Cure For Lower Back Pain

Cure For Lower Back Pain

The Cure For Lower Back Pain

Finding a cure for lower back pain is closer than you might think. At its root, the primary causes are tied to feelings of devaluation — often intertwined with anger related to financial difficulty. Feelings of incompetence from an inability to provide for one's family, resentment over financial losses, or a sense of inadequacy in the breadwinner role can all manifest as physical pain in the lower back.

Lower back pain can also be linked to sexual guilt, being mistreated by a partner, or feeling unsupported — in the workplace or within the family. A sense of having no backing, no one in your corner, frequently drives the pain.

The causes described here are general patterns. In practice, each vertebra may be associated with its own distinct emotional conflict. If you are experiencing this pain, consulting a physician or chiropractor to identify the specific vertebrae involved can help narrow the emotional territory to explore.

When the discomfort doesn't come from the bone or discs, it is often connected to muscular or connective tissue. Resolving the underlying emotional conflict typically brings immediate relief.

Technically, lower back pain involves mesodermic tissue. During the conflict-active phase, a person may experience painless necrosis or tissue breakdown, resulting in a sense of weakness in the back. When the healing phase begins, disc swelling or recalcification can produce pain. If the conflict alternates between active and resolved, the pain becomes chronic.

Case Studies

Steve, age 37, suffered from persistent lower back pain. Working a low-paying factory job, he felt crushed by his inability to buy a home. His wife's spending habits only deepened his frustration. He oscillated between accepting his situation and desperately wanting more — and this cycle created an equally oscillating pattern of pain in his back. Once he confronted and worked through those feelings of helplessness and resentment, the pain resolved.

Ada, age 62, had endured chronic back pain for thirty years — often on the edge of disability. Initially skeptical that emotions could cause physical pain, she eventually uncovered the root: her ex-husband had abandoned her three decades earlier, leaving her alone with a newborn. The rage she still carried was intense and unresolved. After addressing that long-held anger, Ada was freed from thirty years of pain — in a matter of minutes.

Inner Influencing® is the most effective tool I have found for identifying and resolving the emotional conflicts driving chronic lower back pain.