Why It's a Game-Changer in Sports-Based and Performance Physical Therapy
The practice of mindfulness is often overlooked and underutilized among the active and athletic population. Many of our patients here at Conquer Movement Physical Therapy have seen transformative results by incorporating mindfulness into their rehabilitation and training routines. For those who train hard, perform under pressure, or struggle with chronic pain despite an active lifestyle, mindfulness may be the key piece that’s been missing from their recovery or performance optimization.
As a performance-based physical therapist, I’ve seen firsthand how much of an impact this can make. I have seen it impact my patients not just physically, but neurologically and emotionally. That’s why I pursued a certification in mindfulness-based pain relief. It’s more than just a skill or certification, it has become a foundational philosophy in my clinical practice. Incorporating mindfulness into rehab and performance work has been one of the most game-changing elements I’ve introduced to my patients, and in this blog, I want to explain the science of why it works.
What Is Mindfulness and Why Should Athletes Care?
Mindfulness, often defined as non-judgmental awareness of the present moment, might sound like a passive or meditative concept at first glance. But in reality, it's a powerful tool for developing mental and physical performance. The essence of mindfulness isn’t about "slowing down", it’s about becoming more fully present, focused, and responsive to what’s happening right now in your body, your environment, and your mind.
For athletes and active individuals, this can translate into:
These aren’t abstract benefits. They’re rooted in neurobiology and are measurable in the way mindfulness rewires the brain and changes how we process movement, pain, and stress.
Mindfulness and the Brain: Key Regions Involved
The ACC is central to self-regulation, focus, and emotional stability. In sports and rehab settings, these qualities are crucial. When this region is strengthened through mindfulness, athletes experience:
In therapy, this means better engagement, compliance, and resilience during challenging phases of rehab.
This area improves internal body awareness: or what we in therapy call interoception. Enhanced insular activity helps athletes:
This is where I’ve seen a huge breakthrough with patients. Once they begin tuning into their bodily cues more accurately through mindfulness, they often stop overcorrecting and start moving more naturally.
The OFC supports emotional regulation and cognitive reframing. This is the "lens" through which we interpret pain and stress. By strengthening this area, mindfulness helps athletes and patients:
When an injured runner tells me, “I don’t panic when I feel the pain anymore—I just shift my weight differently,” that’s the OFC at work. That’s progress.
Mindfulness enhances the hippocampus, boosting memory and learning. In physical therapy and athletic training, this translates to:
Especially for athletes returning from injury, this accelerates the process of re-patterning safer, more efficient movement.
This network is most active during mind-wandering and rumination. Mindfulness turns down this "background noise," helping:
Athletes often say, “I feel clearer-headed.” That’s not just anecdotal—it's neural.
This network helps prioritize incoming sensory information. It determines what is important in the present moment, and mindfulness helps fine-tune this system. This is vital for:
A heightened salience network can mean faster corrections during dynamic movements and better situational awareness during competition.
This network regulates goal-directed behavior and impulse control. Strengthening the FPCN can improve:
In rehab, this means staying the course even when discomfort arises. In sport, it can mean the difference between success and error in high-stakes moments.
The Science of Mindfulness in Action: Effects on Attention, Emotion, and Self-Awareness
Enhanced Attention and Focus
Mindfulness meditation sharpens multiple domains of attention processing, including:
Even just five days of mindfulness training have been shown to enhance these functions, and with longer-term practice, athletes can maintain a laser-focused mental state throughout competitions or during high-intensity rehab sessions.
Emotional Regulation and Resilience
Emotional reactivity can derail both rehab progress and in-game performance. Mindfulness helps:
This is crucial when pain flares up or when athletic performance dips. Mindfulness gives space for a pause, to choose a response rather than react impulsively.
Self-Awareness and Self-Concept
By decoupling from self-centered thoughts and judgments, mindfulness nurtures a healthier self-image and improved internal dialogue. Athletes stop seeing themselves as broken or limited and instead begin to view challenges as opportunities for growth.
This shift is essential for long-term consistency and sustainable athletic identity.
Mindfulness’ Broader Impact on the Nervous System
Mindfulness directly influences the autonomic nervous system, especially the parasympathetic branch responsible for "rest-and-digest" responses. This helps:
For high-level athletes and weekend warriors alike, this means better recovery between sessions and lower systemic inflammation. Dive into nervous system downregulation in this blog!
Mindfulness and Athletic Performance
For athletes, the brain is the control center of performance. Every skill, every reaction, every adjustment begins in the brain. Mindfulness optimizes this process.
Enhanced Neuroplasticity
Mindfulness enhances the brain’s ability to change, adapt, and grow. This means:
Better Movement Efficiency
Athletes who practice mindfulness move with more ease and precision. They make fewer unnecessary corrections and experience less muscular tension. This results in:
Stronger Mental Resilience
Mental toughness isn't just grit, but also, the ability to stay grounded, flexible, and strategic under pressure. Mindfulness helps build:
Recovery and Injury Prevention
Mindfulness fosters early detection of issues before they become injuries. By being more tuned into subtle signs, athletes can:
And for those already dealing with injury, mindfulness improves:
Why I Got Certified in Mindfulness-Based Pain Relief
Throughout my career, I’ve helped people return to sport, conquer chronic pain, and rebuild their movement confidence. But there was always a percentage of patients who, even with great biomechanics and strength, remained stuck. The missing piece? Their mind.
Many of these individuals weren’t just experiencing pain—they were experiencing fear, anticipation, frustration, and grief tied to that pain. The nervous system was interpreting all movement through a lens of danger.
I wanted to offer something more comprehensive. So I sought out training in mindfulness-based pain relief and began integrating those tools into our sessions. The change was undeniable:
This isn’t a spiritual or feel-good trend, it’s a neuroscience-backed method that changes lives.
Integrating Mindfulness Into a Performance PT Plan
Mindfulness doesn’t have to be time-consuming or abstract. It can be:
At Conquer Movement, we tailor these tools to match your goals and lifestyle. You don’t have to meditate for hours to feel the benefits. You just need to start tuning in.
Reminder of the 5 Facets of Mindfulness:
To fully understand mindfulness, it is helpful to break it down into its core components. The Five Facets of Mindfulness provide a structured way to conceptualize and practice mindfulness in daily life. These facets include Observing, Describing, Acting with Awareness, Non-judging of Inner Experience, and Non-reactivity to Inner Experience. Let’s explore each in detail:
Observing involves noticing or attending to internal feelings, thoughts, and external stimuli. It is about cultivating a heightened sense of awareness of the present moment. This can include paying attention to your breath, the sensations in your body, or the sights and sounds in your environment. This includes observing both the positive and negative physical sensations and mental states. Recognizing, but not reacting to negative stimuli promotes emotional regulation and can increase sense of wellbeing even while experiencing perceived negative stimuli.
How Observing Helps:
Practical Tip: Try a mindful breathing exercise. Close your eyes and focus solely on the sensation of your breath entering and leaving your body. Notice the rise and fall of your chest or abdomen, and observe how it feels to breathe deeply.
Describing refers to labeling feelings, thoughts, and experiences with words. This facet encourages individuals to articulate their internal experiences accurately and objectively, without getting entangled in them. Our descriptions can include adjectives related to the feelings, thoughts and experiences or simply identifying that these are occurring. At Conquer Movement, we use this mindfulness facet to help describe pain. Pain descriptors can include the size and location of the pain, the color associated with the pain, the emotion the pain represents as well as any emotions the pain triggers, the shape and border of the area of pain, the texture of the pain. These descriptors are more focused on a mindfulness approach to pain than typical pain descriptors, which we still emphasize. Typical pain descriptors are burning, dull, achy, sharp, stabbing, heavy, shooting, gnawing, radiating, tingly, numb, shocking, etc... Using both of these descriptors in tandem can also help individuals who work with us to be less reactionary toward pain and measure changes in the subjective experience of pain over time. Rating pain on a pain scale is the typical method of measuring pain, but describing the pain can allow us to identify little changes in pain during our sessions and in between our sessions and especially helpful when the numerical pain rating does not change to make sure we are changing the quality of pain.
How Describing Helps:
Practical Tip: Keep a mindfulness journal. Write down your thoughts and feelings as they arise, and describe them in detail. For example, instead of saying, “I’m upset,” you might write, “I feel a tightening in my chest and a sense of frustration because of an unmet expectation.”
Acting with awareness means being fully present in your actions and avoiding “autopilot” mode. It involves attending to what is happening in the present moment instead of being preoccupied with the past or future.
How Acting with Awareness Helps:
Practical Tip: Engage in a mindful eating exercise. Pay full attention to the experience of eating, the colors, textures, flavors, and aromas of your food. Avoid distractions like phones or TV while eating.
Non-judging of inner experience involves taking a non-evaluative stance toward your thoughts and feelings. Instead of labeling emotions as “good” or “bad,” this facet encourages a neutral observation of your inner world.
How Non-Judgement Helps:
Practical Tip: Practice self-compassion. When you notice a negative thought or feeling, silently say to yourself, “It’s okay to feel this way. This is a normal human experience.”
Non-reactivity involves allowing emotions and thoughts to come and go without being controlled or overwhelmed by them. It’s about observing inner experiences without automatically reacting.
How Non-reactivity Helps:
Practical Tip: Practice the “leaves on a stream” exercise. Imagine placing each thought or feeling on a leaf and watching it float down a stream. This visualization helps you observe thoughts without clinging to them.
In our previous blog, we discussed the 5 Facets of Mindfulness and expanded more deeply into how to integrate mindfulness into your daily routine.
Final Thoughts: The Mind Leads the Movement
We can have the best exercises, the most advanced equipment, and the most evidence-based protocols. But if the brain isn’t on board, progress stalls. Mindfulness gives the brain the clarity, calm, and control it needs to unlock performance and facilitate healing.
This is the future of performance physical therapy. Not just strengthening the body, but also empowering the mind.
We will continue this conversation in future blogs by diving into specific techniques, breathwork for performance, mindfulness drills for athletes, and how to create a mindset practice that aligns with your physical goals.
Until then, remember: movement is not just physical, it’s neurological. And the mind you bring to your recovery or training may be the difference-maker you didn’t know you needed.
Ready to address the mental aspect of pain? Schedule a free discovery call with us today and let’s discuss a plan tailored to your needs!
Best,
Dr. Kylie Miller, PT, DPT
Certified Mindfulness Based Pain Relief Practitioner