Recovery is not a one-day miracle, but a gradual process through which the body restores its balance and natural functions.
What does “recovery” mean
Recovery is the process by which the body relearns to function properly after illness, trauma, surgery, or a long period of inactivity.
Its goal is to restore lost functions, reduce pain, and regain mobility, strength, and endurance.
In simple terms, recovery means bringing the body back to normal step by step, through a plan adapted to each patient.
Recovery is a long-term process that unfolds progressively. It is important to understand that recovery is not a single treatment, but a sequence of biological adaptations requiring time, patience, and consistency. Each body reacts differently, and progress depends on proper collaboration between therapist and patient.
A problem that developed over months or years cannot be “fixed” in one or two sessions, no matter how intense the treatment.
Types of recovery
What must be established before starting treatment
Stages of recovery
Biological phases of tissue repair
Why continuity matters
After each session, the body reacts and enters an adaptation phase. Mild fatigue, muscle soreness, or readjustment sensations may appear. These are normal biological responses indicating active adaptation.
Long breaks between sessions can interrupt progress, and lack of movement often leads to relapse.
Duration of recovery
There is no fixed timeline. Each body has its own rhythm. However, general averages can be estimated:
• mild sprain: 2-4 weeks
• fracture: 6-12 weeks
• orthopedic post-surgery: 3-9 months
• herniated disc: 3-6 months
• chronic neck or lower back pain: ongoing process with periodic maintenance
A common mistake is expecting a “miraculous” result after one or two sessions. True recovery requires time, because the goal is not only pain relief, but restoring correct body mechanics.
The body needs repetition and continuity, not abrupt or spectacular interventions.
Rushing the process may cause relapses or complications.
Recovery means intelligent patience, not speed.
The therapist’s role
The therapist does not “heal” directly but guides the body toward self-regulation.
Through manual techniques, exercises, and corrective postures, the body relearns how to move symmetrically, relax, and regain mobility.
Yumeiho® therapy aims to restore postural balance and physiological function by mechanically and energetically realigning the body, restoring symmetry, mobility, and physiological flow, and reducing the tensions and compressions that sustain pain.
The patient’s role
The patient is not a spectator but an active participant.
Recovery also means awareness – how to stand correctly, how to breathe, and how to move without overloading the joints.
Following the prescribed exercise plan, maintaining proper nutrition, sleep, and attitude are as important as the therapist’s technique.
Real results come through consistent involvement and cooperation.
Conclusion
Recovery is an active process, not a passive one.
It is not measured in the number of sessions, but in steady, well-guided steps.
It requires commitment, patience, and understanding that true restoration follows its own rhythm.
When the body receives the right time and stimuli, it naturally regains balance.
Recovery is neither a race nor a simple walk.
It is both a scientific and human process – a path that demands consistency, trust, and genuine collaboration between therapist and patient.