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In this episode, Daniel Lyman is joined by two of the leading minds in mind-body medicine — Dr. Mark Lumley and Christie Uipi — for a candid, collaborative case discussion unlike anything we've done before.
Dr. Mark Lumley is a distinguished professor of psychology at Wayne State University, co-developer of Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy (EAET), and one of the world's leading researchers on mind-body therapies for chronic pain. Christie Uipi is a psychotherapist, Executive Director of the Better Mind Center, a key contributor to the development of PRT, and a chronic pain overcomer herself.
Together, the three work through three real cases submitted by listeners:
Jill from Canada has lived with vestibular migraine and Persistent Postural-Perceptual Dizziness (PPPD) for six years after a lifetime of people-pleasing, boundary struggles, and pushing through stress. The group explores dizziness as an "escalation symptom" — what happens when the body has been ignored for too long — and how unexpressed emotions may be driving the nervous system's loudest signals.
Ben from Edinburgh has had chronic lower back and hip pain for 30 years. His herniated discs have largely resolved, but the pain remains — and it's worst in the middle of the night. The group digs into conditioned pain responses, the psychology of sleep and pain, and why rigidity in daily routines might be keeping the nervous system stuck.
Katerina has suffered from migraines since age 20 and is now dealing with up to 20 migraine days a month. She wants to know: is migraine actually neuroplastic? Can you treat it like neuroplastic pain if there's an underlying disease process? Dr. Lumley shares findings from a recent randomized controlled trial showing a 40% reduction in migraine frequency with group EAET, and the group unpacks the tension between traditional migraine management and a neuroplastic approach.
This episode is a masterclass in collaborative clinical thinking — and a reminder that no matter how long you've been suffering, there are still doors worth opening.
Resources and Additional Links
By Daniella Deutsch, Paulina Soble4.8
5353 ratings
In this episode, Daniel Lyman is joined by two of the leading minds in mind-body medicine — Dr. Mark Lumley and Christie Uipi — for a candid, collaborative case discussion unlike anything we've done before.
Dr. Mark Lumley is a distinguished professor of psychology at Wayne State University, co-developer of Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy (EAET), and one of the world's leading researchers on mind-body therapies for chronic pain. Christie Uipi is a psychotherapist, Executive Director of the Better Mind Center, a key contributor to the development of PRT, and a chronic pain overcomer herself.
Together, the three work through three real cases submitted by listeners:
Jill from Canada has lived with vestibular migraine and Persistent Postural-Perceptual Dizziness (PPPD) for six years after a lifetime of people-pleasing, boundary struggles, and pushing through stress. The group explores dizziness as an "escalation symptom" — what happens when the body has been ignored for too long — and how unexpressed emotions may be driving the nervous system's loudest signals.
Ben from Edinburgh has had chronic lower back and hip pain for 30 years. His herniated discs have largely resolved, but the pain remains — and it's worst in the middle of the night. The group digs into conditioned pain responses, the psychology of sleep and pain, and why rigidity in daily routines might be keeping the nervous system stuck.
Katerina has suffered from migraines since age 20 and is now dealing with up to 20 migraine days a month. She wants to know: is migraine actually neuroplastic? Can you treat it like neuroplastic pain if there's an underlying disease process? Dr. Lumley shares findings from a recent randomized controlled trial showing a 40% reduction in migraine frequency with group EAET, and the group unpacks the tension between traditional migraine management and a neuroplastic approach.
This episode is a masterclass in collaborative clinical thinking — and a reminder that no matter how long you've been suffering, there are still doors worth opening.
Resources and Additional Links

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