• Movement
  • Nervous System Regulation
  • Science-Backed Education
  • Holistic Self-Care and Sustainable Healing
  • Nav Social Icons

  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • Blog
    • Movement
    • Nervous System Regulation
    • Science-Backed Education
    • Holistic Self-Care and Sustainable Healing
  • Shop
    • Products
    • Cart
    • My Account
  • About
    • About Me
    • Services
    • Shop My Favorites
  • Contact
  • Contact
  • Meet the Team
  • FAQ
  • Mobile Menu Widgets

    Connect

    Search

get PT complete

PT Complete

Promoting fitness and wellness for the mind, body, and soul.

  • Home
  • Blog
    • Movement
    • Nervous System Regulation
    • Science-Backed Education
    • Holistic Self-Care and Sustainable Healing
  • About
    • About Me
    • My Approach
    • Services
  • Contact

Physical Therapy Movement Expert | 5 Handy Tips on How to Feel and Move Better

February 7, 2023 · In: Pain Science and Healing, Science-Backed Education

A physical therapy movement expert can help get rid of your pain and address your areas of concern.

Why are physical therapists movement experts? Because we are taught to analyze how you move! Down to the nitty gritty. And why exactly is this important? Because physical therapists can assess your specific pain complaints, determine where your pain may be coming from, explain why the pain is occurring, and teach how to fix the pain! Physical therapists know how to look for the movement dysfunction.

So how can you take this information and apply it to yourself? Follow these 5 simple tips to reduce pain, improve your movement, and overall, feel better!

**This is not medical advice. Please consult your medical provider for more information.

1. Assess

This is about taking mental notes. How are you feeling? Which areas feel stiff? Are there areas of the body that are painful? Is the pain constant or intermittent? Does it hurt while at rest or only with movement?

joint movement assessment

These are all common questions you may be asked by a physical therapist while going through an evaluation, but they are also great information points for you to be aware of to help explain and understand your pain. Knowledge is power. If you know what may be causing the pain, sometimes the treatment becomes a little easier to manage.

2. Look for Patterns

It is important to look for patterns to establish what may be leading to dysfunction. A physical therapy movement expert is trained in doing just that!

Are you sitting for long periods of time without getting up to move?

Do you find yourself sleeping in certain positions only to wake up with achy pains?

Are you repeating a movement or action that places stress on certain areas of the body?

Finding patterns can really clue you into how to fix a pain problem.

desk worker sitting too long

3. Fix the patterns

If a movement expert finds patterns that may be leading to stiffness or pain, it needs to be fixed. But how?

Sometimes the answer is right in front of us.

If you work a desk job and find yourself sitting for long periods of time, try standing up every 30-60 minutes. Even if it is only for 30 seconds. Use a restroom that is further away instead of the closest one to get some extra steps in. Or take a quick walk at your lunch break to stretch your legs and clear your mind.

If you are sleeping with your neck in a bad position, try to change your sleeping position or find a more supportive pillow. Your neck should be supported and held in a neutral position to reduce increased stress on certain areas. Sleep can sometimes be a tricky one. Everyone’s sleeping position is sacred to them and sometimes changing that up can alter sleep patterns. But if it means waking up without pain… it might be worth trying!

4. move more!

Movement is your best friend. We’ve all heard it. But it truly is! Increased movement improves cardiovascular health, lubricates joints, increases muscle activity, stabilizes your mood, helps you sleep better, and (lets be honest)… makes us feel good! Just think, when did you ever regret a workout or moving your body more? Never!

Motion is Lotion.

hiking with friends as a workout
geriatric workout for movement

5. Build strength

Strength is important to have. We naturally lose strength and muscle mass as we get older. Staying active and incorporating strength training can help keep and build muscle mass over time.

build strength with physical therapy

But strength might also be important in relation to your pain point! Depending on the cause of your pain, strengthening weak muscles might be the answer to getting rid of your neck, back, and/or shoulder pain. The importance is knowing which area(s) are you strengthening and are you performing exercises properly to ensure you are protecting other areas of your body at the same time.

Physical therapists are movements specialists because they can help find the areas of weakness and instruct how to target your weak points without compromising other areas. While you may have shoulder or neck pain, it is always important to pay attention to what the rest of the body is doing too.

More Physical Therapy Related Topics:

  • Core strength
  • Mobility stretches
  • Reduce arthritic pain
  • Sports physical therapy

TL;DR

A physical therapy movement expert will be able to look at and analyze your movement in order to come up with the best approach to treat your areas of pain or concern. This analysis typically involves looking for patterns, fixing the patterns, and making sure your mobility and strength are optimal and working synergistically.

  • Share on Twitter Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook Share on Facebook
  • Share on Pinterest Share on Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn Share on LinkedIn
  • Share via Email Share via Email
tera vaughn physical therapist
Tera Sandona

Tera Sandona is a licensed Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) and the founder of PT Complete. She helps high-achieving women break out of cycles of chronic pain, stress, and burnout through her Regulate and Rebuild Method, a sequenced approach that addresses the nervous system first and builds strength second. Her work focuses on helping women finally understand their bodies, rebuild strength, and create lasting resilience that fits real life.

getptcomplete.com/about

By: Tera Sandona · In: Pain Science and Healing, Science-Backed Education · Tagged: body mechanics, confidence with movement, functional movement

you’ll also love

signs your body is healingSigns Your Body Is Healing (If Pain Is the Only Thing You’re Measuring)
hip pain when walkingHip Pain When Walking: Understanding Diagnoses, Mechanics, and Tolerance
mobility routine for desk workersMobility Routine for Desk Workers: How to Undo 8 Hours of Sitting

Join the List

Stay up to date & receive the latest posts in your inbox.

Primary Sidebar

Meet Tera

Meet Tera
hi friends!

I'm a practicing physical therapist based out of sunny SoCal who loves to educate others and share information and knowledge. You can typically find me hard at work trying to manage normal life or cuddled up under a blanket enjoying coffee or desserts I can never seem to get away from!

More About Tera

Connect

join the list

Categories

  • Movement
  • Nervous System Regulation
  • Science-Backed Education
  • Holistic Self-Care and Sustainable Healing

Search

Archives

Advertise

SiteGround Ad

Featured Posts

Woman in athletic wear sitting on a yoga mat, pausing rather than working out, representing rest as part of consistency

Can’t Stay Consistent With Exercise? It’s Not a Discipline Problem

Woman sitting quietly on a couch in soft natural light, deciding whether to do active recovery or take a full rest day

Active Recovery vs Rest: How to Know What Your Body Actually Needs

Woman with chronic pain considering whether to exercise

How Exercise Helps Chronic Pain Without Making It Worse

Follow Along

@teravaughn22

teravaughn22

I help high-achieving women stuck in pain & burnout
→ build strength, regulate, & heal deeper
💌 Join 100+ women reclaiming their strength 🔗

The label got attached to slow yoga, easy walks, a The label got attached to slow yoga, easy walks, and gentle bike rides. Active recovery became a category of workouts.

But the label is doing the wrong job. What makes movement “recovery” isn’t the modality. It’s whether your body finishes with more capacity than it started with.

A 20 minute walk can be active recovery on a Monday and a workout your body can’t handle on a Wednesday. It’s the same walk on a different day with a different answer.

The thing most of us are missing isn’t a better workout schedule. It’s a daily look at what your body can actually hold. Some days, that assessment points to movement. Some days, it points to rest. Either one, when it’s used at the right time, it supports the body. When used at the wrong time, it makes things worse.

If you want help learning to read your body signals, comment SIGNALS for the free nervous system workbook.

#activerecovery #pushcrashcycle #listentoyourbody #nervoussystemregulation #chronicpainmanagement
This pattern was mine for years. And if your weeke This pattern was mine for years. And if your weekend looks anything like the one I am about to describe, you already know how Sunday night feels.

Rough week, exhausted by Friday, on the couch all weekend hoping to reset. Sunday night, I would be more depleted than when I started with nothing prepped for the week ahead. And the conclusions running through my head about what kind of person I must be to keep ending up here did not help.

The fix I always reached for was discipline…more structure, more consistency, and more grit. The crash kept coming anyway.

What moved the needle was learning to read what my body could hold, day by day. Some days a workout, some days a walk, some days a couch Sunday was the choice. The decision was made each morning, based on what was actually there.

If you want help learning to read the signs and what to do for them, comment SIGNALS and I will send you the free nervous system workbook.

#chronicpain #chronicfatigue #nervoussystemhealth #painscience #listentoyourbody
If by Wednesday you are already running on fumes, If by Wednesday you are already running on fumes, this one is for you. I called myself undisciplined for years.

Every Sunday night I would land on the same conclusion: more structure, more consistency, and more grit. That was the fix. And every Friday I would crash anyway.

Here is what I did not know about the cycle.

Both doors lead to the same room.

Door one is push. The body sends signals about what it can hold that day. Discipline overrides the signal. Push past the signal once, you crash once. Push past it for a year, you live in the crash.

Door two is rest. The week was rough so the weekend is for resetting. You sit Saturday hoping it works. Sunday comes and you feel worse, so you rest again. By Sunday night nothing is prepped and you are still depleted. The week starts in deficit, so you push harder to catch up, and the crash arrives by Friday.

Different doors. Same room. The room is the cycle.

The missing piece was never more discipline. It was a daily read on what my body could hold and the willingness to let the read be the decision instead of overriding it.

Some days the body can hold a workout. Some days a walk. Some days a couch Sunday is the work. The decision gets made each morning, based on what the body is signaling that day.

If you want help learning to read your own signals, comment SIGNALS for the free nervous system workbook.

#nervoussystemregulation #nervoussystemwork #burnoutisreal #lıstentoyourbody #reclaimyourenergy
is treating movement like it only has two settings is treating movement like it only has two settings.

Keep training like nothing happened or do absolutely nothing.

This is where we need a little more nuance, because if you’re doing your normal gym routine, hikes, runs, or workouts and your pain keeps increasing, something is swelling, you’re limping through it, or you keep changing how you move just to get through it, that is your cue to scale back.

Not because you’re weak or because you ruined everything, but because your body is trying to do its job and constantly irritating the area can drag the whole process out longer than it needs to.

The body is made to heal, but it needs the right environment to do that.

On the other hand, being injured does not automatically mean you need to sit around for two to three weeks doing absolutely nothing until it magically disappears.

If you hurt your shoulder, maybe bench pressing and shoulder presses are not the move right now. But can you train legs? Can you walk? Can you modify the range of motion, load, tempo, or exercise choice? Most of the time, yes.

That middle ground is where a lot of people get stuck.

They either push through because they don’t want to lose progress or they stop everything because they don’t know what else to do.

But injury rehab usually lives somewhere in the middle. It is figuring out what still feels safe, what does not increase symptoms, and what allows you to stay active without poking the bear every single day.

Pain is information, but it is not always a stop sign.

You are not broken, but we do need to be smarter about how you’re moving while your body heals.

Save this for the next time your brain tries to convince you that your only options are “push through it” or “do nothing.”

#movementismedicine #injuryrehab #injurymanagement #stayactive #worksmarter
Follow on Instagram

Footer

On the Blog

  • Movement
  • Nervous System Regulation
  • Science-Backed Education
  • Holistic Self-Care and Sustainable Healing

Info

  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Disclaimers
  • Terms of Use

stay in the know

.

This website is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.

Copyright © 2026 · Theme by 17th Avenue