Your pain does not persist because you have not done enough stretches, exercises, or taken enough painkillers.
It persists because of what happens to your spine when you lie down.
Your spinal canal is the channel that holds the nerves running from your lower back to your legs.
With stenosis, that channel has narrowed over the years from arthritis, wear or a herniated disc.
Here is what nobody told you.
The size of that channel changes with your position.
When you bend forward, it opens.
When you stand straight or lie flat on your back, it closes.
That is why bending forward always feels better.
All day, your body knows how to protect itself.
When standing hurts, you sit. When walking hurts, you lean on something.
But the moment you lie flat at night, the channel closes. And it stays closed for hours.
Doctors call it The Silent Squeeze, clinically known as nocturnal spinal compression.
You sleep through it. Every night.
By the time you wake up, your nerves are inflamed and swollen from hours of pressure.
That is the brutal morning stiffness. That is why you grip the doorframe to stand up.
And that is why every treatment you have tried slowly stops working.
Because you cannot heal what is being crushed faster than it can recover.
"Instead of preventing the compression at night, we have been trying to heal the nerves while they are still being crushed every single night,"
Dr. Peterson explained.