Fearless Fitness: An Exercise Guide for People With Chronic Pain Approach exercising with confidence and ease by resetting your mindset, redefining your idea of fitness, and mastering the fundamentals. William Richards, Founder of Fitness 4 Back Pain

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Please note: The following article represents the opinion of the author, William Richards and is not necessarily representative of Curable. Please talk to your doctor before beginning an exercise program.

When it comes to exercise and pain, are you ready to shift your thinking from a fear-based approach to one of confidence? As an exercise professional and chronic pain sufferer myself, I hope I can provide you with a few simple exercise concepts that will empower you to create your own definition of exercise, and ultimately put you in control of your body.

To start, how do you currently view exercise? Do you see it as something that is only for “healthy” people? Do you see it as something you only do when your body is pain-free? Do you see it as this “solution” to chronic pain that everyone is talking about, but doesn’t seem to be a reality for you?

There are a lot of factors that go into our view of exercise:

What we have been told by those we trust (e.g. you are broken, damaged, in need of being fixed)

Our past experiences with exercise

Our limiting views on our capabilities due to the pain we experience

Our lack of confidence in exercising “right” or “safely"

Each of these is very real for so many people with chronic pain.

Unfortunately, these factors have deflated any confidence we might have in our bodies to experience a free and active life... on our terms.

Exercise is like art. It’s something you will mess up and then sometimes get right all at the same time. You need to understand that is ok. If you approach it with the right mindset regardless of how you feel, what operation you have had, or diagnosis you have been given, the freedom and confidence in your body will be yours for the taking.

Let’s jump into 3 actionable concepts anyone with chronic pain who longs to exercise can grasp and apply to their life.

Concept #1: You are in complete control.

Unlike other things in our lives - such as work and daily responsibilities - exercise can almost always be done on our terms and in our way. When you’re at work, things like stress, fatigue and work satisfaction are all at play, which affect the way we feel. Unfortunately, not all of us have the ability to just up and quit our jobs if it causes us stress, so we often feel stuck. This feeling can seem like never-ending fuel for the chronic pain symptoms we experience.

When using exercise as a tool to work towards more confidence in your body, YOU set the standard. Which means you can come and go as you please, and do as much or as little as you want. And guess what?! It’s 110 percent okay and it's the BEST thing for you.

For people with chronic pain, unrealistic standards and pressure to hit certain exercise goals, expectations and achievements can actually have a counterproductive effect. When navigating the brain-body connection, we need to feel safe and “in-control.” I remember when my pain was at its peak. The mere thought of going to the gym and doing one of my old workouts would send me into a major fear cycle. This fear would keep me out of the gym because of the standard I had placed on my workouts: if the workout wasn’t hard enough, intense enough, or long enough then I felt it was just a waste of time.

I see this same mindset in people with whom I work today.

Once I can get clients to accept the beautiful freedom that can be found in “starting over” with their definition of exercise, they find they feel empowered and excited to start. They are encouraged to see what they can do. The things that once invoked pain and fear now have no hold on them, and they can love exercising once again. This may mean doing exercises differently than they had previously. However, many find that their new methods even better and more enjoyable! They have a new outlook on exercise and a new standard that really works.

Take Away: Try not to measure your current strength and health against some previous ideal of yourself. It will make you feel powerless and out of control. When picking your exercise strategy or routine, the goal is not to measure how hard the workout was, but rather how much you felt like you were in control of your body.

Concept #2: Ignore the fitness ads, and do what YOU can do.

Over my career, I've learned that those who don’t have a good coach or trainer end up getting their exercise information from advertisements and health magazines. This is true regardless of whether or not they have chronic pain. The problem with a lot of this information is that it’s not realistic or a good benchmark on which to base what you should be doing. Let’s be honest: who doesn’t want a flat stomach in 21 days, or washboard abs in only 6 minutes a day, or our butts lifted with 3 simple exercises? But then we look at the exercises that go along with those promises, and we rule out half of them due to how we know they will affect our symptoms. This deflates us and makes it feel we can’t have those things.

That is why you need to tune those things out and stay focused on what you and your body are telling you.

Recommended exercises:

5-10 minute fast paced walk 1-2x a day

30 minutes gardening (cutting the grass, pulling weeds, working a garden etc.)

Breathing classes to improve the way you breathe and control your breathing during stressful situations

Learning to improve the way you move and use your body - how you lift things, bend, twist, stand and sit

Trying a couple of sets of wall pushups and assisted bodyweight squats

These are starting points that open up our mind’s view on exercise and allow us to do more in the long run. Feeling confident in our ability to do the “small things” that may feel like mountains to us is a big deal. You should never let anyone tell you otherwise.