Top Ten – Who and how we hang with MATTERS

Who we hang with matters! Mike and Glenn discuss networks, choices, and how our community transforms us from liabilities to assets.  Talking to the core of quality relationships, it became clear that service to others drives us to the best possible outcomes– We have become the five people we serve with.

Limbs For Life – Randy Titony

What does it take to change a life with the gift of mobility?

In this inspiring episode of The AMP’D UP211 Podcast, host Rick Bontkowski, a right below-knee amputee, and passionate advocate, sits down with Randy Titony, Executive Director of the Limbs for Life Foundation.

Randy shares the powerful story behind Limbs for Life’s mission to provide prosthetic limbs to individuals who otherwise couldn’t afford them. From heartfelt success stories to the behind-the-scenes realities of running a national nonprofit, Randy offers a rare and motivating look at how one organization is restoring hope, independence, and dignity, one step at a time.

Whether you’re part of the limb loss community, know someone who is, or just want to hear a story about resilience, compassion, and action, you won’t want to miss this episode.

#limblossawareness #prosthesis #amputee #prostheticleg #limbsforlife

Shannon Sharpe MUST BE STOPPED | Blackstreet Boys Podcast 151

PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/blackstreetboysDISCORD: https://discord.gg/UTnCxNBDTVTWITCH: https://www.twitch.tv/bsbliveUse code “BSBPOD” for 10% any KickBuilds Lego shoe set SITEWIDE!: https://kickbuilds.com/TWITCH:BSB: https://www.twitch.tv/bsbliveBrandon: https://www.Twitch.tv/RangeBrothaRob: https://www.twitch.tv/budabearrPATREON: https://www.patreon.com/blackstreetboysDISCORD: https://discord.gg/UTnCxNBDTVApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/blackstreet-boys-podcast-🎙/id1628730038Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3eFSPmo06i4dg3WMNiGhAyPodcast Linktree: https://linktr.ee/bsbpodBrandon: IG- https://www.instagram.com/brandonkeithj/All other socials: https://linktr.ee/brandonkeith DJ: IG – https://www.instagram.com/djsmoothxl/All other socials: https://linktr.ee/doeboii66Rob: IG – https://www.instagram.com/robdagodxl/

Stuck on Repeat: The Hidden Messages in Music

When the Universe or higher power sends a song, I listen…sometimes on repeat. Do you ever have an earworm just playing over and over in your head and you don’t know why? In this episode I not only tap into the power of music in my life, but also how I find meaning and confirmation within it.

We know our words are powerful, so when it’s in music form and highly vibrational…it’s even more so. Are you extracting the nods of confirmation from the world around you? What about taking time to hear a powerful message the music you are listening to is giving?

I invite you to listen and explore how you use music in your every day life to move you and soothe you. Rock on my friends!

Thank you for being here along side me with another episode of Taking Flight with Megan Holly! I hope today’s episode inspired you to embrace your boldest, most authentic self. If you’re ready to dive deeper into confidence, creativity, and growth, let’s connect!

I recorded this episode at Audiohive Podcasting, a studio in Crest Hill, IL, dedicated to podcast recording, editing, and production. It’s always so fun to come to set and pour my heart into episodes and I am so thankful for my time here and their professionalism.  Audio Hive Podcasting  

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✨ Join The Confidence Collective: COMING SOON – for free trainings, resources, and motivational texts to keep you going.

Let’s keep the conversations going and the energy flowing. And hey—don’t forget to dance it out today! 💃 Catch you next time!

Physical Therapy is Broken, Here’s How I Fixed It (And Back Pain!) | The Art of Wellness Podcast

In this episode of “The Art of Wellness” podcast, Dr. Gerry Robles, PT, DPT, introduces himself more formally (that’s me, as I write this lol) , shares the purpose behind launching this fitness and wellness podcast, and breaks down common myths and misconceptions about back pain. Learn how modern physical therapy, pain science, and a biopsychosocial approach can help you better understand and manage back pain. Subscribe for expert insights on rehab, performance optimization, and evidence-based wellness.

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Disclaimer: This content is for general informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider before starting any new exercise or treatment.

Affiliate Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you.

What’s up? Welcome. It’s Gerry. Thank you for listening. Thank you for subscribing to the Art of Wellness podcast.

I have a lot of things I wanna get off my chest today. There’s three things I wanna accomplish with this solo podcast. It’s just me today. No no buddies, no friends. So the three things I wanna talk about is, first, I wanna introduce myself a little bit more, my background in physical therapy, my journey to the profession, all that stuff.

Secondly, I wanna talk about the podcast itself, my goals, my objectives with this podcast, and my overall vision for it. And then third, since it’s my favorite thing to talk about is is back pain. And last episode with Danny, we kinda talked about it a little bit. And I wanna get more in-depth on more statistics for back pain, some treatments for back pain, and some pretty big misconceptions that I still hear about back pain, in health care in terms of structural things and and pain and how they relate to each other, all that stuff. So introduce myself, talk about the podcast, and then we’ll get into some back pain, research and misconceptions.

So let’s have some fun. So a little bit about me is I have my bachelor’s in exercise science, and I have my doctorate degree in physical therapy from the University of Iowa, which you can see back here. I have my bachelor’s from North Central College in Naperville, Illinois. And I wanna kinda tell you guys my story about working in corporate health care and then transitioning into having my own practice. It’s a long story, but I’ll do my best to kinda keep it succinct for you guys.

So after I took the board’s exam after physical therapy school, I worked in, let’s say, the usual corporate outpatient physical therapy clinic or the mill clinic as we call it. It’s kind of a joke within physical therapists. And, you know, it was fine for a first job. I remember working there and, you know, it was great. You learn super fast.

You see all these different diagnoses really quickly, and you learn to think on your feet. And that was great. That was awesome. But along with that is all the corporate structure and insurance, pardon my French, bullshit that comes along with it. So that’s where I kind of started to not like it as much.

And I was there for about three or four years, and it started to wear on me a little bit. The first year was fine. Second year was fine. Third and fourth year, I was like, okay. This is getting a little ridiculous when it comes to how insurance plays a big part in health care.

And, you know, I remember how stressed I was, how how much of a burden it became working in an environment where I have to treat three or four patients at a time, where I have to play the insurance game with these big companies that all they care about is money. And eventually, I was like, okay. Like, I left. I quit. And it was the best decision I ever made.

So I started doing my own thing. I left that that job, and the whole clinic was fine. I remember, like, you know, working with the people there was fine. They’re all great therapists. But, again, the corporate hierarchy was what I was not cool with.

And also the insurance games that we played. So I decided to disconnect from that, and I did. So I remember I started treating people out of my garage. I remember I would also do mobile visits to people’s houses. So I did that for about a year, I would say.

I did combination of the two. So people would come to my garage. I had my treatment table set up. I had a little bit of exercise equipment. And then also, I would drive to their houses with my treatment table and my exercise equipment and my backpack.

And I also started working at the hospital by me and as a PRN physical therapist. So, like, an as needed physical therapist. I would go there on weekends whenever they needed me. And to me, that gave me much more freedom to kinda treat the way I wanted to treat patients. So I did that for a year, a year and a half, and then eventually got my own space that I’m renting out now in Naperville.

And, you know, a a big part of this podcast I wanna talk about or kind of share with you guys is a different side of health care, a more individualized personal style of health care, which I think people appreciate more. And I think they overall want that more out of our health care system because, you know, people one of the big gripes I see in health care or when, you know, patients are talking about the current health care system is they don’t get enough time with their provider, whether it’s their primary care doctor, their physical therapist, anybody really. All I hear is I was I saw him for ten minutes and then they left, and that was it. So and I hated that. And I know people hate that.

And I know the PTs that I used to work with are burnt out. They don’t like working in those clinics. Nobody does. I’ve never seen anybody really say I love working for this company, this physical therapy company. Excuse me.

And, you know, I wanna I wanna change that. At least give you guys a different perspective when it comes to to physical therapy and health care. So my practice is called Art of PT Sports Physical Therapy. It’s it’s all private. It’s all one on one.

It’s all cash based. No insurance. None of that stuff that, you know, we all hate about health care, and it helped me a lot. I remember I, you know, I would hate seeing multiple patients at a time. Now I just see one person at a time.

You know, I just the way I’m talking to you right now is how the usual treatment session goes is I would just or right now, all I do is we talk and we get to work, and it’s for an hour, hour fifteen minutes. I’m not seeing people for twenty, thirty minutes and then seeing somebody else turning my back to them because, you know, I didn’t like that. That wasn’t cool to them, and it wasn’t cool to me. So, you know, I’m trying to make a give you guys a different perspective when it comes to physical therapy. Health care in general, really, because, again, it should be personalized.

It should be individualized to the patient, and I think people appreciate that. I could see it in their faces when I’m with them, helping them that, you know, I get to know them more. I get to build more trust with them. They get to know me more. I get to know them more, and it’s a reciprocal relationship that benefits both parties.

So, and it’s honestly one of my, you know, primary goals with my practices again to show people that this is how health care should be. So that’s why I chose to disconnect from the, you know, the usual physical therapy clinic and start my own. And it’s the best decision I ever made. So, that’s why I went from insurance based to cash based, to more personalized therapy and health care. So, but yeah.

Enough about me. The podcast itself is called Art of Wellness, which is a play off of obviously my practice called Art of PT. You know, wellness is a very broad term. Right? It’s, you know, a lot of people in the podcast spaces, it’s there’s wellness, there’s longevity, there’s biohacking.

There’s so many different ways to talk about health and wellness. But, you know, my objectives with this podcast is to talk about wellness and more so different professions within the wellness industry. You know, I’m physical therapy. That’s a big section of wellness. We get people out of pain without surgeries and pills and injections.

We’re the more conservative pain management. Right? But I wanna have conversations with people who are, you know, that do other that are in if different areas of wellness. So people in wellness and fitness, you know, my love is also fitness. So people that are, you know, within the mental health space, within strength and conditioning, fitness spaces, pharmacists, other physical therapists, more specialized physical therapists, people that can that we could have conversations with that’ll help hopefully benefit you guys when it comes to your health and wellness.

And I think it’s, you know, it’s how I operate my practice is I wanna have a team aspect to help the patient or the client. I have people that I trust that I can text if I need something else from them. Right? Or I need to saw a different set of eyes to look at them. You know?

Surgeons, trainers that I trust, people in different health care fields that I I trust to take another look at this person that I’m trying to help. Or maybe they have a different scope that they could provide to this patient to help them along their wellness journey. So, yeah, I mean, wellness, again, I know it’s it’s a very broad term, but I’m gonna do my best to stay within my lane of physical therapy when it comes to talking to different people and, you know, do my best to inject physical therapy within the conversation in terms of, you know, pain management and rehab, sports therapy, things like that. So it’s gonna be fun talking to different people. So stay tuned to different conversations that I have with these, you know, different professionals.

So and, again, you know, this is my lane. It’s just physical therapy. I’m not trying to be an expert in everything. I’m an expert in rehab, pain, and and injury. So I’ll do my best to stay within just the physical therapy realm.

And, again, if you don’t know, like, us physical therapists, we’re on the front lines of pain. If somebody has pain and they don’t need surgery, injections, or pills, you know, where do they go? What do they do? They come see us. We’re the ones prescribing exercises.

We’re the literal exercises, medicine, health care profession. We prescribe I prescribe exercises and rehab movements to people in pain. That’s our pill to them is to help them get better through movement and exercises. So, you know, a big tagline again in health care is movement is medicine, exercise is medicine. Well, we’re the ones actually doing that.

I’m with people every day showing them exercises, progressions to exercises, rehab movements. I’m doing it with them every day to help them get better and get better, you know, with back pain, knee pain, ankle pain, neck pain. You know, I don’t care what it is. If there’s nothing really crazy serious going on that requires surgery or an injection or some sort of medication, you know, that’s that’s our wheelhouse as PTs. So that’s my mission overall with the podcast is to, again, have conversations with people and to, you know, obviously, inject my own physical therapy perspectives into each each conversation that I have.

So, anyways, that’s the podcast, and that’s a little bit about myself. If you have any questions on any of that stuff, how I how I left my job, how I operate my clinic, my my practice, you know, if you’re a PT student kind of trying to navigate your way through the the health care system or, prospective jobs that you may have. You guys can all just DM me on Instagram at a p t doctor g. Just send me a a message. I’ll I’ll get back to you.

I’m fairly active on there, so you guys can just, you know, message me with any questions you have. Or if you have any pain or injury and you don’t know where to go, I could hopefully give you an online consult or point you in the right direction. So but, yeah, those are the two main things from in the beginning I wanna talk about. And then I wanna talk about more more about back pain because the last podcast with Danny was research heavy on back pain. And back pain, pie by far, is the one thing I see the most.

I mean, everybody gets back pain. It’s it’s crazy the the range of people I’ve seen with back pain. I’ve seen 12 year olds with back pain. I’ve seen, obviously, the middle aged person with back pain and then up to 60, 70 year olds with with crazy back pain. It’s so prominent in today’s health care system.

It’s it’s everywhere. And I don’t think it gets discussed enough when it comes to these health and wellness podcasts. I’ve had back pain, and I see people every day with back pain. So it’s it’s near and dear to my heart in a way, talking about back pain and misconceptions and myths and stats. So, the important thing to remember when it comes to pain in general is it’s all subjective.

Right? Pain is is not just structural. Pain is the definition of it is it’s a subjective experience that anybody can have. Right? It’s not just tissue damage.

It’s stress can amplify it. It’s your sleep can amplify it. It’s your diet amplifies it. So remember, you know, these treatment options that I’ll give later in the podcast, you know, the main thing to remember is to get a a thorough assessment by your physical therapist first before trying anything you see online and in these social media posts that, you know, that say top three things to do with back pain or top five exercises for back pain, you know, you can’t just paint pain with broad strokes like that. It takes a thorough assessment and teamwork with your physical therapist to to get out of pain.

You know, getting out of pain is a process. I don’t care what kind of pain it is. If it’s, you know, mental trauma or physical trauma, your body needs time to process and heal. And it’s the same thing when it comes to pain, chronic pain, any pain, really. So keep that in mind.

It’s subjective. And remember to talk to your physical therapist and get an assessment first before anything because it’s all individual. I mean, I see it every day. What works for somebody with crazy back pain will not work for this person with crazy back pain or or maybe they have minimal back pain and, you know, trying this exercise that I thought was really light just irritates the heck out of them. So it depends is the answer in health care.

There’s no one size fit all fits all protocols that, you know, people like to throw out there in in in social media posts or in, Instagram reels, TikToks. You know? Do this for your back pain. Do this for your knee pain. Sometimes if you try that, it might just irritate it more because, you know, you don’t know what’s the best for your pain yet.

You know, you need an assessment first, a thorough assessment. So be sure to do that first. You know, also if you know, with with back pain, as PTs, we look for what’s called, like, red flag signs of back pain. So, you know, signs of tumors, fractures, serious neurological deficits, things like that. If you don’t have any of those red flags and I don’t wanna just list them out here.

I’ll you know, it’ll take a while, but, you know, we’re we’re trained to spot those out. If you have no red flags when it comes to back pain, your pain can be rehabbed. In other words, you don’t need crazy intervention. You don’t need a surgery. You don’t need a a pill.

You don’t need a injection. So your provider should send you to a physical therapist, and hopefully, they do. I still know some people, primary cares people, other health care people that don’t send people to physical therapy, and the patient has no idea what to do. They have back pain. They get an MRI or something, and the specialist is like, oh, you don’t need surgery.

You don’t need an injection, really. If you wanna try it, we can. And that’s it. And then the patient leaves, and they don’t even say, hey. Try physical therapy.

Obviously, the good specialists I know do send them to PT, and those are the ones that I talk to because, again, if you don’t need those crazy interventions, you need physical therapy. No red flags. Nothing crazy going on. Well, everything’s in our hands now, us and the patient. So keep that in mind.

No red flags. It can be rehabbed. So alright. Some misconceptions that I love hearing when it comes to back pain. Alright.

These are these are fun. So I have I wrote down four kinda stats and misconceptions about back pain. The first one is there’s no realignment when it comes to your spine. If someone says it can move your bones back into place or realign your pelvis, spine, whatever, they’re lying to you. There’s no real research that backs that up.

In other words, it’s just marketing. And my issue with that is you know, I do that. We do as PTs, we do spinal manipulations that could crack your back. Whatever. People love it.

I get it. It feels good. But that’s the point. It just feels good. It’s just like cracking your knuckles.

I could crack them right now. Crack my wrist. It feels good. The joint in the in the the gas in the joint is just released. There’s a neurophysiological effect in the joint that relaxes the muscles around the area.

There’s local pain relief chemicals that get released in the area. Same thing in your spine. That’s it. Someone pops your back, it feels good. It’s short term relief.

That’s it. No one’s moving no one’s moving your vertebrae. If it’s over here, they can’t just move it back into place. It’s you know, give the human body a little bit more credit than that. You know?

There’s you need much more force than someone just popping your back to put your vertebrae back into alignment. So keep that in mind. And, again, it’s more so the explanation of it that is what I have issues with. You can’t just say, I’m gonna put your spine back into place. You can say, and this is what is how I explain it to pay to patients, is it’s short term relief.

It feels good for a little bit for a short amount of time. Let’s use that window of pain relief to exercise, to strengthen it, to load your spine, to get better. That’s the long term relief is getting stronger and more durable and re reinforcing your spine. Cracking your back or someone massaging your back is not gonna make your back stronger. So keep that in mind.

Going along with that is don’t don’t be so worried about your, again, your alignment or how symmetrical your body is. We’re all asymmetrical in a way. You know, everything’s a little bit off. Your pelvis can be a little bit elevated. Your spine can be a little bit, you know, contorted this way.

There’s not good evidence showing that those things affect your pain as much as you think. So don’t be so into those things is what I’m trying to say. Like, if somebody says, well, you’re kind of out of alignment, is that the cause of your pain? Probably not. Pain, again, is so multifactorial.

It’s not just one thing that’s giving you massive pain, unless it’s a physical trauma thing. So, so keep that in mind. Also, more stats on back pain is some of my favorite stats on back pain, they just blow my mind, is over eighty percent of people will experience low back pain in their lifetime. That’s a huge amount of the population. Eighty percent of people will experience back pain within their lifetime.

And, again, you know, I’ve had back pain. I remember working at my old job and, you know, knowing what I know now, it’s it’s kinda funny thinking back on it. But I remember I I maybe you can relate to this, but I remember I twisted and I felt my back just give out. And then for a week or two, I couldn’t even bend over, and that was it. Like, I was done.

And, you know, again, thinking about pain now is I remember during that time in my life, there were so many other things going on. I was so stressed. I was underslept. I wasn’t working out as much as I could be. If anything, that was just kind of the straw that broke the camel’s back.

It was just me twisting. In other words, that was my body telling me to, hey. Stop. You’re burning the candle at both ends. So but, you know, that pain trigger started everything.

I had back pain for about a year, and I was so young. I was 28, 20 nine, and I had sciatica going down to my foot. It was crazy. And I was like, all of this just from twisting? Like, that’s nuts.

And I remember I went to go get an MRI, and the specialist that I knew, he was like, yeah. I mean, there’s a disc bulge there. You know? Again, disc bulge is not as scary as you think. Most people live with disc bulges with no pain, so keep that in mind too.

And he was like, yeah. I mean, you have a bulge there, but I don’t wanna operate on it. Like, I don’t wanna, you know, give you an injection. You’re too young for that. And I agreed as a PT.

Like, I knew that. In my mind, I was like, there’s probably nothing crazy going on, but let me just, you know, get an image just to see if I have a crazy herniation or something. And the funny thing is even if I did, there’s research showing that those bigger herniation actually resorb and get better faster than the littler ones. So it’s it’s weird how the human body works. But, yeah, so I had that pain for about a year.

And I remember, you know, obviously, I would be diligent with my exercises, getting my core stronger, you know, working out, all that stuff, my PT exercises that I gave myself. And, you know, it took a while. It was against a process to get out of pain. So, again, it took me about a year to get out of that. And I remember when I quit my job, the pain got even better.

Like, I wasn’t stressed anymore. It was like all that that burden of working in a crazy health care environment just went away. And along with that, my pain dissipated even more, and I haven’t had it in six years. I wonder why. Maybe because I’m less stressed, maybe because I’m sleeping better, maybe because I’m back to working out more, maybe because I’m doing what I love in a in a better way.

And I love physical therapy. I love doing it, like I said, in a more private way. So, back pain is not as scary as you think is what I’m trying to say. So and the next that I have written down here is over eighty percent of people with back pain, that back pain will go away on its own without with minimal treatment. So what this stat shows to me is that back pain, again, isn’t as scary as you think.

It may seem scary. Like, I remember when I did twist and my back just locked up and I had sciatica going down my leg, which is pins and needles, nerve pain shooting down my leg. There wasn’t really craze anything crazy going on. Again, they even MRI’d my back. There’s nothing horrible going on, but it feels like it.

And I get it. You know? I was afraid to bend over for, like, a few months. And but remember then again, it’s not as scary as you think. Even if you know, I’ve had people walk in with you know, they get an MRI first, and there’s nothing really there just like me.

And the pain is intense. And they walk in, you know, crying. The pain is so bad, and, you know, they’re limping. They can’t walk right. And then they’re like, hey, Jerry.

Like, why why is my pain so intense? There is nothing really in the MRI. Also, vice versa happens as well. You know? Maybe somebody has minimal back pain, just annoying two out of 10 back pain.

And then they’re like, you know what? Let me go get an MRI. They get an MRI and it’s a crazy disc herniation. It goes both ways. You know, pain is very all over the place.

So you can’t really trust an image on it too much. So keep that in mind. Again, I’m trying to say that back pain isn’t as scary as you think. So and going along with that is the the last that I have written down here is over eighty five to ninety percent of people with back pain, which is a insane number, we classify it as nonspecific back pain. Nonspecific low back pain.

And what does nonspecific mean? Nonspecific means there’s no real clear structural cause. Right? It’s nonspecific. There’s nothing there’s no tumor here.

There’s no crazy herniation. You just have crazy pain with no real structural cause. You know, there’s no fracture, no infection, no tumors, nothing like that. And people have this. You know?

Is there’s nothing real that you could point to that’s like, oh, this is the cause of your pain. Because, again, pain is multifactorial. It’s biopsychosocial. There’s so many things that that can amplify your pain or bring on pain. So it’s very weird how that works, but I see it all the time.

You know? Back pain is is everywhere. So remember just that back back pain isn’t always as structural. Back pain is a whole host of things that I’ll get into here in a second. But, don’t be so sure that, you know, you get an MRI.

You have really bad back pain. There’s nothing there. You know? It happens a lot. I see it all the time.

So just keep that in mind. It’s very common, and eighty five to ninety percent of the time, there’s no real clear structural cause. I know. Weird to think about, but that’s stats for you. Okay.

The last section I wanna talk about here is how we treat back pain as physical therapists. Again, you don’t need surgery. Let’s say you don’t need surgery, which I would argue a lot of times you don’t. You don’t need surgery. They don’t wanna give you medications.

They don’t wanna give you an injection, which, again, research is all over the place on injections anyway. What do you do now? Well, hopefully, they send you the physical therapy, and this is the more modern approach to treating back pain. You know, as PTs, our best way to treat back pain is to graded exposure, let’s put it that way, is to desensitize the area, give you movements that’ll desensitize the pain. And then after the pain desensitizes, we continue to load the spine.

We strengthen the spine. So in in other words, again, exercise really is medicine. That’s the long term relief when it comes to back pain is getting stronger, getting more resilient in certain positions, and getting more confident to bend over and pick something up, to arch back and reach for something back here, to twist, to side bend, to not be afraid, and to be strong in those positions. And how do you do that? Through exercise.

You know? Nobody has magic hands to make your your spine and your your muscles stronger. That’s not how the human body works. And, you know, again, I’m trained in all that stuff. I can crack your back.

I could dry needle you. I could cup you, tape, all that stuff. It’s fine. I get it. People like it.

But, again, that’s more the short term relief stuff. I can do that to give you some relief in order to do the exercises afterwards. So let’s say you come in, you know, a a very basic back pain treatment session with me as you come in, We warm up a little bit through some movements, maybe some walking if you can tolerate it. I’ll do some hands on stuff. All that takes fifteen minutes, maybe twenty minutes.

The rest of the forty minutes, forty five minutes is us exercising, is me showing you movements to desensitize your pain and to get stronger in your spine and in your back. And that’s how you treat back pain is, again, to build resilience in your spine. Three kind of key takeaways with physical therapy in terms of treating back pain is number one, don’t rest it. Resting is very outdated. Avoiding movement is not something you wanna do.

You would just be super afraid to move again. The pain will just amplify. There’s no circulation to the area. So remember to actually, again, find a physical therapist to help you move again. Don’t just lay in bed all day.

Your back’s just gonna keep bugging you. I promise. And I work at the hospital too. So, like, I see people in a hospital bed not moving. They have to move.

People were meant to move, get up, and to exercise. And, you know, one of my professors told me that it sticks with me to this day is inactivity is accelerated death. The less you move, the less your body just, like, degrades. So, you know, I’ve seen people fresh out of surgery at the hospital and giving them physical therapy. I I mean, people need to move and they need it quickly.

So, again, don’t rest it if you have back pain. Maybe if it’s super irritable, you can chill a bit, of course. I’m not gonna make you deadlift or anything if your back pain is 10 out of 10, but you should be moving. And, again, that’s our job as PTs is to prescribe movements to help you kinda get the blood moving, get your joints moving. You’d be surprised how much exercise is a natural pain reliever because it is, and there’s research on it.

So, it’s a very strong pain reliever. It buys endorphins and natural pain chemicals get released through exercise and movement. So it’s a very strong drug. I you know, it’s my favorite drug. So so don’t rest it, number one.

Number two is to be aware of the biopsychosocial nature of of pain and back pain. Meaning, there’s so many things that can amplify your pain. Like I said, there’s your sleep patterns, stress levels. You know, I don’t care if it’s a relationship, if it’s family drama, whatever it is. Your body’s gonna be put on high alert.

Your nervous system gets ramped up when, you know, you’re stressed. And if you have back pain, it’s gonna tense up all your muscles, and you’re gonna have even more back pain. And then it’s a vicious cycle that I see with people. So, you know, I try to talk to them about looking at other areas of their life. You know?

How’s your sleep? How’s your stress? You know, I’m not the mental health guy, but I’m like, you know, find ways to find strategies to reduce your stress. Even social factors, environmental factors, all that can amplify your back pain. So just be conscious of those things.

And so I try to, again, tell that to everybody that, you know, stop being so fixated on structural things and try to get these other things fixed as well is, again, your sleep, your stress, nutrition, hydration levels, all that stuff play a part in your back pain. So keep that in mind. A lot of research on that. So please, I mean, look it up. It’s it’s all over the place.

The the modern approach to pain, it’s not just structural. And I keep saying it, but it’s the truth. The third key point that I have here is, again, to remember to distinguish between short term relief and long term relief. Again, all the fancy stuff we do as physical therapists, you know, I could crack your back. I could dry needle it, tape it, cup it.

People love it. It looks cool. I get it. But, again, that’s more short term benefit. The long term benefit is what we want.

And, again, we do that through movement and exercise. You have to get stronger in in certain positions. You have to get more confident in your movement. So don’t, you know, don’t just go to somebody. If someone’s just if you’re laying on the table and they’re just cracking your back or they’re just dry needling you or e stimming you, God forbid, you know, it’s it’s gonna feel better for, like, I don’t know, a day or two, and it just comes right back.

And if they’re not coupling that with exercise and movement, please see somebody else. Get out of there. That’s not gonna help. It’s gonna help in the moment maybe, but, again, it’s not reinforcing your spine the way exercise and movement will. So that’s the long term benefit.

Like I said, the long term relief is getting stronger, reinforcing the area, building resilience in your spine, being confident in your movement and exercise. And, again, the pain dissipates. It goes away. You get stronger. You get more confident.

There you go. It’s a it’s a it’s a beautiful process. I love seeing it. I see it all the time. I see it every day.

And, yeah, you know, again, getting out of pain is a process. There’s always, you know, up and down days, up and down weeks sometimes. But, you know, the path to getting out of pain is never just a linear progression. It kind of it’s kind of a zigzag. As long as it’s going up, we’re good.

Progress is progress. You know? There’s little goals that we give people or they give us their goals, and I, you know, I give them little check marks to hit along the way. If we hit that check mark, it’s progress. You know?

It could be as simple as bending down, tying your shoe again. You know? That’s progress. So remember to be positive and to when those things happen, to be happy about it, to be confident in it, to build confidence, and don’t just fall for the short term relief stuff, please. Okay?

Exercise really is medicine, and we’re the ones providing that to you guys. So and we love doing it. I like to think as physical therapists, we’re you know, we love to work out. We love to to move and to be animated with you guys. Like, I’m very active with my my patients and clients.

Like, I’m doing the exercises with them. I’m showing them progressions to it. And, of course, we modify along the way. If something feels weird or it’s irritated or, you know, you don’t like this, we modify some stuff. You know, that’s our job is to, give you more exercises tailored to you.

And, again, everybody’s different. So, thankfully, I have a library of exercises in my head that I could prescribe to somebody if they’re not feeling this one or, you know, let’s try something else or let’s let’s kinda go back to this one or let’s advance to this one depending on how you’re progressing. So, again, exercise is medicine. That’s the long term relief. Keep that in mind, please.

Just to summarize, again, the the three key takeaways is don’t rest it. Resting is very outdated. Bed rest for back pain. Yeah. I don’t even know who hopefully, nobody still says that.

But health care is weird, so maybe somebody still says just don’t do anything. Also be aware number two is to be aware of all the factors that actually impact your pain, like your sleep, you know, social factors, stress levels, things like that. So be aware of those things. And then number three is to focus more on long term relief, which is relief through exercise, relief through building resilience, relief through getting stronger. And that’s, you know, our main job as PTs is to give you guys exercises, home exercise a home exercise program to build resilience in your spine and to not be afraid to to bend over and pick something up or to, you know, reach back, like I said before.

So, don’t rest it. Be aware of different things that impact pain. And, again, focus on long term relief, which is exercise and getting stronger. So, again, do your best to stay active. There’s not a one size fits all when it comes to treating back pain.

Find a good physical therapist that can tailor it to you, that actually pays attention to you, that isn’t just seeing you for ten minutes and then they go see somebody else. Because I remember doing that, and I hated doing that. Thankfully, now I could be with somebody for an hour, an hour ten minutes, and we could, you know, work things out, game plan to get your back pain under control. So, hopefully, that all makes sense. There’s a lot of stats and misconceptions and treatment approaches to back pain, but I I try to con condense as much as I could.

So, if you have questions, like I said, you could just find me on Instagram at a p t doctor g. You could DM me about what you’re feeling with your back pain or any pain you’re having really. Like, I love treating back pain. I mean, knee pain, neck pain, ankle pain, you name it. You know?

So if you have questions, just find me on there. If you haven’t subscribed to the YouTube, please subscribe on YouTube. I know we’re at, like, I don’t know, one thirty four or something subscribers, so, I’d greatly appreciate it if you keep subscribing. And, also, I have in the description is my newsletter called the PT Handbook. It’s a free newsletter that I send out every other week, and it’s about, you know, basic easy physical therapy tips that you could implement throughout your daily life and also, research based, discussions that I maybe I link an article and I talk about it for a few paragraphs to help, you know, help you guys better understand it.

So, it’s a great read. So subscribe to that if you haven’t. It should be linked in the YouTube. And so the newsletter, please subscribe to, like I said. I’m also on Spotify and Apple and all those other podcast places.

That’s all I got. So I appreciate you guys listening to me ramble about back pain and talking about myself, but, thanks for listening. Thanks for watching, if you’re watching on YouTube, and we’ll talk to you guys soon. Peace.