Visual-Emotional Therapy for CPPS

A different approach to CPPS, PFD, and Pelvic Pain recovery

I fought CPPS for 20+ years before developing a method that helped me recover completely. I developed it for myself after conservative options failed. The therapy is called Visual-Emotional Therapy. I created a course that can be used as a roadmap, and I am also available to assist people in working through it.

Visual-Emotional Therapy uses a visual, scientific approach to reducing symptoms. I make no claims about its success rate or whether it will work for you - only that it is new, it is a roadmap of how I fully recovered, and it is different than other therapies and solutions that are offered for this difficult problem.

Contact

My name is Jon T. I don't put my last name here because the internet is a little crazy. I am a high school teacher and tech freelancer. I made this course, and I help people with this problem, because I was frustrated with current treatment options for pelvic pain. I spent well over 10k for treatments that I was assured were the "gold standard".Eventually, I found a method that worked better than anything I'd tried, and I used it to get out of pain. My method is still the only thing that has ever made much sense to me about my pelvic pain problems. I make no claims about how well it will work for anyone else, but it is a new and different approach to a difficult problem.

Visual-Emotional Therapy for CPPS

The Visual-Emotional Therapy for CPPS course is roughly two hours of content, broken down into three sections: Active Meditation/Thinking Visually, Exercises and Stretches, and Tips and Tricks. I've posted a few screenshots below.There are two core issues that this therapy aims to fix: 1) The emotional dysregulation of pelvic pain and 2) The poor visual sense that the brain has of the pelvic floor. Solving these problems got me 100% out of pain.This work was created after I spent two years writing a book about my recovery, before deciding a video course would be a better format. I am currently offering it for $37.

I work with people suffering from CPPS and pelvic floor dysfunction. I consult only with males at this time, since I do not yet feel qualified to advise females. However, I do think the emotional and perceptual issues addressed in my course could be useful for anyone suffering from pelvic pain symptoms.

The Theory

My theory of pelvic pain is the result of two years of research that I did as I was recovering from CPPS and after I recovered. I believe that there are two related factors that may keep people in chronic pain. They are:1) Emotional dysregulation as a normalized response. There are a number of studies over the last 15 years showing strong correlation between CPPS and low-level damage to emotional pain processing areas of the brain. Here is one such study..The second problem is that I believe that the pelvic floor is a "blind spot" for the brain. The brain does a poor job of interpreting where the signals in that area are coming from, which is likely due to the crowding of many important systems (reproductive, waste management etc) into a small area. Interestingly, the sensory processing for the genitalia is located right next to the feet. Sensory processing for other body parts flow more naturally, in a top-to-bottom fashion. The pelvic area's sensory processing is quite unique in this way. To see what I mean, simply type "sensory homunculus" into google and notice where sensory input for the genitalia is processed.So, in essence there are two problems: First, our brains get used to responding in an overly emotional way (due to the mild brain damage). Two, because the brain has a hard time "seeing" this part of the body, the signals are continuously perceived as a threat. If the brain cannot "see" this part of the body - if it has a poor awareness of this space in the body - then how does it know that a pain signal in that part of the body isn't a major threat?The pain is in the brain's blind spot, which makes it feel distorted, and hard to describe, and the brain's natural response is to treat it as more of a threat than it really is. In reality, it's a muscle spasm or nerve irritation. Annoying? Yes...but the pain response is way out of context to how serious the injury actually is.Visual-Emotional Therapy aims to fix both the emotional and perceptual problem, by encouraging people to focus 100% visually, and 0% emotionally within a 15 minute meditation (it's easier said than done). By developing an improved visual sense of the space of the pelvic floor, the brain becomes more familiar with the space. This visual practice is also used to help distract you from the emotional responses - it becomes a tool to help the brain go "cold turkey" from the constant, low-level, emotionally overcharged reactions to the pain.By doing the work to shut down ANY emotional responses (at least, for 10-15 minutes), I was able to create a much-improved healing environment that led to small, but real releases in pain and tension. Over a year, I probably got 4-500 small releases. These small releases added up to a complete resolution for my symptoms of pain and tension.Once my brain had an improved picture of this space, and I became better at managing my emotional responses, my brain learned that this nerve irritation or spasm did not actually reach into any vital areas. But I had to improve and re-condition my brain in order to create this environment. And that is what Visual-Emotional Therapy aims to do.