Patients come into my office often complaining of neck and/or back pain, and many are certain there is some structural cause. When patients take my structural, digestive, and emotional assessments, they frequently find there is no structural cause, but rather, the pain is caused by stress. Stress causes muscles to tighten, which can cause serious back and neck pain and also can lead to poor posture.
Stress Can Cause Your Back Pain
It isn’t surprising that the highest number of heart attacks occur on Monday mornings. People physically respond to the thought of the weekend being over and the start of the workweek. Similarly, I have seen many examples of patients who have suffered back pain caused by internal and emotional conflict and share two stories below.
Ken, an active 26-year old who had been coming for his chiropractic adjustment once a month, had been under my care for a year for mild structural pain. One day, he called me and said he could barely get out of bed due to severe back pain. He wanted to fire me! I encouraged him to come in, but I couldn’t find a structural explanation. I started asking him about stress in his life, and he had an “aha” moment. He said he was getting married in two weeks and had been having second thoughts about tying the knot. I encouraged him to do what he needed to resolve his feelings, and hence his pain. Unfortunately for his bride-to-be (but fortunately for Ken), he called off his wedding and hasn’t had back pain since!
A second patient, who was bent over with lower back pain so severe she had trouble getting on the exam table, mentioned her father had died a year ago last summer. As summer and the anniversary of her father’s death approached, it was triggering a negative stress response and causing her back pain. She had no other structural issues. Fleeting moments cause most stress, and many who suffer from chronic stress (long-term illness, dead-end job, poor relationship, etc.) can suffer from chronic neck and back pain.
The Emotional Assessment
My full emotional assessment can be found in 3 Weeks to A Better Back, or you can find your score by taking the assessment here (along with the structural and digestive assessments). Listed below are a few questions that will help you start to assess if emotions are contributing to your back pain:
Depending on the answers to these questions, you will fall into one of the following three categories:
Tips For Reducing Stress and Getting Back and Neck Pain Relief
Although many people are often reluctant to admit there is an emotional cause for their back pain, you must be open-minded about this cause. Stress is a major contributor to back pain. If you visit a doctor who is taking a wholistic approach to your pain, and recognizes the connection between emotions and back pain, he/she will help you manage and eliminate your pain. Unfortunately, most doctors don’t connect emotions to back pain. I am here to help you.
Once you know that your emotions are a source of your back pain, listed below are a few things you can do to fix it: