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Understanding Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is an evidence-based psychological approach that helps people live meaningful lives despite persistent pain. Rather than trying to eliminate every painful thought or sensation, ACT teaches skills to respond more flexibly, focus on what matters most, and take positive action even when pain is present.

Pain Educaiton and Mangagement

Persistent pain affects much more than the body. It can influence your thoughts, emotions, relationships, confidence, and the activities that give your life meaning. It is natural to want pain gone before returning to work, hobbies, or time with family and friends.


Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, or ACT, offers a different perspective. Rather than waiting for pain to disappear before living your life, it helps you develop the skills to build a rich and meaningful life even while pain remains part of the picture.


What ACT is

ACT is an evidence-based approach that helps people develop psychological flexibility, the ability to respond effectively to difficult thoughts, emotions and physical sensations while continuing to take actions that fit your values. The goal is not to eliminate pain. It is to reduce the control pain has over your life.


What “acceptance” means

The word acceptance is often misunderstood. It does not mean giving up, believing nothing can improve, pretending pain does not matter, or stopping treatment. Instead, it means acknowledging the reality of your current situation so your energy can go toward the things you can influence.


Many people find that fighting pain every moment of every day becomes exhausting. ACT encourages a different approach: making room for discomfort while continuing to move toward the life you want.


Living according to your values

A central idea in ACT is identifying what truly matters to you. These are your values, and they might include:

●        being a supportive parent

●        maintaining friendships

●        helping others

●        staying active

●        learning new skills

●        contributing to your community


Pain may change how you live these values, but it does not have to stop you living them altogether.


Taking committed action

Once your values are clear, ACT encourages committed action: taking small, realistic steps toward the life you want, even when pain, fear or self-doubt are present. Progress builds gradually, and each step strengthens confidence and reinforces that pain does not have to control every decision you make.


Part of a multidisciplinary approach

ACT is commonly used by psychologists in pain management services, and is often combined with pain education, physiotherapy, exercise, pacing, mindfulness, relaxation techniques and health coaching. Together, these approaches help people improve function, participation and quality of life.


Name one value that matters deeply to you, being a good friend, staying active, creating something. What is one small action, in line with it, you could take this week even with pain present?

KEY TAKEAWAY

ACT helps people live meaningful lives alongside persistent pain by building psychological flexibility rather than eliminating difficult thoughts or feelings. Acceptance is not giving up; it is directing energy toward what you can influence and taking committed action guided by your values.

Where to next 

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Authour

Pain Educaiton and Mangagement

Last Evidence Review 

2 July 2026

Pain Pal provides educational support only and does not replace medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always consult your healthcare professional regarding your individual circumstances. In an emergency, call 000.

©2026 by Pain Education and Management.

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Acknowledgement of country

Pain Education and Management acknowledges the Traditional Owners of country throughout Australia where we work and live and their connections to land, water and community. 

As we go about our work and life on these lands, we pay our respect to their Elders past, present and emerging. We extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples who also work and live on this land.

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