From Personal Trainer to Patient: Client’s Story Getting Back Into The Gym Pain Free
He’s a certified personal trainer who suddenly found himself on the other side of coaching—dealing with nagging shoulder pain that wouldn’t go away. He tried everything he knew: isometrics, cable work, fat grips, and changing his lifts. Some things helped for a bit, but the pain always crept back.
His low point came during a 285-pound, two‑rep max deadlift. He couldn’t keep his shoulder blades retracted and felt the shoulder drift forward. At that moment, he knew something was really wrong.
That’s when he found the Comeback program. He started by using a few videos as a warm‑up and felt enough relief to commit. Within the first 15 minutes of a guided session, he felt a clear shift—his mid‑back and traps opened up, his shoulder blades moved better, and pressing finally felt even again. For the first time in months, he could overhead press without flaring or neck tension. This client’s story is a simple reminder: when it comes to stubborn shoulder pain, a professional assessment can do what self‑diagnosis can’t.
Where He Started
Day to day, he dealt with tightness in the rear delt, discomfort that showed up as sharp pain in the shoulder later in the day, and an uneven “feel” between sides during lifts. Whenever he tried to reintroduce barbell work, he’d get through a set or two before the pain returned. He even chased different exercises for shoulder pain—T’s to W’s, scap retractions, and more. Some moves felt good, but only for about half an hour. He also knew the neck could influence the shoulder, but the way he trained his neck on his own didn’t move the needle. After working together for 12 weeks, he was able to build the shoulder foundation and then work on bulletproofing.
What Changed?
He stopped trying to assess himself and let someone else assess him. That shift uncovered what he’d been missing and pointed out his neck’s role in his shoulder mechanics.
Within 15 minutes on day one, things clicked and he felt less trap and mid‑back tension. He also had better shoulder blade motion and a real stretch through his pecs during pressing. His rib cage stopped flaring, and he no longer felt that tense, guarded pattern. Every day of programming during the 12 weeks built upon previous days and how he was responding to our exercises along with his gym routine.
Results & Impact
- Immediate relief in 15 minutes, including the significant improvement he saw on day one.
- Returned to pain‑free barbell overhead pressing and having full confidence.
- Even muscle activation on both sides instead of one side overworking.
- Noticeable reduction in neck and upper‑trap tension, and smoother shoulder blade movement.
What he said:
- “I no longer feel tension in the neck or the upper traps, which is really nice.”
- “I could really notice my rib cage just not flaring.”
- “I could feel the shoulder blades move back. I could feel the stretch in my pecs. It felt even.”
What He Learned
This client is proof that more loading isn’t always better. He had a strength-first mindset, but strengthening alone didn’t solve the underlying issue. Getting assessed revealed the actual driver—neck involvement—and turned random exercises for shoulder pain into a targeted shoulder pain treatment. If you’re dealing with pain in the shoulder blade, sharp pain in the shoulder after training, or discomfort that returns after lifts, an expert eye can save months of frustration.
A Simple Takeaway
If your shoulder pain keeps coming back—especially when you return to barbell work—don’t spend months guessing. Get assessed, follow a plan that addresses the root cause, and let your shoulders move the way they’re meant to. As he put it, “I would definitely have someone assess you and write out your programs instead of trying to figure it out for two to three months.”





