Understanding Pain in Your Hip Recovery
A framework for interpreting what your body is telling you.
Read this before tracking anything. The way most people think about pain during rehab actively works against them. Before you use any tool in this program — including the Flare-Up Framework — this will change how you interpret what your body is telling you.
Tendons adapt through load. That's the entire mechanism. Which means if you're never feeling any discomfort during your program sessions, there's a real chance you're not loading enough to drive the adaptation you're after.
Pain up to 5/10 during activity is acceptable and does not indicate harm. Zero pain is not the goal — it's not even the benchmark most researchers use.
The benchmark is whether pain is manageable during the session and how the tissue responds afterward.
Mild discomfort up to 5/10 during a session. This is not a stop sign — it's the load signal your tendon needs to adapt.
Sharp, new, or alarming pain. Pain that spikes above 5/10 during a workout. This is your signal to stop — not push through.
Same-day soreness, fatigue, or mild pain elevation during or right after a workout is expected and does not indicate damage. Tendons have a delayed response to load — what you feel in the moment is not a reliable indicator of tissue tolerance.
This is the standard clinical benchmark used across tendinopathy research — established by researchers including Cook, Docking, Rio, and Silbernagel — and it's the one this program uses.
Next-morning pain is at or below your baseline level of pain you experience on most mornings. The session was appropriate.
Next-morning pain is elevated above baseline. That's your data point — use the Flare-Up Framework to adjust.
Day-to-day pain fluctuations are not meaningful data in tendinopathy rehab. Pain on any given morning is influenced by sleep, stress, how much you walked the day before, where you are in your menstrual cycle, hydration — the list is long. Chasing daily numbers is a recipe for anxiety and premature program abandonment.
This mirrors exactly how tendinopathy research is designed — most studies measure outcomes at 12 weeks because that's the meaningful window for tendon adaptation. Weekly averages smooth out the noise. Month-over-month comparison shows you whether the program is working.
Even in a well-managed program, flares happen. A long day on your feet, a vacation, a stressful week — load spikes from life are normal and expected. A flare is not a setback. It's data showing you where your current load ceiling is.
If pain is new, feels different from your typical symptoms, is bilateral, or is not improving after completing your rest protocol — do not use the flare flowchart. See a local physical therapist.