09/04/2026
Some of the beliefs we carry about pain aren't ours originally.
They came from a throwaway comment in a GP appointment. Something a physio said years ago. A parent who told you to push through. A diagnosis that became an identity.
And once they're in, they're hard to shift, not because they're true, but because nobody ever offered you a different way of looking at it.
That's what this post is for.
The story you tell yourself about your body and your pain shapes how your body responds to it. This is something that is backed by neuroscience.
If any of these sound familiar, whether they came from you or someone else's words, I'd invite you to try reframing the thought instead. Not as a fix, but as a starting point. Your body isn't as fragile as it's been made to feel. And understanding what it actually needs is where things start to shift.
With this change in outlook, your body will be able to respond better to treatments and move freely without fear of reinjury.
I've held some of these beliefs about my own body too. I know how convincing they can feel. But beliefs can shift, and when they do, the body tends to follow.
Which one landed for you? Drop it in the comments.