p>\n Here\u2019s a list of some more examples that can be part of pacing with a flare-up of pain:<\/span><\/p>\n \ud83d\udc49\ud83c\udffb Modulate your usual activities, like with the example above<\/span><\/p>\n \ud83d\udc49\ud83c\udffb Use additional helpful strategies from your toolkit if needed, a few examples are mentioned above<\/span><\/p>\n \ud83d\udc49\ud83c\udffb Do what helps to regulate your nervous system more frequently during the day<\/span><\/p>\n \ud83d\udc49\ud83c\udffb\u00a0 Practice self-compassion, an example would be reframing your language (the self-critic can get loud when things during a pain flare-up)<\/span><\/p>\n \ud83d\udc49\ud83c\udffb For some activities where you are doing less than you normally would due to a flare-up remember to ensure that you have a plan to build things back up gradually as things start to settle (something which can be forgotten).<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Some questions you can ask yourself:<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n This blog has covered what I see as the basic principles of pacing when living with persistent pain, these are:<\/span><\/p>\n No-one paces the same way, no-one walks in the same shoes, yet we create similar footprints. \u00a0This means that we can learn from each other and use the principles of things like pacing and different practices and adapt them to meet what’s needed. \u00a0There are common tools\/practices\/strategies that can help regulate the nervous system, manage and modulate pain, support wellbeing and effective function, these need adjusting for each person. \u00a0This is something I explore with people as part of 1:1 work and it is part of my 8 week Creating A Healing Path workshop series. \u00a0With regular practice people understand the many ways they can adapt practices to meet their needs and as part of exploration and regular practice they create their own toolkit of resources to manage and change pain.<\/span><\/p>\n Learning how to pace and manage pain is a journey of exploration that takes many directions, there isn\u2019t a destination\/an end point with pacing, instead pacing supports pain management and engaging with what matters each day. \u00a0I would say that understanding nervous system regulation, noticing how we are relating to ourselves and practicing embodiment (noticing what\u2019s present in our body) are all key parts of pacing.<\/span><\/p>\n I have written this blog from my understanding of working as a pain specialist physiotherapist & wellness coach as well as lived experience of persistent pain, ME\/CFS & PoTS. \u00a0If you would like to learn more about pacing and\/or would like help with management of persistent pain in general get in touch to book your free 15 minute call to see how I can help.<\/span><\/p>\n If you would like to find out more about the 8 week online Creating A Healing Path workshop series for people with any condition associated with pain\/fatigue\/anxiety click the link below:<\/span><\/p>\n https:\/\/unityphysio.co.uk\/services\/ahealingpath\/<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n There are a number of resources specifically for pacing for persistent pain and related topics, here are a few:<\/span><\/p>\n There is a little about nervous system regulation in part one of my healing blog https:\/\/unityphysio.co.uk\/healing-within-connectedness-love-part-one\/<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n This is a blog that I wrote on exercising with persistent pain and can help with pacing of exercise\/physical activities https:\/\/unityphysio.co.uk\/exercising-with-persistent-pain\/<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n A blog written about pacing in the context of neuropathic pain http:\/\/livingwellpain.net\/persistent-pain-pacing<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n A short pacing video\u00a0https:\/\/www.paintoolkit.org\/pain-tools<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n
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How Can Pacing Help With Persistent Pain?<\/strong><\/h3>\n
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Pacing Tips<\/strong><\/h3>\n
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In Summary<\/span><\/strong><\/h3>\n
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Pacing Resources <\/span><\/strong><\/span><\/h3>\n