Comment by ryan_n
1 day ago
That's awesome that it's helped you so much, chronic back pain is awful. Is it possible though, that this could be interpreted as a failure of the trainer to come up with a successful treatment plan for you? "Sudden" relief after 10 years of therapy just because you changed the program seems like they were just having you perform the wrong exercises no?
We have to also understand that the trainer didn't get to spend 12 hours of researching every minutia or do a trial and error study to get to where OP got to. This doesn't necessarily mean the trainer failed, just that they were constrained by time, which OP wasn't. And I think that is the essence of this tech, when used wisely, I can lead to results like these which you can't get despite having access to the best talent for a limited time. Only the well afforded can afford a full time trainer/therapist.
Absolutely, I didn't mean any disrespect towards any of the professionals helping OP with their back issues. It can be an incredibly hard thing to treat.
The trainer was a godsend, got me to ~95% pain-free, and taught me all kinds of things. He is amazing.
But 2025 was maybe down to 90% pain-free, and I want to get stronger. So I did a big rewrite of my entire workout plan and checked everything. AI wasn't perfect, but it was amazing when you already know some.
It is still a tool I had to direct, and it took a few days of work. But I'm amazed at where it got me to. It took the injury into consideration and my main sport, and built around that. In the past I tried do this online and couldn't do it given the numerous factors involved. It was not perfect, but over the course of a few days, I was able to sort it out (and test with a trainer on the approach a few weeks after).
I've been 100% pain free for 6 weeks in a way I haven't felt in a long time.
Without getting into your specific injury or sport, what was the biggest change compared to the trainer’s program?
Was it something unexpected like "exercise this seemingly unrelated muscle group that has nothing do with your injury but just happens to reduce pain by 75% for some inexplicable reason"?
Or was it something more mundane like "instead of exercising this muscle every day, do it every other day to give it time to rest"?
Good question!
I'm not entirely sure, but here is my educated guess.
The biggest change was that I spent a lot of time vetting each exercise for my specific injury points and asking whether this was really the best way to work that muscle group. I ended up replacing 60% of the workout with new exercises that allow me to lift more weight or target different muscle groups, while taking pressure off those injury points.
I think I had grown to use more weight with a few exercises that, on paper, shouldn't cause a problem, but were causing more stress on my injury and the supporting muscles. I found ways to isolate those muscles without putting as much tension on that area. I also added more core-strength exercises, including some for the hip flexors, which might be helping support as well. I was likely doing planks for too long, and switched to hardstyle, etc.
Last year, I was pain-free 90% of the year, and most years I run around 95% to 98%. Last year just felt different, and the rehab wasn't working the way it was. Since switching to this workout about 8 weeks ago I've been 100% pain free in a way that is hard to describe. My back has just felt light and happy, I can jump up on boxes and back down with no worries.
This is on the back of 10 years of rehab, 10 years of education, 10 years of learning about my injury and body, etc. AI is not some magic button to all the people who might jump on this thread :), it's a tool, and I want to stress that. But I've tried to do this in years past, and I couldn't do it. This was a game-changer. I tred with ChatGPT3 and it was useless at the time as well.