Gary Evans Gary Evans

How to workout after a low back injury

We have all had low back pain from doing the things we love, whether playing the sport you loved growing up, playing with kids/ grandkids or something as simple as going on a walk. Back pain doesn’t have to be your reality anymore. I have helped dozens of people work with their back pain to get stronger than they ever knew possible AND they don’t feel back pain anymore unless they went too hard in their last gym session. BUT TWO things have to established first

  1. They are cleared by a doctor to resume exercise after they hurt their back

  2. You understand you are not the athlete you used to be and need to start slow and build up from where you are at! Trust me, starting to hot is the biggest thing I have seen set people back.


When looking at lower back injuries we commonly see two things, either a sensitivity towards flexion (bending of the spine) or extension (Hyperextending the back). Either way we must find ways to combat that. I like to start off by looking at how the typical American lives. We spend most of our days sitting at a desk doing work, driving to and from work or at home on the couch watching our favorite shows. That is a lot of sitting, which is fine IF you are doing something about it. Sitting tightens our hip flexors, weakens our glutes, lower and upper back leading to an overly weak backside and an overly tight front side. 

Let us break it down, on the front we have:

  • Tight hips/ hip flexors

  • Tight chest/ shoulders

  • Forward head posture

These things lead to more pressure on the spine itself. Tight hips lead to a rounding of the lower back, tight chest and shoulders lead to a rounding of the upper back and a forward head posture leads to more stress in the neck and upper back. These all play into our everyday aches and pains which limit us from doing the things we want to do.

Now on the backside we have:

  • Weak hamstrings

  • Weak Glutes

  • Weak spinal erectors (The muscles that give us good posture)

  • Weak upper back

  • Weak traps 

These weak muscles lead to even more pain or problems in our lives. Weak hamstrings don’t support the glute or the knee like they are supposed to, leading to more knee pain or more back pain. Glutes support the spine and keep it STRONG. So with weak glutes we experience worse back pain.

Weak spinal erectors affect your posture and with each degree of forward posture that’s another couple pounds of pressure on certain vertebrates in your spine. 

Weak upper back muscles again makes your posture worse adding pressure to your spine as well as not allowing your shoulder blades to be in their proper position leading to shoulder pain.

Lastly, weak traps also lead to shoulder blades and the shoulder girdle not being supported properly.

So with that quick summary of issues we can see what we have to do in order to start moving in the gym again. The goal here is to go from a glass back to a strong back. Going from the captain of your couch to the general of your gym starts here.

Cycle 1: Foundations

This cycle is about building up motor control in movement patterns such as squat, hinge and single leg. As well as building up strength in muscles such as hamstrings, glutes, low back, abs and upper back. Here I will give you a list of exercises, rep ranges and tempo in order to start building up your body once again.

Motor Control Exercise

Exercise 1: Goblet Squat Goblet Squat - OPEX Exercise Library

Week 1-4 You will be doing 3-4 sets of 10-15 reps with a tempo of 2121, the goal here is to stay tight through your hips and squat down without your back bending, go as deep as you can maintain the good posture, if that is only a couple inches that is okay, I do not expect perfect technique your first session or even after your 30th session, each session always has room for improvement. If you are able to hit a weight for 15 reps with good posture, and no back pain you are able to move up to the next weight

Exercise 2: Top Down Romanian Deadlift Top Down RDL

Week 1-4: You will also be doing 3-4 sets of 10-15 reps with a tempo of 2121, the goal here is to hinge at your hips, drive your butt back with a flat back and get the bar/dumbbell or kettlebell past your knee. If you cannot get past your knee without rounding your back, stop where you feel you lose tension and start to round.

Exercise 3: Split Squats

Week 1-4: You will be doing 3-4 sets of 10 reps per leg with a tempo of 2121, the goal here is to keep the front shin vertical, back leg under your glute and squeeze your glute the whole time while maintaining an upright position. If you do all sets with no knee pain and an upright position add weight with dumbbells.


These exercises I want you to do on 3 separate days, these will be the exercises we build your foundations on in order to start increasing to higher intensity exercises. These movements will help strengthen your hips, knees, hamstrings, glutes, low back and upper back. All the things we are weak in!


Isolation Exercises:


Exercise 1: Seated Hamstring Curl Machine

Week 1-4: 3-4 sets of 10-15 reps with a 31x1 tempo, the goal here is to get those hamstrings stronger and be able to help support the glutes and the stronger a muscle is typically the more flexible it can become, reducing low back pain

Exercise 2: Front Plank - OPEX Exercise Library

Week 1-4: 3-4 sets of 20-60 seconds, squeezing glutes and actively pressing through the floor, stronger core= less back pain and more support around the back injury

Exercise 3: Superman Superman Hold - OPEX Exercise Library

Week 1-4: 3-4 sets of 20-60 seconds, head down, chest up, squeezing glutes the whole time, this movement is designed to strengthen spinal erectors giving you better posture when you do the hinge pattern

I would recommend doing one Motor Control exercise with one isolation exercise paired with a couple upper body movements to create a full body workout for day 1, then pick another 2 for day 2 and then the last exercises left for day 3. START SLOW, you will not fix all your problems in one day and especially not if you go to hard to fast, remember your coming of and injury so treat it as such.

Stick to this for 1-3 months and I am sure you will start to feel better, remember progress isn’t always linear so after a few weeks you start to get some more back pain, reduce the reps, set or weight to something that is tolerable and doesn’t elicit back pain.

If you have any questions feel free to email me 

@garyevans@deathbygary.com

Disclaimer: As a personal trainer, I am not a medical professional. While I can offer guidance and support in fitness and exercise-related matters, my advice should not be considered as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. It's important to consult with a qualified healthcare provider before starting any new exercise program, especially if you have any pre-existing medical conditions or concerns. Always prioritize your health and safety when making decisions regarding your fitness and well-being.


Read More
Gary Evans Gary Evans

Eating “Healthy” 101

Lets start off with describing what “Healthy” means to me. It is a mixture between sustainable and productive towards your life and what you want to get out of your life. Let us say you are someone who doesn’t care about how they feel, look, move, think and sleep. Then healthy to you must be eating a bunch of junk and overly processed foods. Fine. Okay I can’t convince you there to start making a change. BUT, for the rest of you who do want to improve your life and make a change here we go.

Eating healthy needs to be sustainable. For 99.9% of people eating a fully non processed diet is unobtainable, and most of the people who do only do it for a short amount of time if they are trying to diet down for some athletic feat. WE are not those people and we are people who have lives we want to start living lives to the fullest. So we are going to start making better choices. Not perfect or horrible decisions just a little bit better everyday.

Now that we have reframed our mind that eating healthy is not a binary system of good or bad, and is more of a spectrum from worse to better we can start to make better choices. What are these choices you ask? Let me tell you. Maybe we start off with increasing water intake, the time it takes to eat meals, listening to our natural hunger cues. Whatever we decide to do we must establish a goal that is obtainable.

So here are some goals I would like for us all to work on this year:

  • Eating slower without distractions. We all seem to eat while doing something else, whether that is work or just sitting their on your phone doom scrolling. If we are present while we eat we get a break from our busy lives, it will relieve stress but most importantly allow us to tap into our hunger/ satiation singles and we can stop eating when we are satiated and not stuffed. Doing this will allow you to auto regulate your eating and naturally lose weight. Now for me eating without distractions is hard, so the goal I am setting for myself is to start off with one meal a day I will eat without distractions.

  • Drinking more water. Many of our problems come from not hydrating properly. Low energy, headaches and overeating are common symptoms of dehydration which is why we need to make sure we have this in check early on. The goal I want everyone to have is drinking half their bodyweight in ounces of water. I way 195 pounds so I went out and bought a 32 ounce water bottle and my goal is to drink 3-4 of these a day. I encourage you to do the same if you aren’t hitting your water goals already. The beauty of drinking more water is it going to improve your energy withing the first water bottle, the headache that seems to come everyday will start becoming less and less frequent. Maybe the most important part is that we won’t crave for as much food anymore because we are full of water.

  • Eating more protein. This is arguably the hardest one on the list. We want to eat our bodyweight in grams of protein. Foods high in protein aren’t always the most tastiest which makes it harder to eat enough of but the benefits will pay for this ten fold. Protein is satiating, meaning it makes you more full, making you stop eating the other foods that are making you keep on weight. Protein burns calories being digested, so from just eating more protein it will boost your metabolism, again making you lost weight. And most importantly protein is the building block of muscle, with increased muscle your metabolism also increases.

With these 3 goals we are going to become healthier in no time, again the goal is to pick obtainable and sustainable goals. So if eating slow every meal is hard, start with one meal, if drinking half your bodyweight in ounces of water, start with just one more glass a day or one glass at every meal, if eating your bodyweight in grams of protein is to much, start with half or making sure you are eating protein at every meal. There is no one size fits all, we are all in different stages of becoming healthier so I empower you to create your goals and roadmaps to improve your health. However if you need help you know who to ask!

Read More