Air Force Veteran Ed Lucero started having severe abdominal pain while undergoing dialysis for kidney failure. Even after a kidney transplant in 1987, his pain didn’t stop.

At the time, doctors couldn’t explain why. The surgery was successful. There was no sign of new damage, yet Lucero was in constant discomfort.

Decades later, Lucero learned that he was experiencing neuroplastic pain, which causes the brain to continue sending pain signals long after the body has healed.

“I thought that was just how it would be for the rest of my life,” he said. “Even with light yard work, I would have to lie down or sit and breathe through it.”

To manage his pain, Lucero was prescribed methadone, a long-acting opioid sometimes used when other pain medications do not work. He took it under medical supervision for 10 years.

“It dulled the ache, but it dulled everything else too,” he said. “I couldn’t think clearly. I was in meetings, holding the wall to stay balanced. That wasn’t me.” 

Breaking the loop

Eventually, Lucero reached a point where the side effects of methadone were no longer worth it. He talked with his VA provider and asked for help getting off the medication and finding other solutions.

That’s when he was introduced to a new treatment called pain reprocessing therapy (PRT).

PRT treats pain that happens when the brain gets stuck in a loop, constantly sending pain signals to the area because it expects to feel pain.

PRT breaks the pain loop by training the brain and nervous system through stress reduction, calming the nervous system and rebuilding confidence.

Learning from the pain

During therapy, Lucero noticed patterns. The pain showed up most often when he felt overwhelmed.

Before a trip overseas, he began having sharp pain in his neck and shoulders. He hadn’t lifted anything heavy or strained himself. He paused and checked in with what else was going on.

“I realized I was worried about the house, the dogs, the garden,” he said. “That was not an injury; it was stress showing up as pain. Once I worked through it, the pain went away.”

He said PRT gave him a way to step back, ask better questions about his situation and move through the discomfort with less fear.

“I still get pain, but it is different now,” he said. “I do not panic. Therapy changed how I think about my chronic pain.”

New tools

As his physical pain started to ease, Lucero noticed something else changing, too—how he interacts with himself and others.

Often, his chronic pain kept him from participating in events with friends and family. He began isolating more and more. When people did check in, he frequently brushed them off, trying to hide the pain he was in.

“People don’t always know how to respond to someone who’s sick,” he said. “So, I just told them I was fine.”

With techniques he learned in PRT, he is started telling his truth and resumed participating in activities.

“I have new tools I didn’t have before,” he said. “They’re helping me enjoy my life again.”

Lucero uses a combination of daily guided meditation, breathing exercises, yoga and Transcendental Meditation, which helps calm the mind and body through the repetition of a silent sound or phrase to settle the nervous system.

At home, he spends time gardening, stargazing with his backyard telescope and walking his two Yorkshire terriers. He and his wife travel and enjoy exploring with their grandchildren.

“My new favorite hobby is creating great memories,” he said. “I encourage Veterans living with chronic pain to seek treatment.”

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26 Comments

  1. Ricky Daughtry July 14, 2025 at 21:54 - Reply

    I have never received anything from the VA, now I did take my father to the VA and got good results. I have chronic pain in my neck , back and to two hip transplant. I have several crushed vertebrae in my neck and back ; both hips have been replaced and a shoulder. My family doctor gives me pain meds every mon. I have taking them everyday for 4 years ,now they do not work as well as they use to. I thought about going to the VA but it is a pretty good ways from where I live. The media etc. have created the problem and confused real pain burden people with children taking some pill they bought off the street and ODed. I am 72 and I can tell you right now that they can not reprogram my mind to do away with the pain I have . That is BS.

  2. JAMES CUNNINGHAM July 11, 2025 at 16:20 - Reply

    …look at these comments, you fraudulent GHOULS!!!

  3. JAMES CUNNINGHAM July 11, 2025 at 16:19 - Reply

    Per VA.govs own data, the VERY MOST SUICIDAL VETERANS ARE, AND HAVE BEEN, THOSE WHO’S PAIN MEDS ARE TAKEN AWAY – or get no pain mgt.

    YOU KNOW IT’S TRUE TOO. …if you do your homework responsibly.

    Shame on you incredibly evil ghouls. You ALWAYS serve the economic or political narrative instead of the Science. @#$% shame on you. A special place deep in hell awaits you.

    • David C. Eichner July 12, 2025 at 12:11 - Reply

      I wrote up a pretty nice post to add here, but it was denied. The admin sent my information to the VA suicide hotline, so yeah. There’s that. That’s what real pain looks like and it’s doesn’t get spoken away. If that was the case I’d get a f’ing parrot.

  4. T Brown July 11, 2025 at 13:45 - Reply

    I have chronic pain due to multiple joint arthritis. Pain is exhausting and affects my other health issues. I call it ‘the triangle’. Each side has to be in balance with the other sides. If one health issue is out of my ‘normal’, it affects the other two as well.

    I don’t like how I now think of participating in activities in terms of how they will affect my pain level or potentially cause a new problem. Fear of pain keeps me from doing a lot of things. The ‘mental aging’ associated with chronic pain and reduced activity is the absolute *worst*. My ‘feels like’ age is much more advanced than my actual age.

  5. Ralph Maddox July 11, 2025 at 07:59 - Reply

    Methadone is an Addiction med
    MOT a pain med.

  6. Ralph Maddox July 11, 2025 at 07:52 - Reply

    This is nonsense. Methadone is not actually a pain medication.it is an addiction medication. Not meant for pain control. No wonder he was still in pain. Just another anti opioid propaganda message .

    • Charles Bruscino July 11, 2025 at 09:37 - Reply

      Methadone is a similar drug to Vicodin, oxycontin, morphine etc. Dosages can be manipulated to have more or less analgesic effect. Each opioid has a distinct and different atomic structure, and have similar responses in peoples’ nervous and other systems. Methadone was developed as a pain medicine in Germany. About 30 years later methadone was seen to help heroin addicts. Different people have different responses to all the individual opioids. What works for one may not work for another. Basically. addiction occurs when a person screws up his or her life because for various reasons he or she seeks substances like opioids or alcohol or stimulants or “downers” to get high. The question does beg, how many Americans have safely and responsibly taken opioids for pain for years or decades without ever overdosing or becoming addicted? The CDC never answered this question because of the human emotions related to drugs and addiction and overdose episodes. Different people have various responses to different therapeutic modalities to treat pain. What works for one may not work for another.

  7. Stephen Kenneth Shy July 10, 2025 at 18:03 - Reply

    Different strokes for different folks. Not every modality works for everyone! I’m 73yrs old and have had14 surgeries leaving alot of scar tissue. Also 2 artificial hips plus artificial parts in other areas of my body. So it makes me angry when we’re all treated the same, like robots off the assembly line.

  8. Mary Coil July 10, 2025 at 16:30 - Reply

    This will not work for Fibromyalgia.

  9. Cnn July 10, 2025 at 00:06 - Reply

    Why have a “pain clinic” if you don’t want to actually treat pain? And you can talk all you want until you are blue in the face, if you could talk your way out of any kind of pain situation there would be no reason for pain meds that actually work. We are all adults here who get their military care from the VA so my two cents are if a person takes their pain meds as PRESCRIBED there is little to no risk of anything including addiction and or dependence. But if you dont take pain meds as directed ie taking more or not as directed, that is the problem. Period. All stop.

    • David Eichner July 11, 2025 at 00:40 - Reply

      I have metastatic prostate cancer. They’ve removed the prostate, but the cancer came back. I’m doing hormone therapy which is a hell in itself. Along with the pain down below, I have pain in all my joints and bones from the Xtandi and Eligard injections. Fun stuff I tell you. Fun stuff. Yeah, I know pain and I’ve had to do battle with pain clinics even though they knew about my situation. I got laid off after a 23 year run with a large well know mobile company. I have no health care. My wife started to call the VA and lit a fire under my arse to get in contact with them While they’ve been superb about giving me my Eligard injections and supplying me with my Xtandi (11k per month, and they send me 3 months worth, I was in awe that they actually purchased this for me), the pain management they’ve totally dropped the ball on. They just said flat out that they don’t prescribe any pain medication. Alrighty then……and so we’re hoping they send me to a pain clinic. Meanwhile, I have this Metastatic cancer and I’m searching for a job. I guess I could go on disability, but I’m not done yet. I still have more in the tank. When they ask about a disability (cancer) I just choose not to answer (there’s an option not to answer, that’s a HIPAA thing anyways). So here I am, I guess you would say it feels like my joints are broken, or have no Cartlidge in them. I don’t know, I’m not a doctor. I just know the shit hurts. I’m juggling pain and job search, trying to hide the cancer and it’s getting ridiculous. Sorry for spewing this out in this post, but my wife was reading this and it caught my eye. Had to post. Hope they send me to a pain place soon. Then they have the nerve to ask about suicidal thoughts….really? Have you read my file? Really….again, I’m not built that way, I’m not taking the easy way out, but have I thought about it. You’re goddamn right I have!

      Eichner, Dave C.
      USN
      USS Reasoner
      USS Kinkaid
      Desron 13
      Naval Special Warfare Unit 10
      NAS Sigonella Security

  10. Samual Huff July 9, 2025 at 23:59 - Reply

    This is great news to hear for those that this helps. Me personally nothing but the old Vicodin worked. Unfortunately when I moved back to Ohio. They said there was an opiate epidemic. And therefore they would not continue my prescription mind you my prescription was 15 pills a month and during the two years I was prescribed it. My life had done a complete 180 and I was in shape feeling good. Rebuilding my muscle core.. I had a life again. It took me 15 years to get to those two years.. and now it’s been another 11 years without any of it and I’m in the worst shape I’ve ever been. I can’t bring it up or mention you know the only thing that worked. without being looked upon as a junkie, mind you 15 pills. they also had taken me off my Adderall for my ADHD, but at least I can say “well I don’t concentrate on the pain as much as I used to.”

  11. Stephen July 9, 2025 at 21:05 - Reply

    I received a procedure that ended 25 years of chronic back pain. The VA funded it back in 2023. It’s called Discseel and community care is supposed to help vets receive it. Many vets throughout the US all which had the same problem. The VA made it real difficult to get and is still the main obstruction

  12. Pablo Blanco July 9, 2025 at 19:05 - Reply

    Therapy and/or medication should go hand in hand to be effective. I am not sure I understand or agree with others’ views as to why pain medication is essentially viewed as a bad thing or negative for all. Many people take a low or mild dose of pain medication as prescribed and have no desire to abuse it or acquire higher doses. Not everyone has a substance use disorder, and many can have a better quality of life taking their medication along with performing other therapeutic activities. Let folks live. If they want to be a junkie then Darwinism will prevail.

    Truth be told, more individuals are taking prescribed stimulants than pharmacies can keep up with all over the nation. Those are no different from meth. Same same. Yet its not looked down at.

  13. VINCENT D MANCUSI July 9, 2025 at 12:29 - Reply

    Keep trying

  14. Larry Boston July 9, 2025 at 11:01 - Reply

    Right there with this gentleman. Pain is a constant even with pain meds. I have been on dialysis for just over two years and have finally adjusted to my circumstances. I also suffer with RA. However, I agree with the stress causeing pain and changeing the stressors is a great thing. IT WORKS !

  15. Ken Kirchner July 8, 2025 at 19:54 - Reply

    So how do I get involved to treat chronic pain ?

  16. Steve Wikert July 8, 2025 at 19:27 - Reply

    After more than 3 decades of chronic pain I spent almost 4 weeks going through Mayo Clinic’s Pain Rehab Clinic Rochester, MN. It sounds very similar to the VA program in the article. It worked on it from all angles including PT and Occupational PT and biofeedback and relaxation breathing exercises. I thought I really had the world back again by the end. The tricky part is trying to use the techniques in real life with a lot more chaos than the more controlled setting at the clinic.

    • Gerald Messer July 9, 2025 at 22:25 - Reply

      Absolute malarkey.
      He had no real pain in my opinion.
      Another bs attempt thrown at you by va without actually helping you.
      Pain medications work on real pain.
      Talking about it, not so much.
      My Dr. Tried to push this on me, I told her I don’t believe in that bs. I think since I don’t wimper and cry in front of them they actually think I’m not in pain. No no no.

      • harold July 11, 2025 at 07:59 - Reply

        WOW! Gerald is an angry elf!

    • Gerald Messer July 9, 2025 at 22:33 - Reply

      Absolute malarkey.
      Another bs attempt thrown at you by va without actually helping you.
      Pain medications work on real pain.
      Talking about it, not so much.
      My Dr. Tried to push this on me, I told her I don’t believe in that bs.
      I think when you don’t wimper and whine and cry in front of them they actually think I’m not in pain.
      No no no.
      Some such as myself refuse to show it.

  17. Robert D Vernon July 8, 2025 at 17:23 - Reply

    I do applaud this Veteran for being able to “break” the cycle of using pain medications. I personally have tried every new therapy coming out and known to mankind, (Steroid Injections, Non-steroidal medications, hypnosis, etc) and the only thing that seems to work is the Opioids but I use the minimal strength and refuse to ask for higher doses because of the way people who take pain medication are looked at as the pain don’t exist. I don’t like that kind of picture painted on those that legitimately are suffering pain. So its great this Veteran was able to break his cycle, me, I’m fine with something that works for me.

  18. Kenneth w. Bartlett July 8, 2025 at 16:22 - Reply

    Thank GOD for the VA. They have been there for me in my time of chronic pain. I wish the VA had a hospital nearby. Last year I was taken to the local hospital. When I was being offloaded from the ambulance, I heard one nurse ask “What do we have here referring to me. The head nurse responded with I don’t know, just hope it’s not another of those Damn Vets looking for pain meds. OK take him upstairs. The other nurse said, “Oh No” not there and that was the beginning of several miserable days. My wife doesn’t drive so she came to visit me by UBER and bring me my regular meds. I finally got in contact with my son, and he had me released and taken home, never to be taken there again. The VA provides me with the necessary pain meds and I was told by the hospital I would not get anything from them. GOD Bless the VA.

    • Michael July 10, 2025 at 10:43 - Reply

      I was wondering what state you live in; that makes a big difference about pain meds. If the state frowns on pain meds then they treat you like a criminal. Also, hospital and doctor opinions vary about pain meds. So sorry you had such a bad time; I’ve been there and know what thats like.

  19. George Plummer July 8, 2025 at 15:14 - Reply

    I am going to call the 800 # . I have constant pain.

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