A client came to me two years after a knee injury that had, by every scan and every doctor's note, healed. He still would not squat below a quarter of the range he was capable of. Not because the tissue could not handle it, his surgeon had cleared him well past that, but because somewhere along the way the injury had stopped being something that happened to his knee and became something that defined it.
I see this often enough that I no longer think of it as unusual. An injury has a story attached to it, and the story tends to outlast the tissue damage. People start introducing themselves by it, my bad knee, my shoulder that went out, and the language is not wrong, but it can quietly narrow what someone is willing to attempt long after the body itself has moved on.
At the same time, I am careful not to swing too far the other way. Some clients arrive wanting to prove the injury does not exist anymore, pushing through pain to demonstrate to themselves that they are fine, and that is its own kind of avoidance, just wearing a more determined face. Ignoring a healing structure is not braver than protecting one. It is a different way of not looking closely at what is actually going on.
What I try to do instead is keep the injury in proportion. We work around it specifically where it needs specific care, and everywhere else, we train the rest of the body fully, without treating the whole person as fragile because one joint had a hard year. A knee injury does not require a cautious upper body. It does not require timid breathing or a generally careful approach to life. In my experience, keeping the rest of training normal actually helps the injured area recover its confidence faster than isolating it ever does.
This takes ongoing conversation, not a fixed protocol. Some weeks the knee needs more deference than others, depending on sleep, stress, and how much walking someone did that week without noticing. I check in rather than assume the story from two years ago still applies today.
The goal is not to forget the injury happened. It is to stop letting it write the whole program. Eventually, for most people, the knee becomes a joint again instead of a character in the story they tell about their own body, and that shift usually matters as much as any exercise I give them.