After a physio session, many people leave with a printed sheet of exercises. It’s easy to treat this paper as optional – something you’ll “try if you have time.” In reality, the home exercises are often the main treatment, and clinic sessions are just the fine-tuning.
Physiotherapy aims to retrain muscles, joints and movement patterns. That retraining needs repetition. Doing a few exercises once a week in the clinic isn’t enough; your body learns through frequent, consistent practice at home.
The sheet usually includes specific instructions: how many reps, how long to hold, how often per day. These are chosen based on your condition. Skipping, changing or rushing them reduces their impact. On the other hand, doing more than advised, or pushing into sharp pain, can irritate tissues and slow progress.
If an exercise hurts in a worrying way, or you’re confused about technique, don’t just stop everything. Note your difficulties and share them at your next session or via phone/email if that’s available. Physios expect to adjust plans; it’s part of the process.
Think of the sheet as your personalised homework. The more seriously you take it, the faster you usually see results – and the more value you get from every appointment you’re paying for.
