Show Notes
Why does your right shoulder hurt when the problem is actually in your left hip? Why does treating the painful area over and over again fail to give you lasting relief?
The answer lies in how your body is actually wired. Your body isn't a collection of independent parts—it's an integrated system connected by diagonal slings that link opposite shoulders to opposite hips.
The Contralateral Pattern
One of the most important connections in your entire body runs diagonally—from your right shoulder to your left hip, and from your left shoulder to your right hip. This is called the contralateral pattern, and understanding it changes everything about how we approach chronic pain.
The Posterior Oblique Sling
This functional chain runs from your latissimus dorsi (the big muscle on the side of your back), across your thoracolumbar fascia in your lower back, and connects to your opposite gluteus maximus.
- Your right lat connects to your left glute
- Your left lat connects to your right glute
This is how you walk, run, throw, swing, and rotate. When you take a step forward with your right leg, your left arm swings forward—your right lat and left glute working together to stabilize your spine and transfer force across your body.
Key insight: When one part of this sling isn't working properly, the other part has to compensate.
How Dysfunction Travels
If your left glute isn't firing properly—a condition called gluteal amnesia, incredibly common in people who sit all day—your right shoulder complex starts compensating for the instability. Over time, this creates excessive tension, altered mechanics, and eventually pain.
You treat your right shoulder. You get temporary relief. But the pain keeps coming back. Why? Because you never addressed the left hip.
The Anterior Oblique Sling
This runs from your external obliques across your abdomen and connects to your opposite hip's adductor muscles. It's crucial for rotational movements—throwing, golf swings, kicking—and core stability during walking and running.
- Groin pain on the left? Check the right side core and obliques
- Right hip flexor tightness? Look at the left shoulder and trunk rotation
The Spiral Line
This fascial chain wraps around your body like a helix—connecting your skull to your shoulder, crossing your back to the opposite hip, wrapping around the thigh, and continuing down to the arch of your foot.
When restricted or imbalanced, it can create pain patterns that seem completely unrelated. A restriction in your right hip can create tension that travels up and across to your left shoulder.
What This Means For You
- Where you feel pain is often not where the problem is
- Effective treatment requires whole-body assessment—not just looking at the painful part
- Your rehab program needs diagonal and rotational patterns—isolated exercises aren't enough
Your Action Step
If you have persistent right shoulder pain: Spend time activating your left glute—glute bridges, single-leg stance work, lateral band walks.
If you have persistent left hip pain: Check your right shoulder mobility and core rotation to the left.
Start connecting the dots. Your body already has—it's been telling you through these pain patterns. Now it's time to listen.
Weekly Takeaway
"Your body is connected diagonally—right shoulder to left hip, left shoulder to right hip. If you've been chasing pain without answers, stop looking where it hurts. Start looking where it's connected."
About Absolute Rehabilitation & Wellness:
Located in Burlington, Ontario, we assess the whole system. We find where the chain is breaking down—often far from where you feel the pain—and we address the true source of your dysfunction. Because lasting relief doesn't come from treating symptoms. It comes from understanding how your body actually works.
📞 Call our Burlington clinic: 905.332.7000