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Why your lower back keeps hurting - and how massage therapy can help

6/10/2026

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You made it through the workweek.

Maybe you sat through back-to-back meetings, pushed through a long run, or spent the weekend tackling yard work. And now your lower back is letting you know about it.

If this sounds familiar, you are not alone.

Lower back pain is one of the most common reasons people seek massage therapy—and one of the areas where we see the most meaningful, lasting results. The key is understanding what is actually driving the pain, so we can address it at the source rather than just managing the symptoms.

What Is Actually Going On in Your Lower Back?
Lower back pain rarely has a single cause. Most of the time, it is a combination of factors that have been building quietly over weeks or months—tight muscles, restricted fascia (the connective tissue that surrounds and connects your muscles, joints, and organs), compressed joints, and movement patterns your body has developed to protect itself.

For desk workers, prolonged sitting shortens the hip flexors and weakens the glutes, which puts the lower back muscles in a constant state of overwork. For athletes and active clients, repetitive training patterns and inadequate recovery time can create chronic tightness across the low back, hips, and hamstrings that builds up faster than the body can release it on its own.

In both cases, the result is the same: pain, stiffness, and a range of motion that keeps getting smaller. And the longer it goes unaddressed, the more the body compensates—which usually means more tension in more places.

How Massage Therapy Addresses Lower Back Pain
Massage therapy works on lower back pain through several mechanisms, and we often combine more than one approach in a single session depending on what your body needs.

Deep Tissue Massage
Deep Tissue Massage uses slower, more targeted pressure to reach the deeper layers of muscle and connective tissue. It is not about how hard someone pushes—it is about precision and pace. At Mobile Performance Therapy, we do not believe in the “no pain, no gain” approach. A client who is bracing against discomfort cannot fully release, which defeats the purpose. Our goal is to work deeply and effectively while keeping you relaxed throughout.

For lower back pain, Deep Tissue Massage targets the erector spinae muscles that run along the spine, the quadratus lumborum (the deep lower back muscle that is often the primary source of ache), and the surrounding hip and glute muscles that contribute to how the lower back feels. When these areas release, the back often responds quickly.

Myofascial Release
Myofascial release is hands-on work focused on connective tissue restrictions—the tightening of the fascial network that can limit movement and contribute to pain throughout the back, hips, and legs. Fascia responds to sustained, gentle pressure rather than force, so this technique involves slow, deliberate work that encourages the tissue to soften and let go.
Lower back pain often has a significant fascial component that other treatments miss entirely. Stretching helps, anti-inflammatories help, but neither directly addresses the fascial restrictions that may be pulling on the spine and limiting how freely you move.

Cupping Therapy
Cupping Therapy uses negative pressure, suction created by cups placed on the skin, to lift and decompress the tissue rather than compress it. This is especially useful for areas that are deeply congested or where multiple layers of tension have built up over time.
In the lower back, cupping increases blood flow to areas that may be chronically tight and under-circulated, helping to clear out the metabolic waste that accumulates in overworked muscle. Many clients notice significant relief in the lower back from cupping alone, and it pairs particularly well with Deep Tissue Massage when both are used in the same session.

Fascial Stretch Therapy
Fascial Stretch Therapy (FST) is a table-based form of assisted stretching that focuses on the joints, muscles, and surrounding connective tissue. Unlike stretching on your own, FST uses traction and guided movement to open up the joints and release the fascial network in a way that self-stretching simply cannot replicate.
For lower back pain, FST is particularly effective at releasing the hip flexors, piriformis, and hamstrings—all areas that, when tight, put direct strain on the lower back. Many clients step off the therapy table feeling looser and moving more freely than they have in months.

What to Expect During Your Session

Before we do anything, we talk. Every session at Mobile Performance Therapy starts with a conversation about what brings you in, what your lower back pain feels like, when it started, and what your goals are. This is not a formality—it shapes everything we do during the session.
Your therapist will assess which areas are contributing to your pain (it is often not just the lower back—hips, glutes, and even the thoracic spine play a significant role), and then build a treatment plan specific to your body. That might mean Deep Tissue Massage on the lower back and hips, Cupping Therapy on congested areas, and some assisted stretching at the end to restore range of motion.
For new clients dealing with significant lower back pain, we recommend starting with our 90-minute Introductory Session. This gives your therapist time to do a thorough assessment and address the area properly, rather than spending 60 minutes just scratching the surface.

One Session Helps. Consistency Is What Changes Things.
Most clients notice meaningful relief after their first session. Tension decreases, range of motion improves, and the lower back feels less guarded. But for chronic lower back pain—the kind that has been building for months or years—one session addresses the acute discomfort without fully resolving the underlying patterns.
That is why we talk about the wellness scale: the idea that the goal is not just to get out of pain, but to move through pain toward healing, and eventually toward prevention. Consistent sessions allow your therapist to build on each appointment, address root causes rather than just symptoms, and help your body develop new movement patterns that do not re-create the same tension.
We offer multi-session packages to help make consistent care more accessible, and we accept HSA/FSA cards. Taking care of your back is not a luxury—it is a responsible investment in your ability to work, move, and show up for the people and activities that matter to you.

What Clients Tell Us After Lower Back Treatment
The relief clients notice most often includes:
  • Less stiffness getting out of bed in the morning
  • Greater ease sitting through a full workday without that familiar ache setting in
  • Better range of motion during workouts or daily activities
  • Fewer days reaching for ibuprofen to get through the afternoon
  • Being able to keep up with kids, training, or weekend activities without paying for it afterward


Ready to Start Feeling Better?

If lower back pain has been limiting how you move, work, or recover, we would love to help. Every session is goal-oriented and customized for each client—and we take the time to actually assess what is going on before we start treatment.
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Give us a call at 443-203-8810 or book your session online. If you have questions about which service is the right fit for your lower back, we are always happy to talk it through with you first.
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Rehabilitation massage explained: how therapeutic bodywork accelerates recovery from repetitive strain injuries in office workers

5/4/2026

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By Wednesday afternoon, your shoulders are creeping toward your ears again. Your wrists feel stiff after a few hours of typing. There's that familiar ache at the base of your neck — the one you've started to think of as just "normal." You've tried stretching at your desk. You've adjusted your monitor height. But the tension keeps coming back.
If this sounds familiar, you're not alone. Repetitive strain injuries (RSIs) are one of the most common workplace health challenges facing office workers today — and one of the most misunderstood. The good news? Therapeutic massage, specifically rehabilitation-focused bodywork, is one of the most effective tools for breaking the cycle and helping your body actually recover.

What Is a Repetitive Strain Injury — and Why Does It Keep Coming Back?A repetitive strain injury develops when the same muscles, tendons, and connective tissues are used over and over without adequate recovery time. For office workers, the usual suspects are hours of keyboarding and mouse work, holding your neck in a fixed position while looking at a screen, and sitting in ways that load certain muscle groups far more than others.
Over time, this repetitive loading creates a cascade of issues: muscles tighten and shorten, fascia (the connective tissue that surrounds and connects muscles, joints, and nerves) becomes restricted, and circulation to those areas decreases. The result is the familiar cluster of RSI symptoms — wrist and forearm tension, carpal tunnel-like discomfort, neck stiffness, shoulder tightness, and tension headaches that seem to materialize every Thursday afternoon.
Here's why RSIs can be so frustrating to manage on your own: stretching and rest help temporarily, but they don't address the underlying tissue restrictions that have built up over months or years of repetitive loading. Your body adapts to protect those irritated areas — and that guarding creates its own set of problems. This is where rehabilitation-focused massage makes a real difference.

How Therapeutic Massage Targets RSI RecoveryRehabilitation massage goes beyond general relaxation to address the specific tissue changes that occur with repetitive strain. At Mobile Performance Therapy, every session begins with an assessment so we understand your specific pattern — where you hold tension, which movements feel restricted, and what your daily workload actually looks like. Your session is then customized to meet those needs directly, not just applied generically to wherever you point.
Here's what that looks like in practice:
Deep Tissue Massage works with the deeper layers of muscle and fascia to release chronic tension patterns — slowly and deliberately, not with excessive pressure. (This is not the "no pain, no gain" approach — we can achieve meaningful results without making you dread the table.) For RSI-related issues, this is especially useful for releasing the forearm flexors and extensors that are overworked during keyboard-heavy days, as well as the muscles of the upper back, neck, and chest that compensate for poor posture.
Myofascial Release targets restrictions in the fascia — that connective tissue network we mentioned earlier. When fascia tightens around nerves and tendons, it can contribute to the numbness, tingling, and reduced grip strength that many people associate with carpal tunnel syndrome. By working directly on these fascial restrictions, we help restore normal tissue mobility and reduce compression on nerves and blood vessels.
Fascial Stretch Therapy (FST) — table-based assisted stretching — is a powerful complement to hands-on massage work for RSI recovery. FST addresses restrictions through the entire joint and fascial system rather than isolating one muscle at a time, which is especially helpful when RSI symptoms span multiple areas (which they usually do — tight forearms often connect to shoulder and neck tension).
Cupping Therapy uses gentle suction — rather than compression — to lift and separate tissue layers, increase local circulation, and accelerate the body's natural recovery process. Many clients with chronic forearm or shoulder tension notice significant relief from targeted cupping work, often in areas where compression-based techniques haven't reached the deeper layers.

What Recovery Actually Looks LikeOne of the most important things we want our clients to understand is that RSI recovery is a process, not an event. A single massage session can bring meaningful, immediate relief — but the cumulative effect of consistent therapeutic work is where real change happens.
In early sessions, we're primarily focused on reducing acute tension, restoring circulation, and identifying the key patterns driving your symptoms. As we progress, the work shifts toward rebuilding better tissue quality, improving range of motion, and addressing the postural patterns that contributed to the injury in the first place. Over time, clients often find that their symptoms become less severe, their recovery between sessions gets faster, and they need less and less reactive care to stay ahead of pain.
We also provide guidance between sessions — specific stretches, postural awareness cues, and simple self-care practices that reinforce the work we do together. Bodywork and daily habits work best as a team.

You Don't Have to Keep White-Knuckling Through the WeekRepetitive strain injuries are real injuries — they deserve real care. If you've been managing your symptoms with ibuprofen, foam rolling, or simply pushing through, we want you to know there's a better path forward. Therapeutic bodywork is healthcare, not a luxury, and it works best when it's part of a consistent wellness plan rather than a last resort.
We accept HSA/FSA cards, offer evening appointments, and provide mobile in-home services throughout Anne Arundel and Queen Anne's counties for clients who prefer the convenience of care at home.
Ready to stop white-knuckling through Wednesday afternoons? Book online or call us at 443-203-8810. We're happy to answer any questions and help you figure out the best starting point.
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April 26th, 2026

4/26/2026

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The Massage Finder Checklist:
7 Questions to Ask Before You Book

You've decided you're ready to try therapeutic massage. Maybe your neck has been tense for months, or a nagging injury is getting in the way of training, or you just know your body needs more support than you've been giving it. You open your browser, search "massage therapist near me," and suddenly you're staring at a long list of options — spas, franchises, independent therapists, wellness centers — with no clear way to tell them apart.
Here's the thing: not all massage is the same. And booking with the wrong provider doesn't just waste your money — it can mean another session that fades by the next morning, leaving you right back where you started.
These seven questions will help you cut through the noise and find a practice that's actually equipped to help you.

1. Are the therapists licensed?
This is the non-negotiable starting point. In Maryland, massage therapists are required to hold a license through the Maryland Board of Massage Therapy Examiners. A licensed therapist has completed a minimum number of training hours, passed a national board exam, and maintains continuing education requirements to keep their license current.
Before booking anywhere, confirm that the therapist you'll be seeing is a licensed massage therapist (LMT) or a registered massage practitioner (RMP). A legitimate practice will have this information readily available - on their website, in their bios, or happy to confirm when you call. If it's hard to find or they're vague about it, that's a meaningful signal.

2. Do they do an intake or assessment before your first session?
A one-size-fits-all approach might work fine for a haircut. It doesn't work for your body.
A reputable therapeutic practice will ask about your health history, current concerns, goals, and any areas to avoid before your session begins. This intake process isn't just paperwork, it's how a skilled therapist builds an approach that's actually right for you. Without it, you're essentially getting a generic routine applied to a body they know nothing about.
Ask: "Will my therapist review my health history before we start?"
The answer should be yes.

3. Is the session customized to your goals or is it a set menu?
Related to the intake question, but worth asking separately: does the practice offer sessions tailored to what you actually need, or do they book you into a preset 60-minute Swedish Massage and call it done?
Therapeutic massage should address your specific goals, whether that's reducing chronic neck tension, supporting athletic recovery, managing a condition like sciatica, or building toward long-term prevention. Ask if the therapist will adapt the session based on your intake, your feedback during the session, and how your body responds.
A practice that takes the time to customize your session is one that takes your results seriously.

4. What modalities do they offer?
Massage therapy is not one technique. A well-rounded therapeutic practice offers a range of modalities and knows when to apply which one. Some common ones to look for:
  • Deep Tissue Massage: focused, sustained pressure for chronic tension and muscle adhesions
  • Swedish Massage: broader strokes for circulation, relaxation, and general wellness
  • Myofascial Release: work on the connective tissue (fascia) that surrounds and connects your muscles and joints
  • Cupping Therapy: a technique using suction to release tight tissue and improve circulation
  • Fascial Stretch Therapy: table-based assisted stretching that improves mobility and range of motion
  • Prenatal Massage: specialized work for pregnancy-related discomfort, with appropriate positioning and precautions
If you have a specific concern — athletic recovery, chronic pain, pregnancy, a post-injury area — make sure the practice has therapists trained in the modalities relevant to your situation. Not every technique is right for every body, and a good therapist will tell you honestly what they recommend.

5. Can they clearly explain what they'll do and why?Before or during your session, a skilled therapist should be able to explain what they're doing in plain language — not because they owe you a lecture, but because understanding what's happening in your body helps you get more out of the work.
If a therapist can't explain why they're choosing a particular technique, or if they're vague about what a session will involve, that's worth noting. Transparency is a mark of competence and respect. You should feel informed, not guessing.

6. Do they have clear communication and professional boundaries?This one matters more than people sometimes realize. A professional therapeutic practice has clear policies around draping, communication, and client comfort. You should feel completely at ease asking questions, requesting a different pressure, or flagging something that doesn't feel right — and a professional therapist will welcome that feedback, not dismiss it.
Look for: an intake form that asks about preferences and boundaries, a therapist who checks in during the session, and a practice where you feel heard before you even get on the table. If any part of the booking or intake process feels unclear, pressured, or unprofessional, trust that instinct.

7. Do they accept HSA/FSA — and do they treat massage as healthcare?This might seem like a practical detail, but it actually tells you something important about how a practice thinks about what they do.
Therapeutic massage is healthcare. It supports musculoskeletal health, aids in recovery from injury, helps manage chronic pain conditions, and contributes to long-term wellbeing. Practices that accept HSA/FSA cards — flexible spending accounts specifically designated for qualified medical expenses — are typically the ones approaching massage with that mindset.
It also means you can use pre-tax dollars to invest in your health, which is a meaningful benefit if you have those accounts available. Ask before you book.

What This Checklist Is Really AboutEach of these questions points toward the same underlying thing: is this practice actually equipped to help you, and do they take your health seriously?
At Mobile Performance Therapy, the answer to every question on this list is yes. Our therapists are licensed, every session begins with a thorough assessment, and every treatment plan is built around your specific goals — not a preset menu. We offer a full range of modalities including Deep Tissue Massage, Fascial Stretch Therapy, Cupping Therapy, Prenatal Massage, Myofascial Release, and more. We explain what we're doing and why. We maintain a professional, communicative environment where your comfort is always the priority. And yes — we accept HSA/FSA cards, because we believe massage is maintenance, not a luxury.
We serve clients throughout Anne Arundel and Queen Anne's counties, with locations in Annapolis, Stevensville, and Centreville, plus mobile in-home services if getting to us is a barrier.
If you have questions before booking, we're happy to talk through them. Reach out online or give us a call at 443-203-8810. Online booking is always available whenever you're ready.
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What Our Clients Are Saying

As a marathon runner I have had increasing pain in my hips, hamstrings and low back.  I tried 6 weeks of physical therapy,  massage, and lots of ibuprofen. Stretch therapy was the answer! after only a few sessions, I had less pain and improved my performance.  Thanks to Stephanie I'm ready to run my next marathon."
-CF

Contact Us

Mobile Performance Therapy
​443-203-8810
[email protected]
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​​Centreville: 322 Pennsylvania Avenue, Centreville, 21617
Stevensville: 112 Log Canoe Circle, Stevensville, 21666
Annapolis: ​2152 Renard Court, Annapolis, 21401
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