About Us
Founded by Eric Stokell, Santa Barbara Chronic Pain Solutions is more than a practice, it’s a mission to bring hope and healing to those who’ve struggled for too long. Let’s work together to help you reconnect with your body, your emotions, and the life you deserve.
Eric Stokell: A Journey of Healing and Transformation
Eric Stokell is the founder of Santa Barbara Chronic Pain Solutions and a certified Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT) practitioner trained directly under Alan Gordon — the researcher behind the landmark Boulder Back Pain Study.
His path to this work wasn't academic. It was lived. Eric spent years in debilitating chronic pain — cycling through Western medicine, alternative therapies, and dead ends — before discovering PRT and experiencing a profound, lasting recovery. That personal transformation became his calling.
He holds a degree in Comparative World Religion and Indigenous Studies from UC Santa Barbara, brings a deep background in mind-body healing traditions, and has worked closely with local Native American elders and healers. His approach is holistic, deeply human, and shaped by the simple belief that the capacity to heal already lives within you.
The Pain Begins
At 18, a mild car accident triggered chronic neck pain and severely limited range of motion. Medical imaging showed bone spurs between his C5 and C6 vertebrae, and doctors were confident they had their answer: structural damage. Physical therapy and anti-inflammatory medications followed. Neither helped. The pain intensified. Eric's ability to focus on his college studies — and simply live his life — began to erode.
What followed was years of searching. Acupuncture. Massage. Craniosacral therapy. Yoga. Qigong. Chiropractic care. Practitioner after practitioner, modality after modality — each offering hope, none delivering lasting relief. Western medicine had a diagnosis but no solution. Alternative practitioners offered compassion but couldn't identify the real cause. Eric was doing everything right, and nothing was working.
A Crack in the Wall
A turning point came unexpectedly when a friend introduced Eric to an alternative healing technique. In just 45 minutes, something shifted — his pain temporarily eased and his range of motion returned. It didn't last, but it planted a seed. For the first time, Eric began to wonder: what if the answer wasn't structural at all?
Years later, when debilitating back pain entered the picture, Eric found himself back at square one — more doctors, more treatments, more dead ends. Then he read John Sarno's Healing Back Pain. The experience was disorienting and clarifying at once. The idea that pain could be driven by repressed emotions and conditioned neural pathways — not structural damage — challenged everything he had been told. And yet it resonated deeply.
Finding PRT — and Then Actually Healing
The most pivotal moment came when a Chinese medicine doctor introduced Eric to Pain Reprocessing Therapy. He read Alan Gordon's The Way Out, began applying the principles — and waited for the transformation he'd read about in others' stories.
It didn't come right away.
This is the part of Eric's story that most people don't tell — and the part he thinks matters most. Even after discovering PRT, even after understanding the theory, his symptoms did not significantly improve until he immersed himself in the work deeply enough to become certified. The intellectual understanding wasn't enough. The healing required going all the way in.
When it finally came, it was real and lasting. And looking back now, Eric will tell you without hesitation: chronic pain is one of the best things that ever happened to him. It dismantled assumptions, deepened his self-awareness, and gave him a purpose he never could have found another way.
Building Something New
In 2024, Eric founded Santa Barbara Chronic Pain Solutions — a practice built on the conviction that most chronic pain is not a structural problem requiring a physical fix, but a nervous system problem requiring a different kind of healing entirely.
His approach draws from PRT, mindfulness, art therapy, guided introspection, and the rich well of spiritual and indigenous wisdom he studied at UC Santa Barbara and through years of collaboration with local Native American elders and healers. He sees his role not as healer, but as facilitator — someone who helps clients find and trust the healing capacity that already lives within them.
His clients have called it life-changing. Eric calls it coming home.