Tag Archive for: non-invasive pain relief

Why Those “Little Tweaks” After Shoveling Snow Matter More Than You Think

If you live in New England, you already know — this winter has arrived with a vengeance.

After several mild seasons, we’re finally seeing the kind of snowstorms that turn everyday homeowners into part-time weightlifters overnight.

Shovels come out. Snowblowers get dragged from garages. Driveways, walkways, decks, cars, and mailboxes all need to be cleared — often quickly and in freezing temperatures.

In other words, snow removal involves a lot of lifting, twisting, pushing, and pulling, usually performed by people who haven’t done anything remotely similar in months.

So if your back feels tight, your neck is stiff, or your shoulders are aching after shoveling snow — you’re not alone. What matters most is what you do next.

Too often, people brush these symptoms off as “just soreness” or a minor tweak that will go away on its own. Maybe you take a few Advil and keep moving.

That might work short-term. But as I often remind patients at our Portsmouth, NH physical therapy clinic, the absence of pain does not mean the absence of a problem — especially when symptoms return every time you shovel, lift, or twist.

Minor stiffness or recurring tightness is often an early warning sign of a deeper mechanical issue. Over time, pain relievers stop working — or you find yourself needing them more often just to get through daily activities.


Why Clearing Snow Is a Perfect Storm for Injury

Snow shoveling injuries are incredibly common throughout New Hampshire, Maine, and Massachusetts, and for good reason.

Shoveling combines:

  • Repetitive bending and spinal rotation
  • Forward or overhead lifting
  • Sudden force production
  • Uneven, slippery footing

Snowblowers create their own challenges, including:

  • Sustained pushing through heavy snow
  • Resisting torque when the machine catches
  • Repeated twisting to adjust the chute
  • Forceful pulling to start or reposition the blower

Add cold temperatures, heavy wet snow, and muscles that aren’t warmed up, and you have a perfect setup for injury.

After every major storm here on the Seacoast, our phones start ringing. We see:

  • Low back strains and disc irritation
  • Neck stiffness and pain
  • Shoulder injuries — especially rotator cuff flare-ups
  • Knee and spine arthritis flare-ups triggered by sudden load

What makes these injuries tricky is that they don’t always show up immediately. Often it starts as:

  • A dull ache
  • A pinch when turning your head
  • A shoulder that feels “off” when reaching

These are exactly the signs people tend to ignore — until the problem escalates.


Why “Pushing Through It” Can Backfire

One of the biggest misconceptions about musculoskeletal pain is that it has to be severe to be serious.

In reality, many long-term injuries start as small mechanical problems that were never addressed.

When you irritate a joint, disc, tendon, or nerve while shoveling snow, your body compensates. Movement patterns subtly change. Muscles tighten to protect the area.

If that irritation doesn’t resolve properly, those compensations stick around — placing stress on tissues that weren’t designed to handle it. This is how a minor tweak turns into weeks or months of pain, even after winter ends.


The Problem With Masking Pain

When pain lingers, many people look for the fastest way to quiet it:

  • Anti-inflammatory medications
  • Muscle relaxers
  • Cortisone injections

While these options may temporarily reduce symptoms, they don’t promote healing.

Pain is information. It’s your body telling you something isn’t moving or loading properly. When you silence that message without addressing the cause, you’re more likely to repeat the same patterns — and delay true recovery.


Don’t Wait It Out — Why Early Action Matters

The good news? Most snow-related injuries respond extremely well to early, conservative care.

When addressed early:

  • Recovery is faster
  • Treatment is simpler
  • Long-term problems are often avoided

The key is identifying what’s actually driving the pain — not just where it hurts.

Is the pain coming from the spine or the shoulder joint? Is a nerve involved? Is inflammation primary, or secondary to poor movement and overload?

At our Portsmouth, NH physical therapy and regenerative medicine clinic, we rely on repeated movement testing and test-retest methods to determine what’s truly contributing to symptoms — not just imaging findings.

Once the root cause is clear, treatment can focus on restoring movement, improving load tolerance, and supporting the body’s natural healing process.

Non-invasive options like shockwave therapy, EMTT, targeted manual therapy, and prescriptive movement work together to reduce inflammation, improve blood flow, and promote tissue healing — without masking symptoms.


Listening to Your Body Pays Off

New England winters aren’t going anywhere. Neither is snow shoveling.

If your back, neck, or shoulders still hurt days after clearing snow, that’s worth paying attention to. Pain that lingers, worsens, or changes how you move is not something to ignore.

Seeking help early doesn’t mean you’re overreacting — it means you’re being proactive.

Your body is talking to you.
The smartest move is listening now — before it starts yelling.


Dr. Carrie Jose, Physical Therapy Specialist and Regenerative Therapy Expert, owns CJ Physical Therapy & Pilates in Portsmouth, NH and writes for Seacoast Media Group. To get in touch or request a free discovery visit with a physical therapy specialist visit cjphysicaltherapy.com or call 603-380-7902.

When Your Stretches Don’t Work – This Could Be Why

If you’ve ever told someone you’re dealing with tight hips, tight hamstrings, tight calves, or a tight neck, chances are the next thought was: “I just need to stretch more.”

As a physical therapist, this is one of the most common assumptions I hear — and one of the biggest misconceptions when it comes to muscle tightness.

Stretching is not always the solution.
And in many cases, it’s not the problem either.

Tight does not automatically mean short, restricted, or in need of aggressive stretching. Understanding why a muscle feels tight is the key to creating real, lasting change.


Tightness Is Often a Sign of Compensation

Muscles don’t work in isolation. They rely on surrounding muscles, joints, and efficient movement patterns to share load and maintain stability.

When something in that system isn’t working well — such as weak stabilizers, limited joint motion, or poor movement mechanics — other muscles step in to compensate. Over time, those muscles become overworked, fatigued, and stressed, which often shows up as a persistent feeling of tightness.

Stretching a muscle that’s already overworking can:

  • Provide only temporary relief
  • Increase irritation
  • Remove tension the body is using for stability

This is why many people feel worse after stretching or massage — or why the tightness returns no matter how consistent they are.

The real solution begins by identifying what the muscle is compensating for and correcting the imbalance at its source through proper strength, movement, and load management.


Why Traditional Stretching Doesn’t Always Help

Static stretching — holding a stretch for 30–60 seconds — has long been considered the gold standard for flexibility. For many people, it works well.

But for others, it does the opposite.

When the nervous system is sensitive, sustained stretching can cause the muscle to guard instead of relax, making you feel tighter afterward. This is especially common in people with chronic pain, recurring injuries, or long-standing muscle tension.


A Better Option: Movement-Based Stretching

If static stretching hasn’t helped, a movement-based approach may be more effective.

Instead of holding a stretch at end range, you gently move into the stretch, ease off slightly, and repeat the motion. This tells the nervous system that the range is safe, allowing muscles to relax naturally instead of bracing.

For many patients, this approach:

  • Reduces guarding
  • Feels less aggressive
  • Leads to more lasting improvements

When Tightness Is Actually Dysfunction

If stretching and strengthening haven’t helped — and the tightness feels deep, stubborn, or unchanged — the issue may be tissue dysfunction, not flexibility.

Dysfunctional tissue occurs when the elastic components of muscle or tendon become disorganized and lose their ability to contract and release properly. This commonly happens after:

  • Surgery (especially with scar tissue)
  • Chronic tendon injuries
  • Old injuries that never fully rehabilitated
  • Trauma or repetitive overuse

In these cases, the tissue itself must be remodeled, not stretched.

This requires progressive, guided loading to restore collagen alignment, elasticity, and tolerance to stress — a process that takes time, consistency, and expert oversight.


Supporting Healing With Natural, Non-Invasive Therapies

At CJ Physical Therapy & Pilates in Portsmouth, NH, we often combine targeted rehabilitation with non-invasive therapies to help stubborn tissue respond better to treatment.

These may include:

  • Shockwave Therapy and EMTT, which stimulate blood flow, cellular activity, and healing in chronically tight or irritated tissue
  • Dry Needling, which helps reset excessive muscle tone, improve circulation, and reduce protective guarding

These tools don’t replace exercise — they help prepare the nervous system and tissue so movement and strengthening are more effective.


What to Do Next

If you feel tight all the time, the answer isn’t always more stretching.

Sometimes muscles are:

  • Overworked
  • Protecting another problem
  • Or dealing with tissue dysfunction that requires a different strategy

If your tightness keeps coming back, feels resistant to stretching, or worsens with aggressive release techniques, it may be time to stop guessing and get expert guidance.

When you treat the source instead of chasing the symptom, tightness becomes something you resolve — not something you constantly fight.


About the Author
Dr. Carrie Jose is a Physical Therapy Specialist and Mechanical Pain Expert and the owner of CJ Physical Therapy & Pilates in downtown Portsmouth, NH. She also writes for Seacoast Media Group.

To get in touch or request one of her free guides to back, knee, neck, or shoulder pain, visit cjphysicaltherapy.com or call 603-380-7902.