Your Low Back Isn’t the Problem: 3 Things Your Body Is Trying to Tell You

Heather Otterbine

May 18, 2026

Low back pain has become one of the most normalized problems in modern life.

People expect stiffness when they wake up.
They expect aching after sitting.
They expect their back to “go out.”
They expect movement to hurt eventually.

And because it’s so common, most people immediately try to treat the low back itself.

They stretch it.
Twist it.
Brace it.
Massage it.
Crack it.
Baby it.

But here’s the thing I wish more people understood:

Your low back is often the messenger, not the root problem.

From a functional movement perspective, the low back is frequently compensating for something else:

  • poor balance and adaptability
  • limited hip movement
  • weak timing and coordination through the core
  • stiffness higher or lower in the chain
  • lack of movement variability
  • instability that the body is trying desperately to control

Your body is smart.
It will always find a way to keep you moving.

Even if that means your low back does extra work it was never designed to do.

That’s exactly why I created this recent 3-part YouTube series:

Because if we only focus on the site of pain, we miss the bigger story.


Stop “Bracing” Everything

One of the biggest misconceptions in fitness and rehab culture is that the core should always be rigid and tight.

People are constantly told:
“Brace your core.”
“Tighten your abs.”
“Pull your belly button in.”

Now listen…
There are moments where bracing is useful.

But your body was not designed to live there all day.

Real human movement requires:

  • timing
  • responsiveness
  • pressure management
  • adaptability
  • coordination

Your core is not just your abs.

It’s an entire pressure and stabilization system involving:

  • the diaphragm
  • pelvic floor
  • deep abdominal muscles
  • spinal stabilizers
  • breath mechanics
  • hips
  • rib cage

The goal is not permanent tension.

The goal is the ability to respond appropriately to movement demands.

When people over-brace constantly, they often:

  • stop breathing well
  • create unnecessary rigidity
  • reduce movement adaptability
  • increase tension through the spine
  • lose natural rotational mechanics
  • create fatigue and compression patterns

Ironically, many people trying to “protect” their backs are actually making their backs work harder.

Your body needs stability, yes.
But it also needs movement.

Functional movement lives in the relationship between the two.


Your Low Back Was Never Designed to Be Your Main Rotator

Another huge issue I see constantly:
People twisting aggressively through their lumbar spine.

The low back has some rotational ability…
but not very much.

The thoracic spine (mid-back) and hips are designed to contribute far more to rotational movement.

But when those areas become stiff or underused, the body steals motion from wherever it can get it.

Usually?
The low back pays the price.

This shows up everywhere:

  • golf
  • pickleball
  • tennis
  • yoga
  • getting out of the car
  • reaching awkwardly
  • gardening
  • everyday turning movements

People often think:
“My back hurts when I twist.”

But the real question is:
Why is your low back doing so much of the twisting in the first place?

When the hips don’t rotate well…
when the thoracic spine gets stiff…
when balance and coordination decline…
the lumbar spine becomes the overachiever.

And overachievers eventually get irritated.

This is why functional movement matters so much.

We’re not just stretching muscles randomly.
We’re improving how the body shares load and movement across the entire system.


Balance Is About Far More Than Falling

When most people hear the word “balance,” they think:
“Don’t fall.”

But balance is actually one of the most foundational components of healthy movement.

Balance is your body’s ability to:

  • organize itself in space
  • react to change
  • coordinate muscles efficiently
  • shift weight appropriately
  • stabilize dynamically
  • recover from perturbation

And guess what happens when balance declines?

The body starts gripping.

It stiffens.
Co-contracts.
Moves cautiously.
Reduces variability.

This often creates the exact stiffness patterns people associate with aging.

But many times, it’s not simply “getting older.”
It’s loss of adaptability.

Your nervous system wants safety.

If balance, coordination, or proprioception decline, the body often creates extra tension to compensate.

That compensation frequently lands in the low back.

This is one reason I care so deeply about functional movement training.

Not just isolated exercises.
Not just aesthetics.
Not just “working out.”

But teaching the body how to:

  • adapt
  • coordinate
  • react
  • stabilize dynamically
  • move confidently through life

That’s real-world movement.


The Goal Isn’t Perfection. It’s Capacity.

One of the biggest shifts I want people to make is moving away from fear-based movement thinking.

Your body is not fragile.

It’s adaptable.
Trainable.
Responsive.

The answer is not avoiding movement.

The answer is improving your movement capacity.

That means:

  • improving balance
  • improving coordination
  • improving rotational control
  • improving strength
  • improving timing
  • improving adaptability
  • improving confidence

Not becoming rigid.
Not locking everything down.
Not moving like a robot.

Healthy movement is responsive movement.

And honestly?
This is one of the biggest missing conversations in modern fitness and wellness spaces.

We’ve become obsessed with isolated muscles while ignoring integrated human movement.

But life is integrated.

Your body is always communicating across systems.

The low back is rarely acting alone.


Final Thoughts

If your low back is always tight…
always stiff…
always talking to you…

there’s a good chance your body is asking for something bigger than another stretch.

Maybe it needs:

  • better balance
  • better rotational mechanics
  • better breathing
  • better pressure management
  • better movement variability
  • better coordination
  • better strength
  • better adaptability

That’s the lens I teach through.

Not punishment.
Not fear.
Not “perfect posture.”
Not rigid movement rules.

But helping people become more capable, resilient, and adaptable humans.

Because healthy aging is not about becoming smaller and more cautious.

It’s about maintaining the ability to fully participate in your life.

And that starts with how you move.

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