A very common patient statement:
“Walking is okay… but carrying things is what really triggers me.”
Or:
“I can move around, but once I carry groceries, everything flares.”
Or:
“The real problem is carrying my child / laptop bag / luggage.”
This is extremely common.
Because rehabilitation often focuses on:
- pain
- stretching
- exercises
- walking
- strength
But real life often tests something more specific:
carrying capacity.
And if carrying capacity is not rebuilt, many patients remain functionally limited despite otherwise “good progress.”
First: What Is Carrying Capacity?
Very simply:
Carrying capacity means the ability to safely and confidently transport load during real-life movement.
Examples:
- groceries
- handbags
- work bags
- children
- luggage
- shopping bags
- clinic supplies
- sports equipment
- laundry baskets
- parcels
- travel backpacks
This is not theoretical.
This is everyday life.
Why Carrying Is Different From Simple Strength
Patients often assume:
“If I’m stronger, carrying should be fine.”
Not always.
Carrying involves more than raw strength.
It may require:
- grip endurance
- trunk control
- shoulder tolerance
- walking endurance
- balance
- breathing
- load distribution
- movement confidence
- asymmetrical control
- pacing
This makes it a distinct rehabilitation demand.
A Practical Example
Patient with back pain.
Can do exercises in clinic.
Can walk.
Can sit better.
But carrying shopping bags?
Symptoms flare.
Why?
Because carrying creates:
- sustained loading
- asymmetrical forces
- movement under load
- endurance demands
That is different from isolated exercises.
Another Example
Parent with recovering shoulder or back pain.
Able to do rehab drills.
But carrying a tired child?
Entirely different functional challenge.
Real life is messy.
Loads move unexpectedly.
Fatigue matters.
Confidence matters.
Fitness Analogy
A person may be strong on a seated machine.
That does not automatically mean they can comfortably carry two heavy grocery bags while walking across a carpark.
Functional carrying is a real-world performance task.
Carrying Is Often Asymmetrical
Important point.
Real life rarely gives perfectly balanced loads.
Examples:
- one shopping bag
- handbag on one side
- child on one hip
- laptop bag over one shoulder
- suitcase in one hand
That creates unique movement demands.
Carrying Challenges Multiple Systems
Carrying may stress:
- shoulders
- neck
- trunk
- hips
- knees
- grip
- endurance
- balance
- walking tolerance
Which is why symptoms may appear even when simple exercises seem okay.
Back Pain Example
Back pain patients commonly struggle with:
- groceries
- luggage
- shopping
- household loads
- work equipment
Because carrying combines:
load + walking + endurance + trunk control + confidence.
Neck Pain Example
Patients with neck / shoulder issues often flare with:
- handbags
- laptop bags
- briefcases
- shopping bags
Static loaded tolerance matters here.
Shoulder Pain Example
Shoulder rehab may not be complete if patients still cannot comfortably carry:
- bags
- groceries
- work gear
- children
- travel items
Band exercises alone may not fully transfer.
Knee Pain Example
Patients may think:
“My knee only hurts with stairs.”
But carrying often increases knee demand dramatically.
Especially:
stairs + load
walking + load
uneven surfaces + load
Real function changes.
Parenting Example
Parents are one of the strongest examples.
Carrying:
- toddlers
- sleeping children
- school bags
- diaper bags
- shopping + child simultaneously
This is highly functional rehabilitation demand.
Travel Example
Travel exposes carrying limitations immediately.
Examples:
- airport luggage
- cabin bags
- hotel transfers
- shopping bags
- backpacks
- child + luggage combinations
A patient who “feels okay” in clinic may struggle here.
Office Worker Example
Even office workers carry:
- laptops
- work bags
- gym bags
- groceries after work
- children
- documents
Carrying capacity still matters.
Sport Example
Athletes carry:
- equipment
- training gear
- recovery bags
- water
- gym loads
Functional loading still matters outside pure sport movement.
Carrying Confidence Matters Too
Patients may say:
“I physically can… but I’m scared.”
Confidence matters.
Fear changes:
- posture
- breathing
- muscle tension
- pacing
- movement quality
This affects symptoms.
Avoiding Carrying Can Backfire
Avoidance may reduce immediate fear.
But over time:
- endurance drops
- load tolerance drops
- confidence drops
- functional independence drops
Then even lighter loads feel threatening.
Carrying Retraining May Be Necessary
Practical rehabilitation may need:
- progressive loaded walking
- grip endurance work
- unilateral carry progression
- bilateral carry progression
- trunk endurance
- stair + load progression
- functional simulation
Matched to real life.
Carrying Is NOT “Just Tough It Out”
Important clarification.
This does NOT mean:
grab heavy bags immediately.
Or:
ignore symptoms.
Good progression matters.
Assessment matters.
Carrying Helps Restore Independence
Patients feel empowered when they regain ability to:
- shop independently
- travel confidently
- parent practically
- work without fear
- manage life logistics
This is meaningful rehabilitation.
Better Questions
Instead of asking only:
“Can I exercise?”
Ask:
- Can I carry what real life demands?
- What loads matter to me?
- Does asymmetrical loading trigger symptoms?
- Do I trust carrying?
- What progression is needed?
Much better.
Practical Reality
Many patients seem “improved” until real life requires carrying.
That is when hidden limitations appear.
This is why carrying capacity deserves far more attention in practical rehabilitation.
Practical Takeaway
Carrying capacity matters because daily life often depends on loaded movement.
Good rehabilitation may need to rebuild:
- load tolerance
- endurance
- grip capacity
- trunk control
- walking under load
- confidence
- practical independence
Because recovery is not complete if patients can exercise—
but cannot carry what life requires.
About The Pain Relief Practice
The Pain Relief Practice is a Singapore physiotherapy and musculoskeletal rehabilitation practice focused on evidence-aligned non-invasive care, rehabilitation, movement restoration, and patient education.
Its physiotherapy-led approach may include:
- gait assessment
- movement analysis
- progressive strengthening
- neuromuscular rehabilitation
- walking retraining
- stair function rebuilding
- balance and movement confidence retraining where appropriate
- proprioceptive retraining where appropriate
- lifting and carrying retraining where appropriate
- selected adjunct physical modalities where appropriate
- patient education and self-management coaching
- directional preference / MDT-informed reasoning where relevant
- taping and bracing strategies where appropriate
- nerve mobility strategies where relevant
- practical functional rehabilitation planning
- collaborative goal-setting and structured progress tracking where appropriate
- graded return-to-work and return-to-sport planning where appropriate
- appropriate screening and clinical reasoning to guide rehabilitation suitability
The focus is restoring sustainable movement and practical daily function.
Location
350 Orchard Road
#10-00 Shaw House
Singapore 238868
General enquiries
WhatsApp: 97821601

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