One of the most common things people say when their lower back hurts is:
“I think I’ve just pulled a muscle.”
And sometimes, they are right.
But far more often, that muscle pain is protecting something deeper.
Muscles Protect Your Spine 🛡️
Your muscles play a huge role in keeping your spine safe.
When something is not moving properly in the spine, such as a spinal misalignment or restricted joint, the body often responds by tightening the surrounding muscles.
This does two things:
- It limits movement to protect the area
- It acts like a brace to stop further irritation
Think of it like a seatbelt locking up during sudden braking. The belt is not the problem. It is responding to a problem.
In the spine, muscle tightness and pain are often the body’s way of saying, “Something here isn’t right.”
Muscles Are Excellent at Healing 💪
Muscle tissue is one of the best tissues in the body at recovering.
A simple muscle strain will usually:
- Improve noticeably within a few days
- Be significantly better within one to two weeks
So if your lower back pain:
- Has been there longer than a week or two
- Is not improving
- Keeps coming back
Then we have to ask an important question.
What is stopping this muscle from recovering?
Yes, the Pain Can Come From the Muscle ❗
Absolutely, the pain you feel can be coming from the muscle itself.
But the key question is not where the pain is coming from.
The key question is why that muscle is painful in the first place.
If a muscle is constantly being asked to protect a stiff or misaligned spinal joint, it stays switched on. Over time, it becomes:
- Tight
- Fatigued
- Painful
It is not failing. It is doing its job too well.
A Helpful Analogy 🔧
Imagine a door that is slightly off its hinges.
Instead of fixing the hinge, you keep forcing the door shut. Eventually, the handle, frame, or lock starts to suffer.
Treating the muscle without addressing the spinal issue is often the same thing. The real problem stays, and the symptoms keep returning.
Temporary Relief vs Real Change 🤔
Have you ever:
- Had massage on a sore lower back muscle
- Felt great for a few days
- Then felt the pain slowly creep back in
That is a common experience.
Massage can relax muscles and improve blood flow, which feels great. But if the muscle is tight because it is compensating for a spinal problem, the relief is usually short-lived.
It’s About Finding the Root Cause 🌱
Lower back pain is rarely “just a muscle”.
More often, the muscle is reacting to:
- Poor spinal movement
- Imbalance in the lower back
- Long-term stress on specific joints
Chiropractic care focuses on finding and correcting the root cause, not just calming the symptom.
When the spine moves better, the muscles no longer need to protect it, and that is when real, lasting relief can occur.
If your lower back pain keeps returning, it may be time to stop asking which muscle hurts and start asking why it hurts at all 👌

