SummaryIn this episode, Ollie and Tim explore the rapidly emerging field of mind–body medicine. They explore what it means to integrate the mind–body connection into mainstream healthcare, as a growing evidence base shows how thoughts, emotions, beliefs and the nervous system can generate very real physical symptoms. Using examples from chronic pain and other persistent symptoms, they reflect on how clinicians are beginning to move away from simply labelling experiences as “medically unexplained” and instead offer more constructive, compassionate explanations. They explore how ruling out serious causes remains essential, but how recognising neuroplastic patterns can open up new possibilities for care. The conversation weaves through themes of safety, fear, emotional experience and the power of trusted relationships - considering how hope can be grounded in evidence rather than wishful thinking. Along the way, they touch on emerging research and therapeutic approaches, reflecting on what this shift might mean for health professionals, coaches and patients alike.TakeawaysMind–body medicine recognises that emotions, thoughts and beliefs can drive physical symptoms.The divide between “mental health” and “physical health” can be useful for organising care, but it often misses how closely connected the two really are.Many symptoms historically labelled “medically unexplained” may be better understood as neuroplastic symptoms, explainable patterns shaped by the nervous system.Good practice starts with ruling out serious physical causes, before ruling in a mind–body formulation.Fear and threat responses can amplify symptoms; helping someone feel safe is often a key part of recovery.Chronic pain can be maintained by common loops and eased through curiosity, observation and safety.Emotional awareness and expression may matter, especially around suppressed emotions like anger - but this needs careful, skilled practice and appropriate training.Relationships are therapeutic: trust with a practitioner and hope-building peer support can be central to progress, especially when ideas feel “left field.”The placebo and nocebo effects highlight how belief and expectation shape symptoms - and why framing, reassurance and meaning-making matter in care.Health coaching may be well-placed to support this work because it brings time, rapport, safety and collaboration, but must stay within scope and be backed by proper training.The aim isn’t to blame or dismiss symptoms, it’s to widen the map of what’s happening, expand treatment options, and replace “learn to live with it” with realistic, evidence-based hope.