The Real Reason You Keep Re-Injuring That Same Spot

The Real Reason You Keep Re-Injuring That Same Spot

By the All for One Physiotherapy team

Ankle. Shoulder. Lower back. Hamstring.
If you’ve found yourself injured in the same place more than once—or several times—it’s not bad luck. And it’s not just that you “didn’t rest enough.”

Injuries that keep coming back usually have something deeper going on. And the key to breaking that cycle? Understanding the why.


First, It’s Probably Not Just the Injury Site

Here’s a secret physios know well: the place that hurts isn’t always the root of the problem.

Let’s say your knee flares up every time you try running again. The real issue could be:

  • Weakness or control issues in your hips

  • Lack of ankle mobility

  • Poor load tolerance from a rushed return to activity

  • Or maybe… your knee’s actually fine—but it’s doing too much to compensate for something else that’s not pulling its weight.

Our bodies are brilliant at finding workarounds—but those workarounds can turn into overload patterns over time. That’s why we don’t just treat symptoms. We assess how you move, what’s moving (and what’s not), and where the load is going.


Rest Isn’t Always the Answer

We’ve said it before, and we’ll keep saying it: rest doesn’t equal rehab.

Sure, rest may help your pain settle. But if you don’t retrain the way you move, load and stabilise that area, it’s likely to flare up again the moment you start asking it to do more.

That’s why our goal in physio is never just to get you pain-free. It’s to build confidence, capacity and resilience in the tissues, joints and systems involved—so they can do their job when life gets demanding.


What Keeps Injuries Coming Back?

Some of the most common patterns we see are:

  • Underloading in rehab – stopping exercises too soon, or not progressing to higher loads before returning to sport or activity

  • Over-reliance on passive treatments – things like massage, taping or dry needling can help, but they don’t replace strength, stability or control

  • Lack of variability in training – doing the same movement patterns over and over creates blind spots in your body’s resilience

  • Neglecting whole-body function – treating the sore spot without looking at the rest of the chain (core, pelvis, foot, breathing, nervous system)


How We Break the Cycle at All for One

Whether you’re working with a physio, taking Clinical Pilates, or integrating strength work in a class, here’s what we focus on:

  • Finding the root cause, not just the sore spot

  • Building load gradually—then progressing it appropriately

  • Supporting movement confidence, so you stop avoiding activity out of fear

  • Collaborating with you—your goals, your sport, your life

Injuries happen. But they don’t have to keep happening.


A Final Thought

You don’t have to live with flare-ups, rest cycles, or wondering when the pain will return. With the right guidance, you can move beyond symptom management—and into strength, trust, and freedom in your body.

All for One. One place, for movement that moves you forward—for good.