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How to stop knee pain

A while back I read a statistic that a quarter of forty five year olds in the UK have knee pain, and that in a quarter of these cases it is debilitating! Why is chronic knee pain so common? I don’t think that question is asked enough.

Many health practitioners fall into the trap of only identifying the condition – osteoarthritis, bursitis, tendonitis, etc. – rather than asking what are the root causes of this condition in this individual (of course I’m not talking about an acute injury from an accident such as getting hit by a car).

If you do ask them about the root cause they either say that in some people the knees are just weak, that it’s one of those things that happens as we age, or that some people have over-used their knees. In this video, I explain why I think this is rarely the case and suggest one of the most common causes I see with clients who come to see me.

(To receive the posture correction exercises I mention in the video please sign up to my free newsletter by clicking here)

The reasons for having chronic knee pain can be varied and complicated, but there are several explanations which seem a little silly.

First, that it’s just normal wear and tear that occurs with age. This doesn’t make much sense to me. If it was primarily age related then shouldn’t everyone in your age bracket have knee pain?

Furthermore, many of the clients I work with have pain in just one knee. If it was primarily age related then shouldn’t both knees hurt, as they should be the same age?

Second, that the knees are just weak. In the video I use a model knee joint to show you how beautifully it is designed. It’s a work of genius. You have fibrocartilage pads, fat pads, tendons, ligaments and powerful muscles all trying to stabilise and protect the joint.

It’s the result of millions of years of evolution. Did nature really produce a knee joint that is so weak?

I don’t think so, but I do think that in some people their knees are more susceptible to injury and pain because something has gone a little wrong with how it’s working due to their body alignment – I explain more in the video.

Third, that you just used your knees too much such as from running too much or playing too much sport. This also doesn’t make much sense to me.

Aren’t there people who play your sport and have used their knees much more than you, and don’t have knee pain?

Furthermore, I’ve had clients come into clinic with knee pain in their twenties and thirties who have hardly played any sports in their entire lives. In the so-called western world aren’t we using our bodies less than ever before with modern day inventions and cars and trains and sofas and offices etc.?

So why am I banging on so much about finding the root cause(s) of the pain?

It’s because this will help you to find the right solution to hopefully stop the pain. I feel sad and often angry about all the people who have been given and all the people who are continuing to be given expensive and invasive treatments which either don’t help at all, help temporarily or make things worse – I see examples of this every week in clinic and it’s just terrible.

I hope you find the video beneficial, and if you have knee pain then please don’t give up! Keep looking for answers and solutions.

Take care.

My name is Ameet Bhakta . I’m a posture correction specialist certified by the Egoscue Institute, and founder of Health Through Posture based in London and Tunbridge Wells.

8 comments
  • Ammar

    Hi Sir,
    I need your help, I feel severe pain in my knees, the knee cap area. Some times I really feel severe pain. Please I need your help as I am just 30 years old.
    Looking forward for your suggestions.
    Thanks in advance
    Regards
    Ammar Khan

  • Jill

    Hi Ameet! I have just discovered your website after Googling Egoscue. I was lucky where I used to live as a qualified therapist ran an adult education class in posture correction (based on Egoscue). Now I’ve moved house, there is no-one near who uses this method – and I’m a complete convert. So I wanted to write something to let your other readers know that this is not some fly-by-night system – it REALLY works! Since I left the class 18 months ago, all my bad habits have come back and with them, the terrible knee pain (ah say the doctors, did you play a lot of football when you were younger?) , the lower back pain, and the dodgy hip! I’m walking like Mrs Overall (if you’re not too young to remember Julie Walter’s character in Acorn Antiques). Hence I was Googling for therapists near enough to me to get to…

    Perhaps I should actually DO the training myself!

    Keep up the good work – you will help a lot of people.

  • Ameet Bhakta

    Hi Jill! Thanks for your message and sorry to hear that the pain is back. Some of the exercises on my blog page might help you and if you ever wanted some one on one help, I do Skype sessions which are also very effective when distance is a problem. Take care. Ameet

  • Bharti

    I have pain in my upper back thoracic area and neck which gives me pins & needles in my arms and hands.

    Can u let me have exercises for alleviating this pain

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