Many people suffer from Tennis Elbow.
Many people try many different treatments in the hopes of making it better.
Many people continue to be in pain even after they have tried all the usual methods.
What makes Tennis Elbow so resistant to treatment? 1.
Many variables go into the creation of Tennis Elbow.
It is a complex dynamic of pain and tightness.
There is a very specific pattern it follows as it gets worse and worse, and all the variables work together to make it happen.
We use our arms too much, get some irritation, muscles tighten, connective tissue tightens, we get less circulation, irritants build up in our tissue, and the nervous system responds to all this with more pain and more tightness.
It is an ongoing, Downward Spiral of tightness and pain.
Many times there is no actual injury even though it feels like one.
It can be tough to treat tennis elbow if one isn't knowledgeable of all the factors, how the factors work together, and how to interact with all the factors in such a way that they ALL start moving in a better direction.
2.
The common available treatments don't target the right variables, they don't target all the variables, and they don't do enough when they do fit their target.
Anti-inflammatory medications, corticosteroid shots, splints and braces, rest, and surgery are tools that people use in the hopes that they will make a difference.
There is a correct tool for every job.
With the RIGHT tool, it's easy to accomplish the job.
With the wrong tool..
...
well, you know how that goes.
The usual methods I just listed above just aren't the right tools.
They help a little, to some degree, for a while, but they fail to effectively reverse the pain causing dynamic of pain and tightness that keeps the arm structure getting worse and worse over time and use.
Most treatment methods only, at best, target one of the elements that make Lateral Epicondylitis a problem.
They may target the inflammation, or the continual irritation of repetitive movement, but not all the elements and not enough to turn it around.
It's not really your body's fault that your elbow area hurts.
It's doing its best to help you.
It's not trying to be resistant.
It wants you to feel better.
It's trying.
But it needs the right kind of help.
The reality is, Tennis Elbow isn't tough to treat.
It's really very simple to effectively and reliably make the pain and physical problem go away, when you have the right information.
Tennis Elbow isn't resistant to the RIGHT treatment.
It's just that most treatments aren't designed to successfully do the job of getting you back to 100%.
Many people try many different treatments in the hopes of making it better.
Many people continue to be in pain even after they have tried all the usual methods.
What makes Tennis Elbow so resistant to treatment? 1.
Many variables go into the creation of Tennis Elbow.
It is a complex dynamic of pain and tightness.
There is a very specific pattern it follows as it gets worse and worse, and all the variables work together to make it happen.
We use our arms too much, get some irritation, muscles tighten, connective tissue tightens, we get less circulation, irritants build up in our tissue, and the nervous system responds to all this with more pain and more tightness.
It is an ongoing, Downward Spiral of tightness and pain.
Many times there is no actual injury even though it feels like one.
It can be tough to treat tennis elbow if one isn't knowledgeable of all the factors, how the factors work together, and how to interact with all the factors in such a way that they ALL start moving in a better direction.
2.
The common available treatments don't target the right variables, they don't target all the variables, and they don't do enough when they do fit their target.
Anti-inflammatory medications, corticosteroid shots, splints and braces, rest, and surgery are tools that people use in the hopes that they will make a difference.
There is a correct tool for every job.
With the RIGHT tool, it's easy to accomplish the job.
With the wrong tool..
...
well, you know how that goes.
The usual methods I just listed above just aren't the right tools.
They help a little, to some degree, for a while, but they fail to effectively reverse the pain causing dynamic of pain and tightness that keeps the arm structure getting worse and worse over time and use.
Most treatment methods only, at best, target one of the elements that make Lateral Epicondylitis a problem.
They may target the inflammation, or the continual irritation of repetitive movement, but not all the elements and not enough to turn it around.
It's not really your body's fault that your elbow area hurts.
It's doing its best to help you.
It's not trying to be resistant.
It wants you to feel better.
It's trying.
But it needs the right kind of help.
The reality is, Tennis Elbow isn't tough to treat.
It's really very simple to effectively and reliably make the pain and physical problem go away, when you have the right information.
Tennis Elbow isn't resistant to the RIGHT treatment.
It's just that most treatments aren't designed to successfully do the job of getting you back to 100%.
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