Posts Tagged ‘Fixing You’

A 20-second Test for Neck Pain & Headaches

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Trap LevMost headaches and neck pain are due to the shoulder blades sitting too low on the trunk. There are muscles attaching from the shoulder blade directly to the first four neck vertebrae and skull. When the shoulders sit too low, these muscles then pull on the neck bones and skull causing neck pain and headaches. This is explained in my book, Fixing You: Neck Pain & Headaches.

Here’s a quick, simple test to see if this is the case with you. If you’re having right-sided neck pain or headaches, raise your right hand and place it flat on top of your head for 20 seconds. Make sure your head doesn’t side-bend or rotate to achieve this. If your pain diminished after this test, then your scapula may be sitting too low causing your discomfort. This is easily correctable. This is also the culprit in diagnoses such as thoracic outlet syndrome and carpal tunnel syndrome or with symptoms of pain or numbness down one arm.

The 1-minute Back Pain Test

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

I think we are all thoroughly confused now with all the advice on back pain bombarding us every day!

So you’re going to figure out why you have pain right now. It’ll take 60 seconds. Really. Get out your watch and time yourself while performing this very simple back pain test.

Lie down on your back on a firm surface. Straighten your legs out and stay there with them resting on the ground for 30 seconds. Don’t forget to time yourself! Now bend your knees with feet flat on the floor and stay there for 30 seconds. No cheating! Just 30 seconds no matter how good it feels! If there was no difference in your back pain then hug your knees to your chest for 30 seconds instead.

If your back felt better with the knees bent (which most people do) then your pain is the result of too much arching in your low back. Bending the knees and flexing the hips flattens the spine and reduces the arch. All you need to do is not allow the back to arch so much.

If your pain felt better with your legs straight, then your problem is due to too little arching in your low back. Straightening the knees creates more arch in the spine. All you need to do is make your back arch more.

Simple.

Sound too good to be true? It’s not. Back pain is due to a very basic problem of the lower spine either arching too much or too little.  It is this fundamental problem that is at the root of all back pain. “But, that’s too simple! It can’t be that easy!” you might say. It is–you just proved it to yourself.

“But, I have disk bulges, stenosis, degenerated disks (insert your diagnosis here)!” you might counter. Well, how do you think those problems got there? The body’s tissues respond to abnormal stresses placed on them. Excessive extension or flexion of the spine creates abnormal stress. A lot of it.

Don’t take my word for it though. You just did the test. Did your back actually feel better with your knees bent or straight? If your back could feel that good all the time, would you be happy? That’s all the proof you need to know that something is inherently right or wrong for you.

The trick is, getting your body to hold on to that good feeling. Turns out there are a few simple things you’ll have to do to make this relief last. First, you must remove the stresses pulling your spine into either too much extension or too much flexion.

Then you must strengthen the muscles responsible for maintaining this ideal position. Strengthening them without removing the stresses affecting the spine will not fix your pain. That is because the stresses pulling the spine into extension (or those creating too much flexion) are much more powerful than any strength program you could create. There’s just too much leverage acting on the spine.

Lastly you must identify the habits that are contributing to these first two issues and, therefore, pain. Luckily there is one neat little book that outlines all these principles–mine!  Fixing You: Back Pain will explain all of this to you in plain English including how to correct the stresses creating too much extension or flexion, the proper strengthening exercises and which movement habits are likely contributing to your pain. I also include free videos of all of the exercises in the book on the Fixing You website.

“Sounds like a lot of work,” you might be thinking. Wrong. Many of my clients are 50% better in just one treatment. It’s not uncommon to eliminate back pain altogether in two or three treatments.  Your body doesn’t have to be perfect, it just needs to be better than it is now.

In 60 seconds you’ve just learned the core of your problem. Don’t you think it’s worth it to take this a little bit further and see for yourself? I understand your doubt (see my blog, Chronic Pain & Chronic Doubt, just a few articles down from this one). Read my testimonials and you’ll see others who have been helped by this very simple way of approaching and treating the spine.

Whatever you decide, I truly wish you the best in your search for answers. I understand your pain and frustration. I work with people just like you all the time. They are better and you can be too.

Chronic Doubt & Chronic Pain

Monday, November 16th, 2009

One of the toughest aspects when talking with someone with chronic pain is feeling their sense of defeat and doubt. The hardest part of helping people with chronic pain is getting them to believe they can still heal their pain. Fear is a big obstacle here. Fear of being let down, fear of hurting themselves, fear of spending a lot of money on another dead end, and fear of getting hopes up only to be dashed– again. All of this contributes to doubt that anyone can really help them. After all, haven’t they visited the best specialists in their fields?

I don’t blame people with chronic pain one bit for their doubts. So many doctors, specialists, therapists, and other practitioners haven’t been able to help them–why should I be any different? They’ve been in pain for so long, it must be permanent–mustn’t it? If there was something new under the sun, surely the word would have gotten out by now–wouldn’t it?

Besides, there was an X-Ray or MRI with a disk bulge, herniated disk, spinal stenosis, degenerated disk, arthritis, or any number of other diagnoses that showed exactly why they have pain. There’s a physical thing causing their pain–they actually saw it!

But is that structural issue really causing their pain? If that was the case, why didn’t surgery help? Why did the pain pop up somewhere else after the surgery? Could it be that the same issue that caused that structural problem is also causing their pain? Could it be that the structural problem seen on the MRI or X-Ray is separate from the issue that is causing the pain? Could it be that the structural problems are instead a symptom of the underlying roots of their pain, borne out in a physical form?

I believe the roots of back, neck, or other types of pain are usually separate from these diagnoses. I believe these root causes create these diagnoses. Here’s why. If these problems were really the source of people’s pain then I shouldn’t be able to make anyone painfree because I’m not a surgeon. How could I possibly help someone with spinal stenosis without correcting the spinal stenosis? The same goes for disk bulges, degenerated disks or any of the other diagnoses mentioned above.

But they do become painfree. They are able to resume their normal life again. In fact they are able to do much more than they could because they are armed with knowledge of their condition and what makes it worse or better. They have the tools to fix themselves instead of being dependent upon me to fix them. Everyone has the ability to fix themselves. The only thing they’re missing is the knowledge to do so.

That’s where my books come in. You are now closer than you’ve ever been to fixing your chronic pain. I know this sounds presumptuous but it is true. My books will teach you to understand your pain from an anatomical, biomechanical, and movement-based perspective. Though it may sound difficult, it is all quite simple. Don’t worry, I won’t overwhelm you with boring technical jargon. I’ll explain it just as I’m explaining this to you now. Besides, I have video clips on the Fixing You website of all the exercises in my books to make sure you get it right. And I am always here to help.

Those of you with years of chronic pain, believe you can be fixed. Know that the answers exist to eliminate your pain. Instead of relying on someone else, rely on yourself. My books will give you the tools to do so.  Suspend your doubts for just a little while. If you have reached this website then you are closer than you’ve ever been to fixing your pain–for good. You can do it!

Fixing You

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

I have been writing a book detailing some very powerful self-treatment techniques I use to treat patients with chronic pain. It’s been an interesting venture because, in the process of writing the book, I now understand how my subconscious or intuition has been working to guide my treatments. This understanding, in turn, has helped guide my treatments.

Each chapter of the book addressed a different area of the body. For instance neck pain & headaches, shoulder pain, elbow pain, back pain, hip pain, knee pain, foot & ankle pain and back pain & sciatica during pregnancy. The feedback I’ve received is that the information was too technical for laypeople (who happen to be my audience). In the process of breaking the information down even more, each chapter has expanded to become its own book.

The title of the series will be Fixing You. The first book out will be Fixing You: Back Pain and will be followed by seven other books all to be published this year. It will be a busy year for me! My sincerest hope is that these books help the thousands of people out there living with chronic pain. So often with just a little attention to the right areas, pain will vanish. I hope the Fixing You series can guide people to pain-free lives.