Your Back - Keep It Moving

A Healthy Back Is A Moving Back...!

Research has shown that people with back problems easily develop fear of moving. Someone even coined a phrase for that: kinesiophobia, meaning a phobia (fear) of kinesis (movements).

But the very last thing a back in trouble needs is for you to stop moving...

Because your back really does need the moving. Moving creates circulation around your spine, and exactly this circulation is needed so desperately to ensure supply of necessary oxygen, blood and nutrients to all parts of your back.

Ligaments and Discs in troubled backs are in desperate need of higher levels of circulation....

As you may or may not know, the vertebrae of your back are connected by the intervertebral discs and the ligaments that run all the way through the front and back of your spine.

Your vertebrae are also connected by smaller ligaments that run from vertebra to vertebra, and even from one vertebra protrusion to the next.

Your ligaments and discs are your first ring of defense against core instability of your back...

Ligaments & Discs Need Circulation To Stay Healthy

Ligament tissue is a very special tissue, and one thing it definitely needs is good circulation in the muscles around it. Ligament tissue needs to be properly hydrated to stay flexible and healthy. Your intervertebral discs also need to be properly hydrated to stay flexible and healthy.

Keeping your discs and ligaments properly hydrated is already reason enough to add some healing moves to your daily routine.

And if it comes to moving your back, of course your muscles play a number of roles....

Two things - at the bare minimum - are needed from your muscles:

1 - the sheer use of your muscles means circulation, which in itself is already crucial for back health

2 - your muscles keep your body and back in the right position and posture while moving...

For your back to work properly, you have two kinds of muscles: muscles to help the spine move and stabilizing muscles that provide the core satbility of your back during all movements of the spine.

And in people with back trouble some of those muscles just no longer do their part...

..resulting in a back that is getting more and more instable every time your back pops...

All these muscles, discs and ligaments must cooperate in a proper manner for your back to work fine.

What Movements Are Good For The Back?

Moving keeps the muscles active. The question is just: which movements should you do, and which ones should you avoid?

The e-book 'Back Pain GOODBYE!' gives insight in what the right movements are. The book is being used world wide by people with back complaints, and with success! Let one thing be clear, it is not about life long exercising, who would want that? What it really is about, is to learn (again) a series of healthy movements that give your body the opportunity to repair your back and to keep it healthy and free of pain.

Our research showed that many people with back complaints actually struggle with stiff parts of the back, simply because the intervertebral discs in those parts are in bad shape. And with parts of your back being stiff, it is difficult to perform the healthy movements with your back. That is why we developed a supplementary program especially targeting the healing of intervertebral discs: 'The Dutch Decompression Routine'.

Don't let fear of movement guide you, but start working with a healthy and proven self help program. Thousands have already preceded you.

Your back is designed for movement, and needs movement to stay healthy!


How To Correct Your Own Back Troubles - click here.




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How To Correct Your Own Back Troubles!

Robert FeddesRobert Feddes - Former Back Pain Sufferer & Founder of Beatingbackpain.com- writes actionable self-help articles and books - used successfully in 93 countries already.
The latest version of his book: Back Pain - GOODBYE! is the result of more than 7 years of research into 'How To Correct Your Own Back Troubles'.
Robert shares his insights on www.beatingbackpain.com so you can get your body back to when it felt good, painless and nimble.
Chiropractor Recommended!

Back Pain

“hope of avoiding surgery”

I have been suffering from painful sciatica for three months. Five weeks ago, after a long car journey, it became much worse. I was put on 4 different strong painkillers and diazepam, but was still in so much agony my doctor nearly admitted me to hospital as an emergency.

Fortunately the pain killers started to work. Two weeks ago my neurosurgeon referred me for an MRI scan.

As I've worked at the hospital for 16 years in intensive care, the neuroradiologist phoned me at home to say I have a big disc prolapse at L4 L5.

I rang my physio, who I have had 10 appointments with over the last three months, who said she did not want to treat me until I've seen my neurosurgeon again, incase it makes it worse.

She advised me to have surgery. I felt very let down and that surgery would be my only choice.

Four days after my scan I started with a gastro intestinal bleed which was probably caused by the voltarol (anti-inflammatory) drug which I had been taking for three months. I had to stop taking it and ended up increasing the codeine I was taking.

In the early hours of the morning to take my mind off the pain I started to surf the net.

Your website appealed to me as it promised I would not need surgery. As a nurse, I am all too aware of the dangers. I have now been doing your exercises for 10 days and feel they are definitely making a difference.

I leave out the first and last, as advised. I cannot do exercise 18 a I can't sit cross legged. I also find exercise 6 difficult to understand and consequently do. The rest I am able to do nearly all the repetitions.

You have given me the confidence to move my back in ways I would have been too afraid to do before. I have now come off 3 of the 4 painkillers with your help and the help of a TENS machine.

I am recommending your book to fellow back pain sufferers. Your book has given me hope of avoiding surgery.

Thank you

Jane Platt

“very satisfied with the all the book has to offer”

I did purchase the e-book a couple months back, and have been doing the back exercises almost daily. 

I am finding that they are helping a great deal with my lower back problem(herniated discs and degenerative disc disease). 

I am very satisfied with the all the book has to offer- the information/facts about the anatomy, etc... and of course, most importantly, the exercises themselves. 

They have been great for my problem thus far, and I will continue to do them as long as they continue to bring relief (and I`m sure that will be forever, as I know this is a lifelong problem I will continue to have). 

Thanks for the email, and I look forward to the other e-book when it becomes available...let me know!  

By the way, are you Dutch?  My husband is 100% Dutch (our last name is Van der Kooi)- just curious!  

Thanks again-  

Kate Vander Kooi