05/11/2026
Most people understand this instinctively as kids:
If the bottom blocks aren’t stable, the tower has to compensate somewhere higher up.
But for some reason, rehab often ignores this concept.
We chase the symptom:
• the knee
• the hip
• the back
without asking whether the foundation is actually accepting load well.
Your body is a stack of interconnected segments constantly transferring force into the ground and back up the chain.
So if the foot can’t absorb and transfer force efficiently, something higher up has to change:
→ the knee rotates differently
→ the hip stiffens
→ the pelvis shifts
The body will always find a strategy to keep the tower standing.
The question is whether it’s an efficient one.
Sometimes improving movement isn’t about “fixing” the painful area.
Sometimes it’s about improving the quality of the blocks underneath it.
If you’ve been dealing with recurring tightness, pain, or movement limitations that never fully resolve, there’s a good chance the issue isn’t only where you feel it.