01/08/2026
A word that came up from the anonymous exercise and pain survey is kinesiophobia.
I want to pause on that.
Not because fear of movement isn’t real, but because the label itself matters, especially within pain care.
In much of the medical literature, kinesiophobia is defined using words like “excessive” and “irrational.”
That framing is often accepted as fact.
And that’s where the problem begins.
For many people living with persistent pain, fear of movement is not "excessive" or "irrational" at all:
👉🏻 It’s learned.
👉🏻 It’s protective.
👉🏻 It’s based on the lived experience of flare-ups, injuries, dismissive provider encounters, and being told to push through when their body wasn’t safe to do so.
When a person’s fear is automatically labeled as "excessive" and "irrational," their experience is quietly invalidated.
đź”´ They remain unheard.
đź”´ And when someone feels unheard, they cannot build trust.
đź”´ They cannot feel safe during provider encounters.
đź”´ And meaningful lifestyle behavior change becomes much harder, if not impossible.
Language shapes the environment people are asked to change in.
If the environment implies “your fear is the problem,” rather than “your nervous system adapted for a reason,” we miss the opportunity to actually help.
This isn’t about rejecting science.
It is about updating it to include lived experience, context, and compassion.
💡 Because no one changes, physically or emotionally, inside a framework that assumes they’re "irrational" and "overreacting."
And that’s a conversation worth having.
Take the Anonymous Survey about Exercise and Living with Chronic Pain at
https://forms.gle/JYBKKRiQuganSAfp6
Cynthia Austin, NBC-HWC
Board Certified Health Coach
www.MyPainCoachLLC.com
Janet Huehls, MS, ACSM-CEP, NBC-HWC
Clinical Exercise Physiologist and Board Certified Health Coach
www.ExercisingWell.com