Many treatments give you some pain relief, frequently leaving the underlying issue not fully resolved. As the body has created compensated movement patterns for so long, your brain believes that these compensated movements are 'normal'. Hence you still move, sit and recreate the pain again whenever your body is under stress.
I prefer that we create a permanent result rather than having a back that continues to need massage or manipulation. In many cases your bone alignment is not the problem. The real issue is the brain patterns altered belief and 'miss firing' into the compensated muscles neural pathways. ...

This compensated muscle / pain issue is easily identified while weight bearing by noting the tight, sore muscles. Theses tight muscles mostly receive 'too many neural signals' to the muscle, while it's antagonistic partner receives a weaker signal, effectively altering the bodies optimal alignment adversely.
By identifying the tight muscles and then 'cross referencing' these with underdeveloped or weak muscles and nerve groups, I can assess which muscular skeletal neural pathways have been compromised. Then it's a matter of switching these pathways back and strengthening and increasing the range of movement to these muscle groups. A 're-education' of the movement is a vital part of this process to ensure a permanent result.
As a physiotherapist client of mine said: "Lee-Anne told me that through a traumatic injury to my shoulder that my brain had set up a ‘reactive loop’, to protect my body from further damage and my brain didn’t know how to ‘reset the circuits. My way of thinking about injuries and my physiotherapy own client treatment ideas have changed forever."
These 'reactive neuro loops' are something the body can't naturally correct, as the body and brain already believes it's using the best system. This though is far from the 'original and optimal' created muscular neuro- pathways.
This technique leads to a more permanent if not full resolution of the chronic injury and pain.
Create a pain free day!
Wishes of great health for you and yours,
Lee-Anne MacLeod