Your pain has a hidden source. Find it.

Most chronic pain is driven by hidden muscle tension patterns. Your physical therapist, chiropractor, and massage therapist may be treating where it hurts, not what's driving it. This 6-minute assessment, designed by Christine Annie, MPT, with 25 years of clinical experience, identifies which tension pattern may be behind your pain.

RESULTS SENT TO YOUR EMAIL
WHAT YOU'LL LEARN

Your body's tension pattern in 6 minutes

01

Which tension patterns are affecting your body

Upper body, lower body, or both. The assessment identifies where chronic tension is concentrated based on your symptoms and movement patterns.

02

Which keystone muscles are involved

Not guesswork. Based on your responses, the assessment maps to the specific deep muscles driving dysfunction through your whole system.

03

A personalized release protocol

Tools and techniques matched to your tension pattern, the same clinical approach Christine developed over 25 years of hands-on practice.

Neck Pain

Neck Pain

Tightness in the suboccipitals (neck) and upper traps from forward head posture strains the joints and discs of the neck, while a tight pec minor rounds the shoulders and affects neck alignment.

Shoulder Pain

Shoulder Pain

Tightness in the pec minor (chest) and upper traps pulls the shoulders into a rounded posture, narrowing the space for the rotator cuff and bicep tendon with every reach and lift.

Jaw Pain

Jaw Pain

Jaw pain is often the last link in a chain of tension that starts in the pelvis and works its way up through the spine, neck, and skull, which keeps the jaw clenched and overworked.

Headaches

Headaches

Tension in the upper traps and suboccipitals (neck) can develop trigger points that refer pain directly into the head, leading to tension-type headaches.

Hip Pain

Hip Pain

A tight iliacus pulls the pelvis forward and compresses the hip joint, creating pinching or irritation that can mimic arthritis, labral issues, or tendonitis.

Knee Pain

Knee Pain

What starts at the hips affects the knee. Tight hip flexors can internally rotate the leg, shift the kneecap out of its groove, and unevenly load the tendons and ligaments that stabilize the knee.

Foot Pain

Foot Pain

Tension around the hips affects leg mechanics down to the foot, where it contributes to overpronation. This can increase strain on the plantar fascia, load the heel unevenly, and shift pressure onto the big toe joint.

Lower Back Pain

Lower Back Pain

A tight iliacus pulls the pelvis forward while the psoas tugs the spine into a downward, rotational compression that loads the lower back joints, discs, and surrounding muscles.

SI Joint Pain

SI Joint Pain

Iliacus tension can tilt the pelvis forward into an anterior rotation, while an overworked piriformis reacts by pulling on the sacrum, increasing strain on the SI joint.

Sciatica

Sciatica

Tight hip flexors affect the alignment of the spine, which can contribute to nerve compression or disc issues that cause radiating nerve pain. In reaction to this tightness, the piriformis becomes tense and can further compress the sciatic nerve.

Shoulder Blade Pain

Shoulder Blade Pain

Tightness in the pec minor (chest) pulls the shoulders forward, while the muscles between the shoulder blades fight to pull them back, creating a constant tug-of-war that strains the upper back.

Upper Trap Pain

Upper Trap Pain

The upper traps tighten with stress and poor posture, and rounded shoulders with a forward head position only add to the load, keeping them locked in tension over time.

Glute Pain

Glute Pain

Tightness at the front of the hip creates reactive tension at the back of the hip, causing the glutes and piriformis to tighten and develop a dull, achy pain.

Thigh Pain

Thigh Pain

A tight iliacus can irritate a nerve along the front of the thigh, causing burning or tingling, while also creating tension in the quad muscle that leaves the thigh feeling heavy or overworked.

Outer Hip Pain

Outer Hip Pain

An anteriorly tilted pelvis creates compensatory tension in the piriformis and TFL muscles, which attach near the outer hip. Constant pulling irritates the bursa and the adjacent IT band, leading to outer hip pain.

You've tried everything. Except this.

Physical Therapy. Chiropractic. Massage. Stretching. Maybe injections. Each one provides some relief, but it doesn't last. And no one has been able to tell you why.

Here's what's likely been overlooked: chronic tension in keystone muscles, deep muscles that most conventional tools can't reach and most practitioners don't address.

When these muscles stay tight, they pull your entire body out of alignment and create a cascade of pain and dysfunction. That's what this assessment is designed to find.

CLICK ON A DOT TO START LEARNING ABOUT HOW TENSION AFFECTS THE BODY

TAKE THE ASSESSMENT

"I watched patients try everything and still suffer. Not because they weren't doing the work, but because one piece was being systematically overlooked."

— Christine Annie, MPT

Christine Annie spent over two decades as a practicing physical therapist identifying a pattern: patients weren't failing. The system was. Chronic tension in deep keystone muscles was driving their pain and no conventional tool could reach it.

She designed the tension pattern assessment and the tools behind it to change that. The assessment is the starting point: a clear clinical map of where your body holds tension and what needs to happen first.

Results sent to your email
WHAT PEOPLE DISCOVERED WITH THE QUIZ
"I'd been to three PTs and a chiropractor. The assessment identified my tension pattern in the first few questions. It was the first time anything had actually mapped to what I was feeling."
VERIFIED CUSTOMER
"I kept being told my pain was a glute strength issue. The assessment pointed straight to my hip flexors. Everything made sense after that."
VERIFIED CUSTOMER

Find your tension pattern.

Free • 6 minutes • Built by a Physical Therapist • Results and your personalized release protocol • Delivered to your email

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