I developed these principles gradually over my 15+ years of therapy & simply being a human, paying attention to my internal and external world. It is not a complete list, but it captures some of my approach and what matters to me.
Knowledge is key
Reassurance is key
Being empowered is key
Support is key
Education
After a thorough assessment, getting to know the person, their problems, their lifestyle, and the likely driving factors, I share my knowledge on the mechanism of the issue and options
for treatments we can apply.
Time
Time is the greatest healer. However, it is not always sufficient for the injury to heal or for the problem to settle entirely with time. Sometimes, the person must accept that the nervous system and the body physiologically will take time to heal, regenerate, and recondition. Trust the process and give it time but provide the right conditions for recovery.
Communication
Another essential part of my therapy is getting to know my clients. It provides me with a tremendous amount of information to connect the dots” and form a picture of what is likely happening and what is needed. I want my clients to talk to me a lot about how they feel-emotionally and physically, about how their problem is affecting different aspects of their life, about their worries, what they think is going on, what’s happened to them in the past, what are their beliefs and expectations.
Body language is a significant source of information for me when I observe clients, and I encourage them to learn how toc ommunicate with and read their bodies. The nervous system expresses itself through our verbal and nonverbal language.
Our posture, movement quality/ speed, gestures, mannerisms, facial expressions, tone of voice, eye expressions, and smell carry valuable information.
Trust & Love
This one is one of my favourites, but sometimes a challenging part. Often, people get frustrated and annoyed at themselves or their bodies for not being right. Trust your intelligent body- it does everything to care for you and serve you well. Learn your body language to watch for it and regulate various body systems.
Be compassionate towards yourself and your body; it needs you. Most importantly, love your body and love yourself.
Expectations
Meeting each other’s expectations is essential. There is a level of expectation from myself as a therapist and the client to work together on mutual goals, to efficiently go through the physiotherapy process, and for the client to feel good again and thrive. Each of us will have parts to focus on and gradually deliver results to the best of our ability.
Load
The fundamental principle of rehabilitation is we need to move, but how much? Well, it depends on the problem or injury, what the symptoms are, and how severe, but we play with:
Resistance: lift, hold, push, pull.
Repetition: x 5-10-12-15 x 2-3-4 sets
Range: starting usually smaller and increasing gradually
Rest: between sets, minimum two days a week & to include 7-8 hrs of quality sleep.pared to walk a few blocks but it’ll be worth it!