20/04/2026
TAKE BACK CONTROL - What you can do to improve everyday life
1. Build a “pain-friendly” sleep routine
Keep a consistent sleep/wake time (even weekends) to stabilise your body clock.
Create a 30–60 min wind-down: dim lights, screens off, warm shower/bath, gentle stretch.
Keep the room cool/dark/quiet; consider a pillow between knees (side sleepers) or under knees (back sleepers).
If pain wakes you: change position, do 6 slow breaths, then return to “rest mode” (don’t start problem-solving at 2am).
2. Move little and often (instead of “all or nothing”)
Aim for frequent micro-movement: 2–5 minutes every hour beats one big session that flares you up.
Use a simple rule: stop at “I could do a bit more” rather than “I’m done.”
Choose low-threat options: short walks, gentle mobility, light strength basics (sit-to-stand, wall push-ups), or a few stretches you know feel safe.
3. Use breathwork to downshift your nervous system
Try physiological sigh: inhale through the nose, top-up inhale, long slow exhale (repeat 3–5 times).
Or extended exhale breathing: inhale 4 seconds, exhale 6–8 seconds for 2–5 minutes.
Do it before activity, during a flare, and as part of your bedtime routine—think “turning the volume down” on sensitivity.
4. Plan your day with pacing (so your future self doesn’t pay for it)
Identify your “high-load” activities (shopping, cleaning, long drives, desk days).
Break tasks into chunks and schedule recovery: e.g., 20 minutes task + 5 minutes reset (walk, stretch, breathe).
Use the 24-hour rule: if you do more today, plan less tomorrow. Consistency beats heroic bursts.
5. Create a flare-up plan (so you’re not improvising when it hits)
Write a short checklist: “When pain spikes, I will…”
reduce intensity (not stop everything),
prioritise sleep and hydration,
do 5 minutes gentle movement + 2 minutes breathing,
use heat/ice if it helps,
and book support early (rather than waiting until it’s unbearable).
Track 1–2 triggers and 1–2 helpers—keep it simple so it’s sustainable.