You say you have some close friends with scoliosis, huh? Talk to them. I've noticed that with some of my clients who have curvy spines, that it has had a dramatic impact on their emotional health as well as on their physical. In different way with some than with others. Some have been told from a very early age, "You'll never be able to do all the things that normal people do because you got a freaky spine.", Or at least that's the way they hear it. Some of them take it to heart and instinctively limit themselves. They say internally,"I can't do that ,my spine doesn't work right." There are some who embrace that idea and hide behind it. They use it to justify their fears, and use it to ientify themselves. "Don't make me try that, I have scoliosis." "I have scoliosis, I need to be treated special." The there are those who are told that they may face some challenges and say, "Oh goody, a challenge." "Scoliosis, Schmoliosis, I'm riding that bull anyway." One of my favorite clients is a woman with a double s-curve in her spine. She has a bit of a hump. She has severe arthritis in her knees. I don't know for sure when she turned eighty, but it wasn't any time recently. And she has the most optomistic outlook of all the people I know. She walks with her friends every day, dispite back pain and heel-spurs. She sings in her church choir, dispite back pain and shoulder pain when she stands for long periods. She enjoys traveling; she went to Thailand a couple of years ago and tried their Thai massage, (at her age, with all her issues) and liked it. We spend a lot of time in class learning the A&P of it all. Spend some time with your friends and learn how it affects their LIFE.