The Entrepreneur DNA - Fix Your Back Pain Without Surgery: RehabFix Founder Reveals How | Dr. Grant Elliott | EP 75
Episode Date: June 9, 2025In this episode, I sat down with Dr. Grant Elliott, aka RehabFix, to dive deep into something every entrepreneur battles at some point: back and neck pain. As someone who’s dealt with a ruptured C5-...C6 and L5-S1, I wanted answers—and Grant delivered. We talked about how movement, not surgery or rest, is often the real cure. He broke down why those “random” injuries (like mine from rolling in bed or standing up on a plane) actually aren’t random at all, and how small daily habits stack up to chronic pain. If you’re an entrepreneur who travels, sits too much, skips workouts, or just wants to future-proof your spine, this one is a must-listen. 🔑 Key Topics Covered Why 80% of people suffer back pain—and how it’s totally fixable Movement > Medication: why rest and surgery are outdated for most How to self-assess your neck and back pain The #1 daily movement you can do to reduce neck pain in real-time The mindset trap of “I’m just getting older” and how to break it Exercises to do and avoid when in pain Why most glute and hamstring stretches actually worsen your back pain Core training for people with back injuries (spoiler: avoid sit-ups!) Why your doctor might be wrong—and unqualified to help you lift again How RehabFix has become the #1 online low back rehab program ABOUT Dr. Grant Elliott: Dr. Grant Elliott is the founder of RehabFix, the #1 online low-back rehab program helping people around the world eliminate chronic back and neck pain without surgery, injections, or endless rest. With over 1 million followers across Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok, Dr. Grant is a leading voice in movement-based recovery. He’s a Doctor of Chiropractic with a Master’s in Sports Science and Rehabilitation, and he’s worked with thousands of clients—from everyday professionals to high-performing entrepreneurs—showing them how to take control of their pain and mobility through simple, effective movement. Instagram: @rehabfix Website: rehabfix.com Book a consult: Link in his Instagram bio -- About Justin: After investing in real estate for over 18 years and almost 3000 deals done, Justin has created a business that generates 7 figures in active income through wholesaling and fix and flipping as well as accumulating millions of dollars of rental properties including 5 apartment buildings, 50+ single family homes, and 1 storage facility Justins longevity in real estate is due to his ability to look around the corners, adapt to changing markets, perfecting Raising private capital, and focusing on lead generation which allows him to not just wholesale and fix & flip, but also accumulate wealth through long term holds. His success in real estate led him to start The Entrepreneur DNA podcast and The Science Of Flipping podcast and education company, and REI LIVE where he’s actively doing deals with members. He has coached and mentored thousands of aspiring and active investors over the last decade. Connect with Justin: Instagram: @thejustincolby YouTube: Justin Colby TikTok: @justincolbytsof LinkedIn: Justin Colby
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Movement is medicine.
Motion is lotion.
Rest is rust.
Everybody feels better with movement.
Not all movements, because just as though there will be specific movements of your spine that can increase your pain,
there will be specific movements that decrease your pain.
So movement as an entire category is the key to staying pain-free, to being healthy. A vast majority of individuals, oh, when I'm moving, I feel better.
When I go on walks, I feel better.
When I'm active, I feel better.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
That's not saying every exercise, every movement at any time is
the perfect thing for you.
That is not accurate.
There's going to be certain movements that can help.
There's going to be certain movements that can hurt, but we want to move generally.
What is up, entrepreneur DNA?
What is happening?
Super excited to have this guest on.
If you are like me and you are a hard driving entrepreneur,
you're traveling a lot, you're on planes,
maybe you're not working out as much
as you wanna be working out
and you're starting to feel some neck pain,
some back pain, some pain in general,
as you see my guy, Grant Elliott Rehabfix on Instagram
is here to help us all with some of this stuff.
What's up, dude?
What's up?
Man, I'm excited to do this
because we were just talking offline.
I have a ruptured C5, C6.
I have a ruptured S, what was it, S6, lower back,
a ruptured S you know, S something.
So I've been in pain for years.
And you are the guy,
you have one of the largest programs out there
helping individuals remove back pain, neck pain.
Anyone who doesn't know you needs to go to Rehab Fix
on Instagram at least, go check this guy out.
His platform is massive.
He has one of the largest programs out there
for people like us listening to this and watching this.
But dude, this is a topic that needed to be touched on
for all these entrepreneurs out there.
Absolutely.
And I'm stoked to help people with it
because low back pain is the number one disability
in the world.
80% of people alive will experience low back pain
at some point in their life.
And the way society has conditioned a lot of us to think is that immediately
rest, here's the drug, here's the injection. If that doesn't work, here's the surgery.
When in reality, the vast, vast, vast majority can be completely resolved with
movement and I'm here to spread the amazing life of movement to teach people
how to fix themselves
and avoid those things.
And so you do a great job social media wise, right?
Rehab Fix, you have almost a million people following you,
all of your posts.
And by the way, as someone that is a new friend to you,
like I'm watching you and I'm doing all your stretches
and all your movements.
I mean, but it's practical stuff
you're showing on Instagram, right?
Rehab Fix, again, go to Rehab Fix on Instagram, but like this is stuff you're showing on Instagram, right? Rehab fix again, go to rehab fix on Instagram.
But like this is stuff all of us can do.
I don't care.
You know, my, my excuse, uh, used to be like a travel a lot.
It's very hard to get to the gym all the time.
It's very hard to do.
You literally could be in a cubicle and do these movements.
Yep.
We have people in cubicles, movement, not making excuses.
We've had labor intensive construction workers who like the guys you see out there paving roads,
getting off to the side, getting in the grass or on the sidewalk,
doing our stuff, sending us videos of them doing it, making no excuse,
but making opportunities to fix their body, get out of pain and live the life that they want.
Yeah. You and I, we agree on one thing in a big way. making opportunities to fix their body, get out of pain and live the life that they want.
Yeah, you and I, we agree on one thing in a big way.
We were talking about it a little offline here.
It's just kind of this mental frame of understanding
that it's all comes down to excuses, right?
And in understanding if you can control your mindset
that I don't longer wanna be in pain,
I no longer wanna be immobile,
I don't longer wanna make excuses,
you can actually change your whole physical outlook
on all of this, right?
You can get back into shape.
You can get out of pain.
But it just starts with your mindset
of what you're going to be able to do.
Yep, yeah, then that drives through business too.
We talk about mindset in business, limiting beliefs,
what you believe you can achieve versus where you're capped.
And especially with pain and physicality,
yeah, a lot of people who slowly start to develop pain, they become very complacent
in that and they start to develop a mindset that, Oh, this is just like how I
feel now and they start to not believe that they can actually get out of pain.
Or maybe everything they've heard about back pain or neck pain or disc issues.
Oh, I've heard that once you have a disc issue, that's it, you're done.
Like you just have it for the rest of your life.
And none of these things are true.
Absolutely none of them.
You can absolutely resolve it all the time.
These things are highly recoverable.
It's a matter of believing you can get better,
but then taking action steps to get better.
Yeah, and so let's even talk, I'll use me as the example,
because there's many people out there
probably listening and watching this
that has some level of what I've gone through. So most recently a year and a half ago I ruptured my C5,
C6 which is you'll know but it's at the base of my neck right and so excruciating pain. I literally
thought I broke my neck by the way. I wish I had a really awesome story like I was shoulder pressing
500 pounds bro I was crying. I wish I had something cooler than the real story which was
I was rolling over in bed at two in the morning. That's what ruptured my disc.
And I literally thought I broke my neck.
I jumped out of bed yelping.
My wife has never seen me in pain.
I hide pain pretty well.
And like she thought I was dying.
She was like terrified, like screaming,
like what do I do?
You know, and I'm in the most pain of my life.
And if no one's gone through neck pain versus back pain, I've gone through both.
It's not, it's they both suck.
Neck pain for me was like the worst pain by far I've ever felt in my life.
It was an unreal.
And then I've done, I think it was what, what is the lower back S sick legs?
You're probably referring to L5S1. L5S1. There we go. That's the exact one. And then I've done, I think it was, what is the lower back S six X?
You're probably referring to L5S1.
L5S1, there we go.
That's the exact one.
So, but both of them I ruptured in the easiest things,
like my back I ruptured twice,
but one of them I was getting out of a plane seat.
I was getting out of my seat on a plane
and ruptured the disc.
And so let's talk to that.
Like the pain sucks, yes, when you talk through that,
but like why does this stuff happen in the silliest times?
Like neither of these stories are cool.
They're more like, are you joking?
You were rolling over in bed.
Why does that happen?
Yeah, you're absolutely not alone in this.
A lot of
individuals will find that their neck or low back pain journey specifically will begin sometimes
sneezing like some of the allergies. I sneezed really hard and then I felt a pop in my back and
oh my gosh. Or there could be someone who is an active gym goer. They feel relatively strong
and they bend forward to pick their phone off the ground or their kid off the ground. Or even in some instances, Justin,
some people are sitting on the toilet,
having to push a little bit too hard.
And that is the instance where something goes wrong.
And they're like, how is it that something
so seemingly insignificant could result in so much pain
and so much fear and all the different things
that come with it?
Yeah.
And the truth is that although in those stories, these, these can
appear very acute in nature, like for yours, Hey, I rolled in bed and that
is what ruptured it, or I got out of airplane seat and that is what ruptured
it, although that was the incident where the pain manifested, that is not
often the instant where the problem occurred. Meaning that about
90% of spine issues, lower back issues specifically, are called non-specific. Meaning they can't
be traced to one single tissue or one single event. Because these types of issues are multifactorial.
They are insidious in nature, meaning they develop over time,
a vast majority of the time.
So what typically happens is this is, this occurs over a prolonged
period of time of a combination of poor movement habits.
So we're not doing movements that we should be doing.
Uh, we are doing movements that we should not be doing.
Uh, other factors could be inflammatory diets, could be poor sleep,
could be poor stress management.
All of these things absolutely relate to the experience of pain.
And then the incident where then the injury occurs is the straw
that broke the camel's back.
So, uh, because I speak a lot to low back pain, let's use your
airplane ride, for instance, let's say over the last multiple months, we had not been giving our back when it needed
to stay balanced and be free and move the way that it wants to.
And we were sitting on a lot of extra planes.
We were sleeping worse, we were eating worse.
And now our body's like, this thing that was in the background is kind of coming to fruition.
And then long plane ride, get up the wrong way.
Okay, now we feel it.
It's manifested, it is triggered at that point
and now we have the experience of pain.
So that is how these things develop.
They are multifaceted, they're multifactorial.
It's not just one specific thing.
Yeah, you know, and let's lead into the next thing
which I thought was unique.
The doctor I originally saw,
this is when I first did my back,
in Arizona, they were in alignment
with everything you're saying,
is you a lot of times can just fix it through movement.
You know, and they definitely were like,
almost nobody should be getting surgery.
There are extreme cases that find it will make sense.
But they really believed, like,
if you can sustain the pain and then practice movement
over time, you'll essentially cure yourself, right?
And so with that being said,
I believe that's in direct alignment
with what you would support.
Would you encourage people to get epidurals
just for the pain to solve for the pain?
Or would you just say,
if you can get through it, get through it?
So that can be a complex question and can have a complex answer. So I will segment it in the most adjustable manner. So if we're purely talking about pain, is an epidural needed? Well, that
depends on the person you're asking the question. If they prefer, if they
prefer to not feel the pain and they don't have the right rehab plan to help them reduce
their pain, then I would not blame someone for getting an epidural to feel less pain.
I would not blame them for doing that. The flip side of that is there's an abundance
of evidence that shows us that those who do pursue epidural injections does lead to a higher risk of needing
a surgery down the road. It does lead that direction. So we want to avoid these if we can.
The person's like, I have pain, I don't want pain. Okay. With that being said,
injections are not a hundred percent success rate. A majority of them will help maybe two weeks and
then they will fizzle out. Some individuals have more success and some individuals have less success.
Now the, the clinical, here's the clinical answer.
We will advise individuals to get injections when it's actually needed.
So that's aside from pain.
So when is it needed if pain is not the number one focus?
If it's needed from a clinical standpoint, where we look for significant signs and symptoms
that tell us that it is impacting a nerve
or your spinal cord to a degree that is necessitating it.
So what does that mean?
Okay, let's say I hurt my back.
It's been hurting for the last couple of weeks.
It's getting a little bit worse, getting a little bit worse,
but I don't have a plan.
I'm not doing the right things.
I have no plan, so it's getting worse worse and now my foot is starting to go numb. Okay
Well inherently that's not a big deal
A lot of the people we talk to every day around the world have numbness and tingly in their foot or in their hands
This alone is not a big deal. It's the story around it
So let's say they wake up one morning and the numbness is there on their foot. And then the next day, it's significantly worse. The next day, it's significantly worse. It's
rapidly progressive, rapidly spreading up their leg. And now maybe they also have weakness in their
toes, weakness in their foot. The nerve is not getting the juice to the muscles. That is indicating
severe inflammation and encroachment on that nerve.
And so it's, it's compromising it and it's compromising the person.
That is generally a scenario where you would say, Hey, these are rapidly progressive.
We need to reel this back quickly to get you in a state where we can still conservatively
manage you.
So let's get an injection to immediately reduce
the inflammation to the best chance that we can
in this moment to stop this progression
that we don't want to take place.
That doesn't mean they're done.
It gives us the opportunity to then focus
on what the cure actually is,
which is a proper movement-based rehab plan.
That's right.
And I wanted to highlight that.
You know, you do a great job
through your social media,
Rehab Fix, showing these movements, right?
And like we were talking about,
it's literally something you could do absolutely anywhere.
One thing I found is the more active I am,
the less pain I am.
Now I'm not talking about anything crazy.
I'm like, I'll just go and do a stair stepper
just to keep going active and loosening up
my muscles and do some light stretching. I don't go over
the top. I don't need to be an Olympian. It just reduces
pain no matter what. Right. And so let's talk to some in
visually guys, we might be able to cut up some be real and
put some cool stuff on social media here while he's talking.
But for the most part right now, let's walk through some simple ways, lower
back pain or anything else you want to touch on here that people can start to
use stretching movement to their benefit.
Yeah.
Movement is medicine.
Motion is lotion.
Rest is rust.
Everybody feels better with movement. Not all movements because just
as though there will be specific movements of your spine that can increase
your pain there will be specific moves that decrease your pain. So movement as
an entire category is the key to staying pain-free, to being healthy. A vast
majority of individuals, oh when I'm moving, I feel better when I go on walks, I feel better when I'm active, I feel better.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
That's not saying every exercise, every movement at any time is the
perfect thing for you that is not accurate.
There's going to be certain movements that can help.
There's going to be certain movements that can hurt, but we want to move generally.
So something as simple as a morning and evening walk, early sun, evening sun can
be incredibly impactful, not just for back pain, but for a multitude of reasons.
Uh, circadian rhythm regulation, um, hormonal regulation, uh, seeing the sun,
getting actually getting it in our eyes can promote, um, stem cell production,
wound healing, uh, a lot of awesome things increased, um, increased serotonin,
uh, decreased melatonin throughout the, um, increased serotonin, uh,
decreased melatonin throughout the day will reduce your afternoon slumps,
better productivity.
This regulates our body.
We're meant to see the sun as it rises.
We're meant to see the sun as it sets.
So those are amazing things for that's multifaceted for entrepreneurs for sure.
But simply starting your day with movement, getting your blood flowing,
entrepreneurs for sure. Yeah.
But simply starting your day with movement, getting your blood flowing, getting, getting
fluid through and out of your discs and spine joints can be, can be incredibly helpful.
Starting the day and ending the day with that is, is fantastic.
And then movements throughout the day.
Here's, here's a bit of gold I will drop.
The vast majority of us sit in chairs all day and that's not inherently a bad
thing. Sure. And say, oh sitting's new smoking. Not really unless you're not doing any movement,
you're not doing anything to counteract it. Sure. And it is. Our body doesn't like staying in one
position for too long. Right. So the key is to get to frequent positions as much as we need.
So if you envision the shape of your body
when you're sitting in a chair,
that's the position your body is in most of the day.
A healthy joint is one that is exposed
to all ranges of motion.
So if you just envision yourself sitting in your chair,
the two main things you can look at
are your hips are in flexion,
meaning your thighs are close to your abdomen,
and then your back,
your low back is typically rounded forward.
So let's
think that's what my body is getting most of throughout the day. So how can I keep my low
back and hips as healthy as possible? Give them the opposite to counterbalance it. So I'm making
this super simple. If your hips are flex most of the day, if your back is rounded most of the day,
then you need to be taking movement breaks throughout the day that involve the opposite motions. So hip extension, which would look like
a typical hip flexor stretch. There's many different ways to do it though. There's many
different variations. And then low back extension, moving the back backwards in an arched position.
These are- Would a lot of people sit on those big balls?
All right.
Would maybe rolling, putting your back on it
and just kind of rolling and share it.
Like would that be pretty,
should that be pretty, I would open your back,
it would open your hips.
You're really kind of like,
I feel like there's a lot of people out there listening
like, oh, I sit on that every day
cause it's better for you.
But even something like that is an easy cure.
Absolutely.
It is accomplishing both of those things. It's putting your hips into extension
and your low back into extension. Another is laying on the ground performing a
cobra pose repetitively. That's arching your back. So the simplest thing here is
just think about and other people might have different demands on their job. So
just think what are what are the positions your spine is in the most?
Start to give it more of the opposite and you're gonna start to feel better
What are some maybe what are some do don't do's right?
So like what are some movement if you're already in pain you want to avoid because I think you're gonna have
Hundreds of opportunities to show them what they could be doing
What I also want them to like what are the the two, three, four things like do not
do if you are in back pain, do not be deadlifting, right?
As an example, right?
Or what would be some of the don't do's?
Yep.
So this will always be context specific as always.
So I will provide a broad example.
So anyone listening don't think this is a catch all.
It is not a catch all.
It's always, always a situation dependent.
So there's nuance. It's always, always a situation dependent. So there's nuance.
There's always nuance.
So first I'm gonna start with a principle, a principle.
What do you not want to do?
Well, one, you don't want to be afraid of moving.
Okay, so although I'm gonna talk about movements
that we might not want to do,
we do want what to fear movement.
What does fearing movement do in leaning towards rest?
I'm just gonna rest.
I'm not gonna move my back hurts.
I'm not gonna do anything. That'm not going to move my backwards. I'm not going to do anything.
That is the fastest way to develop chronic pain and to hold onto this for life.
Because what fearing movement and not doing movement does is it starts to rewire our brain
and our nervous system to be programmed that if I do things, then I will feel pain.
And if you tell yourself that enough, your brain is going to memorize it.
And it develops what's called fear avoidance behaviors
So let's say I hurt my back
Bending forward and then I go I'm not gonna bend forward at all for the next three days
I'm terrified of bending forward and the next thing you know, you haven't bent your spine for three months
You're rewiring your rewiring your brain to understand that that is a fear-based emotion I should not do that. So now I'm avoiding flexion. I'm not doing it.
I'm afraid of it. Every time I do it,
I feel pain because that's what my nervous system learned to do.
That is not a good thing. So yeah, do not fear movement.
Now what are some actual movements that people should not do?
Let me speak to the most common type of low back pain presentation.
The most common type is what we call flexion intolerant lower back pain, meaning flexion
bending forward, so bending forward motions of the spine is not friendly.
It does not tolerate this.
So if you are someone, listen up, if these symptoms hit home for you, then you're who
I'm talking about.
If you're someone where the longer you sit, the more your low back hurts, bending forward
to put socks and shoes on.
Oh, that's way harder than it should be.
Or you've been sitting for a long time and you go to stand up, but it takes you
like a few seconds to stand up straight.
You feel like you're kind of stuck for like an old man.
This is a flexion intolerant low back issue.
So if we know that flexion bending forward, exacerbates your symptoms,
it intensifies
your symptoms then we don't want to do more of what's causing the stress so we
don't want to do more flexion based movements so that would be hamstring
stretches wait hamstrings I thought you're talking about the back yeah but
what position is your spine in when you're doing hamstrings foot stretches
flexion bending forward or intense piriformis stretches?
Well, I'm trying to stretch my piriformis. Well, look at your back. What's your back doing?
You're cranking it down into flexion the very thing that
aggravates you or any type of other stretch that involves bending forward consistently if
That's the movement that triggers your pain. Don't do more of that movement
But for most people that's the only direction they know how to move their spine.
Yeah, because so often you would hear, and this is what you're going against, doctors will say,
well, hey, your back is connected to your glutes, connected to your hamstrings. You need to loosen
up your hamstrings to loosen up, right? But to your point, most people do like track stretches
where you're standing up, you're trying to touch your toes, or you're sitting down, trying to touch your toes,
which is the entire point you're making,
it's actually the wrong stretch or exercise
you're actually doing.
There's alternatives.
100%.
And this increases even more
if you are someone who is dealing with sciatica.
If you have nerve pain that's traveling into your glute
or down into your hamstring or calf or foot, you will notice that that leg, that glute or
hamstring feels extra tight all the time.
Like when I try to stretch that leg, it feels extra tight or that burning sensation.
That's because you have nerve pain.
You have nerve tension.
When a nerve has pressure on it, it becomes sensitive.
A sensitive nerve does not want to stretch.
I can actually use a visual cue
right now. Check this out. So if a disc is pushing out and you're pulling a nerve across it, that's
going to cause irritation around the nerve. If you try to stretch the nerve across it more,
you're agitating it over and over and over across the disc. So when people have nerve pain, they
feel like, oh, my leg's tight.
I just need to stretch it more. But no, what they're pulling is not the muscle.
They're pulling the nerve. That can flare them up so commonly. Oh God.
Bro, you're preaching to the choir because so many, everyone go follow
this man right now. Because it is such, I don't want to say it's a new way of
thinking, but people aren't
you, there's not enough of you preaching this because I, as someone that has had a lot of
pain, this is the way, like stretch out your glutes, stretch out, but everything was an
inflection.
Everything was a track pose, a hurdle pose, right?
Where you bend your knee and you're trying to go down to your knee.
Everything put me in that position.
And so now where I would take this conversation
so people understand that the alternatives
of those type of poses or stretches,
what can they do in an alternative way
that they aren't doing a touch your toes style
or a hurdle pose where you're trying to touch your knee
to your chest, because that causes the inflection.
What are the alternatives there?
Yep, so we mentioned these a moment earlier and I'll expand on it even further are for these
types of scenarios that I've described the opposite.
So extension based movements.
So you had mentioned, hey, lay back over the ball for sure.
I mentioned laying on your, laying on your stomach on the floor, pushing up into a Cobra
pose for sure.
You could also envision yourself in a typical hamstring or sorry, not
typically hamstring, a typical hip flexor stretch, imagine you're a
typical hip flexor stretch, but instead just sitting there holding and not
moving, you're lunging in and out of it.
Repetitively repetitive motions are spine and hips respond to way more.
So loading the joint over and over.
So that's going to help get that hip into extension while also
Helping the low back and get into extension as well
Even like something like a glute bridge not a not a complex movement not one that's gonna be amazing by the way
Being told oh you're back thing cuz your glutes a week. That's a total myth. We're not gonna go down that route
But doing glute bridges for the sake of getting your low back into extension
can be helpful too.
So these are the types of motions that if you are resonating with the subject matter
that we're discussing right now, these are the type of motions you need to be doing
to help reverse the stress that you're accumulating throughout the day
being in that bent position.
Now I know you're heavily, you know, back centric,
but you are a doctor.
So I'm gonna ask you some personal questions,
see if anyone can get some stuff out of that.
My neck, though not really painful is,
I had an epidural whatever year and a half ago,
what are some alternative,
what can I be doing for my neck?
Neck pain specific, right?
I still work out, I still am very active.
I don't try to go for the heavy lifts anymore, right?
Like I wanna stay fit.
What are some neck examples that I could be doing
to cure myself for that?
Yeah, we might do something crazy on this podcast.
You might have to chop this up quite a bit
and do some voiceover, but a moment ago,
you were telling me you were trying to get some radiation
down to the left hand, correct?
Yeah, down this right here.
Okay. So normally, I want to talk through this very briefly.
For all the listeners, we have around 200 online consultations a week.
We have clients all over the world.
We take everyone through a one-on-one movement assessment over Zoom.
We look at what tests trigger their pain, and then we do exercises with them real time
and then retest to see if we can reduce their pain. I want to attempt to see if I can even do
a mini version of that with Justin and this would be far more in depth when actually working with us
but just based on what you're describing there's there's potential here. So let's see what happens.
I like it and then also where could they go to potentially book a call just let's do do that now since some people might be like, dude, I want to book a call.
How do I do that?
Where, what could they go to try to do that?
Yeah.
If you go to my Instagram, there's a million different ways.
We have called actions all over, obviously.
So the link and bio on our Instagram, if you go to my website, there's an
application that you can submit as well.
But yeah, Instagram is our, is our primary hub for sure.
Rehab fix.
Go get them.
All right.
All right.
Let's see what we can do here.
Let's uh, okay. So, so, so like I said, I'm expediting this exponentially, uh, just for the sake of
where we're at here. So I want you to, I want you to try one test real quick because you said you're
feeling numbness and tingling in the hand and starting to increase a little bit. We're going
to do two basic neck ranges of motion. I'm going to do one other test with you. Um, for the neck,
I just want you to look backwards towards the ceiling as far as you can.
Let me know if you feel anything.
Nope.
Okay, chin down to the chest as far as you can.
Let me know if you feel anything.
Tightness.
Okay, in where?
My left.
Just in the neck.
Tight, just tight.
Okay, got it.
Tilt your head straight to the right.
So right ear to the right shoulder.
Does that pull on that left side at all or no? Kind of feels good. Okay, got it. Last test your head straight to the right. So right ear to the right shoulder. Does that pull on that left side at all or no?
Kind of feels good.
Okay, got it.
Last test, like I said, I'm rapidly going through this.
This one's more involved.
So here's what you're gonna do.
With your left arm, you're gonna stretch your left arm back,
tilt that hand back,
and then tilt the head away from that arm.
Let me know if that increases any of that radiation
into the hand.
Nope, kind of like I said,
it actually kind of feels good like I just need stretch.
Okay, well briefly compare it to the right side.
Now do the same thing on the right side
and let me know if it feels any different to you.
This is actually harder.
It actually hurts.
Like I'm tighter and it hurts more
in my neck and shoulder area.
Interesting, you're flipped.
Your bad side is the good side.
No.
Goodness gracious.
So the goal with going through this is to see if there are just any quick tests that you would say, oh yeah, that does trigger my neck or
oh yeah, that does trigger my hand.
Cause then what we would do is we would do an exercise together, retest
and see if we can get real time results.
For majority of our clients, we see on average 37% improvement in the
first session when we do this, but for you, because I'm really expediting this,
there was no movement that triggered symptoms.
So we're not going to do a whole retest process, but the number one go to
movement for cervical herniations is a repetitive and range loading of the
cervical spine meeting we're going to perform a chin tuck motion.
So here's how it would look is you would sit back in your chair, relax,
let your shoulders and posture muscles totally relax.
And then performing a chin retraction, we would slide the chin straight back.
Like we're making a double chin and then relax.
And we do this repetitively.
a double chin and then relax.
And we do this repetitively.
This is literally the gold standard intro exercises for reducing a cervical herniation, getting it off of the nerve and getting those symptoms out of your
hand, as well as the pain out of your neck.
I'm telling you right now, I did that six times and I, my
tingling basically went away.
I'm like joking you.
I'm not saying it just cause you're not here. I think I did it six times while you're doing it. Yeah. And I went
from a tingly thumb as we were talking to no tingle. I'm not bullshitting. So
what is this doing? Why is that working? I'll explain in depth. So remember how we
tucked up at the lower back. I said hey what position are we in most the day?
Let's do the opposite.
Okay.
So now we're gonna flip it.
So this is gonna be visual.
Anyone who's listening, you're like,
I don't know what's going on right now.
So if I'm sitting at a computer,
let's analyze my neck together real quick.
The top part of my neck, this part is shaped like this.
Right?
So the top part is shaped like this.
This bottom part right here is shaped like this. That? So the top part shaped like this, this bottom part right here is
shaped like this. That's inflection. So the top part is an extension,
bottom part is inflection. When I do a chin tuck,
the opposite is occurring. The top part goes from an arched position
to a straight position and the bottom part, which goes in a rounded, which is in a rounded position, goes to a straight position and the bottom part which goes in a rounded
which is an around a position goes to a straight position. Oh yeah. So we're doing
the opposite that your neck is in most the day. That is why. I mean so simple
right in terms of what you're how you explain it but obviously it took a
doctor to tell me this but that makes all the sense. It's the same reason why you were saying even the, for the back pain, even do
doing the hip flexor, um, stretch, but instead of holding it, you go back and
forth, you go back and in fact, that you just recently did a video of this, or at
least I came across recently watching you do that and I'm like, Oh, that makes
all the sense in the world is why wouldn't you be going lunging and coming in and coming out of it?
Yeah. Yeah. Discs specifically. So we talk about spine conditions. So cervical herniations,
lumbar herniations, discs respond to repetitive load far better than attic load, far better.
So like low back example, if someone holds a cobraobra pose, like, oh, I was, I
looked this up on YouTube.
I saw that this is a good movement for disc herniations.
If they hold that for 30 to 60 seconds, many, many people can start to feel
really tight and really flare up as a result.
But if instead for 30 to 60 seconds, they did it repetitively, their results
can be far superior.
It's because discs like repetitive load.
So we do the same thing for the neck. We don't hold positions, especially not ones that we're getting too
much throughout the day.
We do repetitions.
We load it over and over.
So for some people, Justin, your situation.
Let's say they have active radiation going all the way to the fingertips, like fire.
We might sit here and do that with them 50, 60 times in a row.
Wow. Yeah. fingertips like fire. We might sit here and do that with them 50, 60 times in a row.
Wow.
And as like every 10, like every 10 we do, it's like after the first 10, it'll
suck it out from the fingers to the palm.
The next 10, it'll suck it out to the wrist.
The next 10, it'll be mid form.
And it just starts crawling up their arm because what it's doing is it's
reducing the herniation away from
the nerve and as the pressure gets off the nerve, the pressure reduces out of the arm
or out of the leg if they have sciatica.
This is great.
God, this is my own personal doctor therapy session, guys.
Everybody get a hold of this man immediately.
Rehab Jakes on Instagram.
So because I've been really contemplating
what type of stretching I should be doing at the gym.
The gym have different, you know,
machines and different stuff that obviously you're aware.
Is there anything at the gym people should say,
this is a better, like they definitely,
there's one machine that I'm aware of
that I've used several times now for the hips, right?
Trying to loosen up my hips,
but it makes you hold it essentially, right?
It's the one where you put your leg over
and then the seat pulls out
and so you're stretching your hip flexors.
Is there any ones people should stay away from
and or if your gym has this stretching mobility
type of machine, you should be going to that one?
Yeah, thank you for asking this question because
I've covered a lot of maybe interesting perspectives on this show
and it probably goes against a lot of what people have been told.
But I also want to ensure people aren't hearing what I'm not saying.
So your question allows me to clarify these things.
If you are relatively healthy, if you're relatively out of pain,
if you don't have a serious acute pain that you're dealing with, you should not be steered
away or afraid of any movement because there is no good or bad exercise. There's only the
exercise that you are not prepared for. There you go. Okay. Your body can adapt to anything,
literally anything. Look at all the different videos of human beings on the planet who can do all types of things with their body
It's because they were able to adapt to that over time. So
if you're relatively healthy and you don't have a
A spine disorder a nerve a disc issue that you're dealing with
Go do whatever you want in the gym
however, you want as long as you're slowly exposing
your body to that load and you have the ability to adapt to it over time.
So what this discussion is, this is a load management discussion.
This is like, you know, we see people like, Oh, their deadlift form is terrible.
Their squat form is terrible.
That's not really true because if they're healthy and if they've slowly been exposed in their body to that for years and years and years
Then that could be the position that their body's the strongest in yeah
Before I was educated I used to you know when I was in the bodybuilding and lifting which I am now
But with a more educated mind, of course
If I saw someone rounding their back during dead lifting, I just assumed all terrible for them. They're gonna blow their disco
Oh, that's awful.
That that's not necessarily true.
Yeah.
Cause we can adapt our bodies to anything.
So we don't want to be afraid of movements.
Uh, all that matters is mode management, which is if you have slowly worked into a movement over time, slowly increased weight over time and your body's adapted
to it, it really doesn't matter what movement that is, and it doesn't really
matter how you're doing it.
If you're adapted to it, you're adapted to it and
you don't have to be afraid. I love that. So coming from someone myself pretty
physically fit I would I would say in the gym, right? I want to keep a healthy
neck a healthy back now but I also want to be able to push some weight around on
my guy and my wife likes it when I carry some muscle and wanna,
is there a way I should be working out
that keeps everything protected,
but allows me for the growth of the actual muscle?
Cause you and I both know the old bodybuilder philosophy
is lift as much weight and all,
the gains and all that kind of stuff.
Is there a strategy that you would recommend
for someone like myself that does wanna gain gain some, some muscle, but protecting, you know, my soft spots, which would be
my neck and my back.
Yeah.
So this answer will be much less specific in polarizing than you might think, or
that the audience might think.
The first answer is I would fix your back and neck first, and then you can
train however you want to.
For sure. It doesn't matter.
And a lot of people are like, what?
Like, so the most ideal answer to you, Justin,
is, well, let me just fix your back and neck,
and then you won't have to protect yourself.
You won't have to be concerned.
You won't have to walk on eggshells.
Train however you want.
We get all of our clients back to heavy squats,
heavy deadlifts, and they're like,
my doctor said I should never deadlift again. It's like, well, your doctor
doesn't even lift. So in your school, 14 pounds overweight. Yeah, yeah, he doesn't lift and you're
still in pain. So obviously he doesn't know how to help you. So stop basing someone who has
some proven results. Anyway, now let's say we use the context where, okay, well, uh, Graham,
I haven't gone through your program or I have pain right now.
Like it was, should I modify things?
Okay.
That's a different discussion.
So if you have the type of flexion, tolerant back pain that we discussed
earlier, which I imagine you do based on your onset being on the airplane.
Uh, and we have cervical herniations, which I know the typical, um, manifestation
of that, then the things that you would want to avoid going heavy or over your load in the gym would be things that
will increase a lot of tension in your neck in a extended position and
Then things in your lower back in a flexed position. So let me give a few examples here is
Most people if they're doing really heavy
Let's say overhead press really over really heavy overhead press most people are gonna strain and
overhead press really over really heavy overhead press.
Most people are going to strain and push their neck into extension as they try to do that motion.
This could be not saying it is, could be a common triggering motion for you.
Low back.
If you're doing squats and you want a great range of motion, that's awesome.
If you're going super deep and your mechanics aren't totally ideal for that
though, and you're doing a butt wink or flexing at the bottom of it.
If you have a flexion-tolerant issue, if rounding or standing lung periods hurts your lower
back, then I would not squat to that depth.
You could still squat, but I would not put myself in a loaded flexed position.
Deadlifting, is there anything inherently wrong with deadlifting?
No.
But if you are going above your capacity and you have active pain with
flexion, I would not perform a way that I wouldn't be able to confidently do
like over eight reps where I could keep my spine neutral and avoid a flexed
position.
Um, lastly, this is important.
A ton of core exercises involve flexing, going forward and rotation can also be
aggravating for lumbar disc issues.
So if these agitate your pain, I want to be so clear.
I say that over and over because I'm not painting with broad strokes here.
There are some people who say, well, I feel fine doing these.
Then that's great.
They keep doing them.
I'm not, I'm not demonizing movement, but if they agitate, if flexion hurts you,
then I would not be doing a bunch of sit-ups, crunches, Russian twists, toes
to bar, I would not be doing those if that individual circumstance was
exacerbated with flexion of active disc pain.
What is, so cause we're all guys and we're all one or six pack, what are some
alternative to the type of ab workouts that they could be doing?
Yeah.
So there's so many different ways to have neutral based core workouts.
So a farmer's walk, suitcase carry, all the different plank variations, of course.
Uh, dead bug variations.
I love dead bugs for multiple reasons.
What is a dead bug?
Yeah.
Dead bug.
I'll briefly describe it.
Imagine you're on your back.
Low back is completely flat in the ground.
Arms pointed towards the ceiling.
Both your legs lifted.
So it looks like you're on all fours, but on your back.
Okay.
And then you're going to be alternating your arm and your leg back repetitively.
Um, so basically extend extending a leg this way and this way. And then extended.
Got it.
Exactly.
You can make that more advanced by adding weight to it.
Weight on the arms, weight on the legs.
You can, you can advance this, but that movement is so good because by moving
the arm and the leg, but keeping your low back flat to the ground, it trains
your body how to properly stabilize your spine.
It improves your diaphragm usage.
It improves, uh, intra abdominal pressure, which is so important for being able to
squat and deadlift heavy without pain.
It does a lot of awesome stuff for breathing mechanics and core really, really
good stuff from a rehab perspective, but you can advance those to still feel like
you're getting a strong core workout.
Um, these are all the different things that you can do if you're trying
to avoid flex positions, but once again, once again,
these are not modifications
that you should have to make forever.
If you have active pain and you wanna modify
to be able to train your core,
these are temporary modifications,
not lifelong restrictions we're instilling on your life.
Because if you do things the right way,
you can get back to doing any type of core workout
you want to without a problem.
That's the real big key.
I think it's understanding the expectations
of what you're doing and modifying.
I mean, I think modifying, I'm at a place right now
where I essentially can work out pretty normal.
I'm not really in much pain the last week or so.
I've started to feel it come back.
I now know that one exercise I'm gonna start doing.
But yeah, when I was in pain, I mean, everything was modified and I
think more people need to understand that they don't, you and I were talking
offline about this a little bit.
This doesn't mean you're done working out or exercising.
It literally means you need to have the right coach, the right mentor, the
right program like grant can do again, rehab fixes his Instagram, like you need
that just like is a business owner needs a coach
to grow their business,
this is your business of your body, right?
And if you don't have someone coaching you
through the right program, the right process
of like rebuilding it when it broke down a little bit,
then you're gonna be in a tough spot,
but definitely don't stop.
No, do not stop.
And I said this earlier and I'll say it again
in a much more succinct way is imagine you're
in the middle of a circle and imagine your circle is a mile wide right now.
Those are all the different things you can do.
If you start reducing the circle of movement around you and you say, okay, now I can't
do this, I can't do this, I can't do this, your circle gets smaller and smaller and smaller
and smaller and smaller.
And then you're left with so little to do.
And then that's what then you would then form your life around.
And now you're stuck.
Now you have fear-based movements.
Now you're in chronic pain.
And now you feel like you can't do anything.
That's a trap.
You do not want to restrict your movement.
No, I think that's a mindset thing.
And you and I agree wholeheartedly.
Like, if you can control your mindset around these things in all aspects of life, right?
Business, your body, your health, your fitness,
your marriage, your parenting, you're gonna win,
but that takes going to someone who knows more than you
in that specific sector.
I would go to Grant, you guys should be going to Grant
because he is the expert at that.
He also has three children
and still runs a very successful business.
You have like the largest coaching program in this space
in the nation.
I mean, you're not some newbie to this thing.
No, yeah, we were, I think the first to do it.
So this really started in 2018, 2019,
where everybody for any type of rehabilitation,
it's brick and mortar, brick and mortar, brick and mortar.
I was doing this pre-COVID.
So came up with the concept of,
hey, I'm growing an online following
and how can I help people who aren't in my local area?
Started creating rehab programs for people over text,
initially, then it was, you know, PDF documents,
and then it evolved to where it is now.
But yeah, we've been helping people online
around the world for many years,
and we have over 3 million followers across our platforms
We have the highest highest engagement highest hits in regards to any online low back program
We yeah, we're the with a number one online low back program
Well, let's keep you going dude, cuz you're easy to talk to you understand what you're doing. You're obviously an expert
You're physically fit something that drives me. Absolutely nuts is when people give advice, doctors or anyone else, and they're like physically out of shape.
I, it's even hard for me in the business space.
If, if there's a coach or a mentor that wants me to be like one of their clients,
cause they've sold off and they've made hundreds of millions at all, whatever.
And I look at them like, yeah, but you're probably a hundred pounds overweight.
Like you can't control what you put in your mouth.
How are you controlling?
You know what I mean?
So like the fact that you're really extremely physically fit, I would tell anyone if probably a hundred pounds overweight. Like you can't control what you put in your mouth. How are you controlling? You know what I mean?
So like the fact that you're really
extremely physically fit,
I would tell anyone if your doctor is not,
you gotta change doctors.
Cause that is like their business.
Yep, yep.
It's the same concept as I would never go to a dentist
if my eye hurt.
It's the wrong alignment.
So if you're someone who has pain
and your goal is to become active again
and to be able to get into the gym,
but your doctor has no concept about being active
or the gym or how that looks to get back into the gym,
it's the wrong provider.
You need a provider who understands how to get in the gym
because they're in the gym
and they actually live the life that you're wanting to achieve.
In any area, you need a coach that's achieved what it is that you want to be able to.
That's what makes sense.
Amen. Well, dude, I appreciate you coming on. Rehabfix is his Instagram. Dr. Grant Elliott is his name.
Thank you very much for helping us entrepreneurs, these hard drivers, fix some of this pain and we'll keep you in touch.
Thanks, brother.
Yeah, man. If this was pretty good and you know probably one or two or three people that
need this information, share this episode with them. They're going to appreciate you.
We'll see you on the next episode. Peace.