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Chronic Pain therapists in Blaine, MN

We are proud to feature top rated Chronic Pain therapists in Blaine, MN. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
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Edina, Minnesota therapist: Cara Deininger, psychologist
Chronic Pain or Illness

Cara Deininger

Psychologist, PhD
Chronic pain affects not just the body, but also emotions, identity, and relationships. I use Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) to help clients modify behaviors and thought patterns, allowing them to engage more fully in life despite pain. Together, we’ll work on reducing the emotional burden of pain, improving coping strategies, and reclaiming a sense of control over daily life.  
10 Years Experience
Near Blaine, MN
Online in Blaine, Minnesota
Jacksonville, Florida therapist: Dr. Justin D'Arienzo, psychologist
Chronic Pain or Illness

Dr. Justin D'Arienzo

Psychologist, Psy.D., ABPP
We provide CBT pain management services and psychological testing for spine stimulators.  
Online in Blaine, Minnesota
Concordville, Pennsylvania therapist: Dr. Amy Schullery, psychologist
Chronic Pain or Illness

Dr. Amy Schullery

Psychologist, Psy.D.
I support clients with chronic physical issues and adjustment to any limitations.  
18 Years Experience
Online in Blaine, Minnesota
Austin, Texas therapist: Anahita Kalianivala, psychologist
Chronic Pain or Illness

Anahita Kalianivala

Psychologist, PhD
Living with chronic pain or illness is about so much more than symptoms — it’s about identity, self-trust, grief, and the invisible labor of “looking fine” while struggling to get through the day. I specialize in pain-informed therapy that supports both the body and the mind, helping you reduce flare-related stress, shift fear cycles, and rebuild your sense of agency. You deserve support that sees the whole picture — not just the symptoms.  
6 Years Experience
Online in Blaine, Minnesota (Online Only)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania therapist: Dr. Cynthia Edwards-Hawver, psychologist
Chronic Pain or Illness

Dr. Cynthia Edwards-Hawver

Psychologist, Psy.D.
When you’ve been in survival mode long enough, your body eventually starts to speak the truth your brain has been trying to ignore. If you're a high-functioning woman living with chronic illness—Lyme disease, autoimmune issues, migraines, chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, IBS, or symptoms no doctor can fully explain—you may have spent years blaming yourself. Pushing through. Powering on. Telling yourself you're just stressed, just tired, just too sensitive. But what if your illness isn’t just physical? What if your body is responding to something deeper—like the emotional trauma of a toxic or narcissistic relationship? I work with women who are successful, smart, and chronically unwell—often without fully understanding that the constant stress, emotional abuse, gaslighting, or high-conflict co-parenting dynamic they’ve endured may be a major root cause of their health issues. These relationships dysregulate your nervous system, flood your body with cortisol, erode your immune system, and create the perfect storm for illness to take hold. You may be: Co-parenting with a narcissist and constantly walking on eggshells Living with post-separation abuse, burnout, and deep emotional exhaustion Feeling dismissed by medical providers who don’t ask about your relationships Blaming your body while ignoring the decades of survival it’s endured Overachieving while secretly unraveling Wondering if your body is trying to get your attention If you’ve found yourself searching: Why am I always sick and exhausted? How trauma affects chronic illness Can narcissistic abuse cause physical illness? Stress-related autoimmune disease in women Burnout, inflammation, and emotional abuse Why chronic illness flares after divorce ...you are not imagining it. Your body is not broken. It’s been fighting to keep you alive through years of emotional chaos. I specialize in working with women who are managing chronic illness and the emotional aftermath of toxic relationships. Whether you’re still in the relationship, co-parenting with someone who triggers you daily, or finally trying to heal in peace—this work matters. You deserve care that looks at the whole you: physical, emotional, relational, and psychological. You’re not weak for being sick. You’re strong for surviving what made you sick in the first place.  
25 Years Experience
Online in Blaine, Minnesota (Online Only)