Why Avoiding Pain Might Be the Reason You Keep Having It

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It’s one of the most common things I hear from patients: “I stopped lifting because I didn’t want to damage my back.” “I’ve been trying to avoid anything that might cause pain.” On the surface, that sounds logical. If something hurts or might hurt, you avoid it. But when it comes to the human body, especially the spine, that instinct can quietly lead you in the wrong direction.

Ironically, the very strategy people use to avoid pain often increases the likelihood of experiencing it more frequently.

The Evidence: Less Movement, More Problems

Research consistently shows that sedentary behavior is associated with higher rates of low back pain and disability. Large-scale reviews have found that inactivity increases the risk of developing chronic low back pain, with some studies suggesting sedentary individuals have ~20–25% higher odds of back pain-related disability.

On the flip side, regular physical activity, even at moderate levels, has been shown to reduce both the incidence and recurrence of back pain. In fact, replacing just one hour of daily sitting with light activity can reduce back pain risk by 2–8%.

This flips the common assumption on its head: Avoiding stress on your body doesn’t protect it; it often makes it less capable.

Why Avoidance Backfires

Your body is not a fragile system — it’s an adaptive one. When you stop moving:

  • Muscles weaken
  • Joints stiffen
  • Tissues lose load tolerance
  • Discs receive less nutrient exchange

Over time, your capacity to handle even basic physical demands decreases. So when you eventually do encounter stress like lifting groceries, bending over, or sitting too long, your body is less prepared to deal with it.

Pain, in this context, isn’t necessarily a sign of damage. Often, it’s a sign of deconditioning.

Pain Is Part of the Equation — Not the Enemy

Here’s a mindset shift that changes everything: Pain is not something you can eliminate completely from life. If your entire strategy is built around avoiding pain at all costs, you’ll likely end up:

  • Moving less
  • Becoming more sensitive to discomfort
  • Reinforcing the very problem you’re trying to escape

Instead, a more productive question is: “If some level of discomfort is inevitable, how can I build a body that handles it better?”

Work With Pain, Not Against It

This doesn’t mean ignoring pain or pushing recklessly through it. The goal is not to “push through” pain; it’s to work around it intelligently.

That might mean:

  • Modifying exercises instead of eliminating them
  • Adjusting intensity, range of motion, or volume
  • Gradually reintroducing movements that feel challenging

You’re not trying to prove toughness — you’re trying to build capacity.

The U-Shaped Reality of Stress

  • Too little stress → deconditioning and fragility
  • Moderate, progressive stress → adaptation and resilience
  • Excessive or poorly managed stress → increased injury risk

Most people with persistent pain aren’t doing too much; they’re doing too little, often out of fear.

avoiding pain 1

So What Should You Actually Do?

This is where things get practical and also more individual.

1. You Can’t Prepare for Everything (But You Don’t Need To)

One of the biggest misconceptions is that you need to train for every possible movement or
scenario. You don’t. Instead, think in terms of:

    • What do I want my body to be able to do?
    • What does my life require from me?

    Your training should reflect that.
    If you love hiking, your program should support endurance and lower-body strength.
    If you play a sport, your training should complement its demands.
    If your goal is simply to feel good and stay capable, your approach can be broader.

    2. General Conditioning Is Your Foundation

    Yes. Having a base level of general physical conditioning is one of the most protective things you can do.
    This means developing:

    • Strength
    • Mobility
    • Cardiovascular fitness
    • Coordination

    You don’t need to specialize. You need to be well-rounded. A simple, effective combination could include:

    • Strength training (2–3x/week): builds tissue resilience
    • Aerobic work (walking, cycling, running): supports recovery and endurance
    • Mobility-focused work (like yoga or Pilates): improves control and range

    Each of these contributes something slightly different, but together, they create a more adaptable system.

    3. Are Things Like Yoga or Pilates “Better”?

    Not better, just different tools.

    • Yoga/Pilates → great for mobility, control, awareness
    • Strength training → essential for load tolerance and durability
    • Running/cardio → improves overall capacity and recovery

    The key isn’t picking the “best” one — it’s combining what covers your needs.

    4. Train for Your Life (and a Bit Beyond It)

    A useful principle: Train slightly beyond the demands of your daily life.

    If your life occasionally requires lifting, bending, or carrying, your training should prepare you for that. This creates a buffer:

    • Daily tasks feel easier
    • Unexpected demands are less risky
    • Pain becomes less limiting

    5. Consistency > Perfection

    You don’t need the perfect program.
    What matters most is:

    • You move regularly
    • You challenge your body progressively
    • You adjust when needed instead of stopping entirely
    avoiding pain 2

    If your goal is to avoid pain completely, you’ll likely end up moving less—and experiencing more
    of it.

    If your goal is to build a body that can handle life, you’ll move more—and experience pain less
    often, and less intensely.

    You don’t need to eliminate discomfort. You need to become more capable than it. Because in the long run, it’s not avoidance that keeps you healthy, it’s adaptability.

    Edited with the help of AI.

    References
    1. Hartvigsen J, Hancock MJ, Kongsted A, et al. (2018). What low back pain is and why we need to pay attention. The Lancet, 391(10137), 2356–2367.
    2. Shiri R, Falah-Hassani K. (2017). The effect of leisure time physical activity on low back pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis. American Journal of Epidemiology, 186(9), 983–992.
    3. Chen SM, Liu MF, Cook J, et al. (2009). Sedentary lifestyle as a risk factor for low back pain: a systematic review. International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, 82(7), 797–806.
    4. Alzahrani H, Mackey M, Stamatakis E, et al. (2019). Association between sedentary behavior and low back pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis. European Spine Journal, 28, 213–224.
    5. Ferreira ML, Machado G, Latimer J, et al. (2017). Factors defining care-seeking in low back pain – a meta-analysis. European Journal of Pain, 21(7), 1160–1172.
    6. Booth FW, Roberts CK, Laye MJ. (2012). Lack of exercise is a major cause of chronic diseases. Comprehensive Physiology, 2(2), 1143–1211.
    7. Heneweer H, Vanhees L, Picavet HSJ. (2009). Physical activity and low back pain: a U-shaped relation? Pain, 143(1–2), 21–25.

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