A Runner's Comeback Story

I Tore My Meniscus At 47. Here's What My Physical Therapist Quietly Recommended.

Matthew Carlson

Mechanical Engineer · Runner · Denver, CO
Updated · February 2026

I'm a 47-year-old engineer outside Denver. 

 

I'd been running six days a week for 22 years. 

 

Two marathons, more half-marathons than I can count. 

 

Running wasn't a hobby. 

 

It was how I started my mornings, managed stress, kept friendships, and stayed sane through three kids and a demanding job.

 

In October 2024, I felt a small pop in my right knee on a routine trail run. Not dramatic. Just a sharp click, followed by a dull ache that wouldn't leave.

 

Three weeks and one MRI later: horizontal tear in the medial meniscus. The common kind for runners over 40. The kind that, according to my orthopedic surgeon, was "not bad enough to operate on."

 

"Take a break. Try physical therapy. Come back in six months and we'll see."

 

Those six months were the worst of my adult life.


If you've been here, you know exactly what I mean. 

 

Not injured enough for the medical system to actually do something. 

 

Too injured to do the thing that keeps you functioning.

 

I tried to be the model patient. I tried everything:

 

Eight weeks of physical therapy — minor improvement, then plateau

Anti-inflammatories — temporary, with stomach issues after week three

A $35 compression sleeve from CVS — did absolutely nothing

A $90 hinged brace from a running store — bulky, hot, made me feel like a medical patient

A Copper Fit — same outcome as the CVS sleeve

I wasn't clinically depressed. I was quietly miserable.

 

The thing my doctor never asked about — what I missed most — wasn't the cardio. It wasn't even the racing. It was the feeling. 

 

The rhythm of breath and footstrike. The clarity that comes twenty minutes into a long run when everything in your head goes quiet. 

 

The simple feeling of being a body that works.

 

That was what I'd lost. And no one was treating it.

The Conversation That Changed Everything

A few months later, I switched to a new physical therapist — Dr. Rachel, who'd worked with athletes at a Division I program.

 

I told her the story. She nodded the way someone nods when they've heard it a hundred times.

 

Then she said something my surgeon had never mentioned:

 

"You're focused on the tear. But the real reason you're in pain isn't the tear itself."

 

She reached behind her, grabbed a plastic knee model off the shelf, and held it up between us. 

 

She pointed to two small C-shaped wedges sitting between the femur and the tibia.

 

"Your meniscus is a shock absorber. Its job is to spread the load across the joint and cushion every step you take. When a meniscus tears, it can't distribute that load the way it used to."

 

"This is what's causing the swelling. The inflammation. The pain after every run. The tear is real — but the symptoms you're feeling come from the load distribution failing."

 

I was 47 years old and nobody had ever explained my own knee to me this clearly.

 

"What you need isn't more rest. You need external support that helps stabilize the joint and redistribute that load while you keep moving. If you want to try one, the Knee Compression Support from Flytex is what I usually point my athletes toward. Beyond that, just keep doing the strength work."

 

I'll be honest — I wasn't sure.

 

I'd already spent about $150 on a pharmacy sleeve and a hinged brace, both of which ended up in a drawer.

 

But two things made me try anyway. First, the 30-day money-back guarantee — if it didn't work, I'd send it back.

 

Second, the shipping was free and arrived in 2 days, which made the whole thing feel low-stakes.

 

I ordered one pair on a Tuesday. It was on my doorstep Thursday morning.

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What Actually Happened — Week By Week

Day 1 : One-mile walk-jog on a treadmill. Second-skin feel — on within five seconds, no irritations. The first thing I noticed wasn't pain reduction; it was the feeling of being held. The joint moved inside a kind of structured envelope.

1 weeks in : Three miles outside. What I expected to be a clinical-feeling medical sleeve turned out to be the opposite. Breathable enough that I stopped thinking about it after the first five minutes of activity. No bunching behind the knee, no slipping down mid-run. 

3 weeks in : Five miles, twice a week. The sharp pain when planting my right foot wasn't gone, but it was much less intense. I went back to Dr. Rachel for a check-in. We did some strengthening work — single-leg squats, glute activation. The pain was easier to manage. I left the appointment and sat in my car for a few minutes before driving away. It was the first time in months I'd allowed myself to actually believe I'd run again.

6 weeks in : A 10K. Slow. Cautious. But continuous. No pain spikes during the run, no swelling the next day — and for me, that was the real signal. The knee held. I came home, sat on my front porch with my running shoes still on, and cried for ten minutes. Not because the run had been impressive — it absolutely wasn't. Because I felt like an athlete again.

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Should you try it if you have a torn meniscus ?

I want to be honest about what this is and isn't.

 

This product didn't heal my meniscus. The tear is still there. 

 

If I push too hard or skip my strength work, my knee still talks to me. 

 

It doesn't replace your physical therapist, and it doesn't replace the slow, frustrating work of getting your body back.

 

But if you've been doing everything right and you're still stuck — if you've tried the pharmacy sleeves and the bulky braces and the rest weeks, and you're losing the parts of yourself you took for granted — this might be the missing piece.

It was for me.

 

And if you're staring down a surgery that your doctor isn't even sure will fix anything — the kind where you're told "we'll go in and see what we find" — it might be worth giving this a real try first. Surgery's always going to be there. Twelve weeks of consistent compression and strength work isn't.

 

If you want to try it, here's what I'd do: order one pair, give it 30 days during your activity. The company offers a 30-day money-back guarantee, so the only thing you're risking is time.

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Title

V2 KNEE Compression SUPPORT

Active 15–20 mmHg targeted compression that helps redistribute load away from a damaged meniscus.

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30-day money-back guarantee

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