This book takes a novel approach, that it's your mind that causes the cycle of pain and you can break it. I was already aware of the relationship between stress and pain, but thought it didn't apply to me because I left a stressful career. What I didn't realize is that my fear of pain, frustration with increasing pain, and so on was my new stressor. This book helped me understand that.
His writing is very convincing, and the techniques he suggested did seem to work -- for a few days. Then I had to fall back on some of my go-to strategies for pain relief, but they were the strategies I use for mild pain -- ice, OTC pain relievers, lidocaine cream, lying on the floor, and so on. I didn't need anything further than that, and that was definitely an improvement. After a few days of low pain, pain flared again, but I was also able to reduce it using similar methods.
So, for me, it hasn't yet been a complete cure, but another good tool in my toolbox. A doctor recommended Back Sense, stating that even though my biggest problem is neck pain, he thought it would help. It did help the intensity of the pain, making it more manageable, so I'm going to continue following his approach.