Chronic pain is not maintained by faulty thoughts or unwillingness to accept experience. It is the result of a nervous system living under ongoing threat, overload, and unmet needs. When pain is chronic, the body is already doing everything it can to protect itself.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT )aims to change thoughts and beliefs about pain. That can slide into telling people that their thinking produces their suffering. For someone in chronic pain, that easily turns into self-blame and pressure to “think better” while nothing in their life or body conditions improves. It also keeps attention focused on pain, which often intensifies it rather than settling it.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) reframes this by saying the pain can stay, and the work is to accept it and live anyway. That sounds kinder, but for chronic pain, it often becomes another demand placed on an already overburdened system.
Accepting pain while the body remains unsafe, exhausted, or unsupported is not regulation. It’s endurance. It teaches people to coexist with suffering rather than asking why the pain persists and what conditions would alleviate it.
Both models individualize the problem. They place the needed change within the person instead of in the environment, relationships, workload, medical neglect, financial stress, or ongoing injury. They ask the person to adapt to pain instead of reducing what drives the pain.
From an Interpersonal Neurobiology (IPNB) lens, pain eases when the nervous system is supported enough to settle. That means safety, rest, predictability, physical support, relational support, and relief from constant demand. Without those, no amount of cognitive reframing or acceptance practice will resolve chronic pain. It may only teach people to override their own signals.
The issue is not resistance or lack of acceptance. The issue is that the body is still under threat. Until that changes, CBT and ACT are at best incomplete and at worst they are harmful.