Why exactly does someone feel better after massage? Or acupuncture? Or foam rolling? Or a chiropractic adjustment, or wearing K-tape, or doing mobility drills, or a hamstring stretch?
There are some good answers to these questions, and the interesting thing Iâd like to point out in this post is that quite often, the therapist doesnât know them. Or even care about them! Or maybe the therapist has heard the good answers, but prefers alternative bad answers that are far less plausible given the current state of relevant science.
Speaking of bad explanations: Foam rolling probably doesnât work by breaking adhesions or melting fascia. Chiropractic manipulation doesnât put joints that are âoutâ back âin.â Deep tissue massage doesnât get rid of toxins or âmuscle knots.â Acupuncture doesn’t access special points or meridians – putting the needles in random places works just as well. Some sham surgeries work just as well the real thing. Motor control exercises often work to reduce pain even though motor control hasnât changed.
None of this means that the above treatments canât work to make someone feel better. It just means they donât work in the manner advertised. And no this doesnât mean that everything is just placebo (that’s a confusing word without a clear meaning.)
In general, it seems that therapists have a strong bias towards the idea they are fixing “issues in the tissues.â Â And they tend to ignore issues in the more complex systems in the body – nervous, immune, autonomic – which are very sensitive to even minor inputs and have a great influence over how we move and feel. Maybe this is because these systems are less visible, or tangible, or just not what practitioners learned about when they were in school.
I was trained as a Rolfer and taught that Rolfing works by changing fascia. So when people got up from the table and said they felt taller, or looser, or had less pain, this was because their fascia had somehow changed for the better.
After doing some research about the deformability of fascia in response to manual pressure, I decided this was not a good explanation for our observations. A better explanation would involve the nervous system, which is constantly adjusting muscle tension, movement patterns, perception, and pain sensitivity in response to new sensory information, including the highly novel sensory information caused by bodywork.
Of course itâs kind of a bummer to learn that a central premise of your education is incorrect. But the good news is that this doesnât mean people canât be helped with your treatment. That is a completely separate issue. So my attitude was – OK, itâs not about the fascia, but that doesnât mean I canât help people.
But for many Rolfers it just has to be about the fascia. And for chiros it has to be about the subluxation, and for Reiki practitioners it has to be about energy, and for others it needs to be about posture, or core strength, or muscle imbalances, or movement patterns.
And of course many others will say: “I donât care how the treatment works, I just know that it works does so who cares why?”
Hereâs three reasons why its important to know why your treatment works.
1. If you know how something works, you can make it work better
This should be obvious. If you know where the target is, itâs easier to hit the bullseye.
Letâs assume that stretching or massage works to create better range of motion by getting getting the muscles to relax. (Reasonable enough, right? And supported by research!)
But if you think that it works by forcefully breaking adhesions or physically lengthening tissues you might lose focus on whether your clients are staying relaxed.
When I work on someone I always ask “how does that feel?â Here’s a common response from clients who think it’s all about the fascia: âDonât worry about me, I have a very high pain tolerance, just do what you have to do.â
And I will think to myself: “Well, I need to know how you feel because that is one of the main targets for this work.â But if my target was breaking up fascia or muscle knots then indeed I wouldnât care how they felt. And I wouldnât do as good of a job.
2. Unintended Consequences
Imagine someone with neck pain goes to the chiropractor, is told their neck is âoutâ, gets cracked to put it back âinâ, and then immediately feels much better. Whatâs the harm if they think that pain relief came from some form of realignment?
Maybe in the short term there is no harm, but false beliefs have a mischievous way of eventually causing problems in the long term.
Letâs say the neck pain comes back. The client thinks her neck must be âoutâ again so she needs another crack. So she overlooks other potential solutions like exercise, rest, or gentle movement. If the neck pain continues, she might eventually develop the pathological belief that her neck is fragile and unstable. This can have a nocebo effect â creating further pain and avoidance of healthy movement.
I have seen many clients with similar misconceptions, and this has cost them significant time, money, anxiety, and confusion.
And Iâm not just talking about the clients of chiropractors.
I have seen yoga people who are always stretching; Pilates people always stabilizing; corrective exercisers looking for microscopic muscle imbalances; joint mobility fans perpetually mobilizing, as if their joints need a constant bath in synovial fluid, or will start knitting themselves together with some sort of fascial âfuzzâ after just a few minutes of stasis. Rust never sleeps!
All these pathological behaviors ultimately stem from false beliefs about why certain therapies have worked for them in the past. These beliefs cluster around the idea that they have corrected âissues in the tissuesâ as opposed to temporarily adjusting the sensitivity of the nervous system.
The bottom line is that false beliefs, no matter how small, are like viruses â they multiply, get passed to others, mutate to form super bugs, and can eventually cause disease. Donât spread them people!
3. The truth matters
The truth has inherent value, even when its practical application is not immediately obvious. Knowledge is always powerful â for you, your clients, and the whole community.
We donât yet know exactly why people have chronic pain and the best ways to treat it.
Even though that knowledge hasnât been created yet, that doesnât mean itâs useless to learn more. Every step away from misinformation and confusion is a step in the direction of the truth.
Letâs face it. The truth is good and ignorance sucks. Hereâs some quotes from smart people to prove it.
âAll evils are caused by lack of knowledge.â
â David Deustch
âI think itâs much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers which might be wrong.âÂ
â Richard Feynman
âIt ainât what you donât know that gets you into trouble. Itâs what you know for sure that just ainât so.â
â Mark Twain
 âThe truth will set you free, but first it will piss you off.âÂ
â Joe Klaas
Many thanks to my readers and members of my social media community who are thinkers, skeptics, and unafraid to follow where the evidence leads.
This was originally posted on Todd Hargrove’s website. You can click here to read more blogs from them.
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Great blog Todd! Loved this. This is what is the hardest part of educating our clients.
Loved this, đ thanks for sharing. Always good to reflect on the Whys! N.S