To the New Generation of Physical Therapists

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December 2025 Kristen Keefe
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Byline: By Eric Edelman, PT
Founder, Peak Physical Therapy & Sports Performance

To the graduating class of physical therapists,

Congratulations. You’ve made it through a demanding program, countless exams, practicals, clinical rotations, and probably a lot of moments where you were running on caffeine and stubbornness more than anything else. You’ve earned this.

When I think back on my own path, I started out in inpatient and acute rehab after graduating with my degree in physical therapy in the mid-90s. Those early years shaped how I see this profession: I saw people at some of the most vulnerable points in their lives, and I learned quickly that PT is as much about human connection as it is about protocols and techniques. Boston Voyager

Over time, I gravitated toward outpatient orthopedics and manual therapy, and eventually opened my own spine-focused clinic with a partner. In 2008, I took the leap and founded Peak Physical Therapy as a solo practice in Norwell. My goal was simple but not easy: build a place where people felt truly known and cared for, and where therapists had the time and tools to deliver individualized, one-on-one care at a high level. Boston Voyager+1

Today, Peak Physical Therapy & Sports Performance has grown across the South Shore with multiple locations, a broad range of specialty programs, and an incredible team—yet that original vision hasn’t changed. We’re here to help people feel better, move freely, and live fully. peaktherapy.com+1

As you step into your first roles as physical therapists, I want to share a few things I’ve learned along the way.

1. Build your career around people, not just protocols

It’s natural, especially early on, to focus on “getting it right”: the perfect evaluation, the right cluster of tests, the ideal progression of exercises. Keep that curiosity and high standard—it matters.

But the longer I do this, the more I’ve seen that what truly sets great therapists apart is how they treat the person in front of them.

When I started Peak, I was very intentional about creating a patient-centered experience:

  • Significant one-on-one time so people feel heard, not rushed.
  • Personalized rehab plans rather than cookie-cutter templates.
  • Elevated customer service, treating patients like people, not numbers on a schedule. Boston Voyager+1

Whatever setting you land in, you can live out those principles. Look patients in the eye. Ask what they want from therapy. Explain your reasoning. Celebrate the small wins with them. You’ll be surprised how far those “little” things go.

2. Let your curiosity shape your specialty

Over the years, our practice has expanded into a wide range of specialized programs—spine, sports rehab, TMD, pelvic health, vestibular, post-concussion, fall prevention, pediatrics, aquatics, and more. We treat everyone from infants with torticollis to older adults working to stay independent and active. Boston Voyager+2ChoosePT+2

None of that happened overnight. It grew out of curiosity—clinicians asking, “Could we help with this?” and then pursuing the training to do it well.

As you start your career:

  • Notice the types of cases that energize you.
  • Seek mentors who are strong in those areas.
  • Take courses, read, and keep adding tools to your toolbox.

You don’t have to have your “forever specialty” figured out right now. Just keep following the combination of what interests you and where you see a need in your community.

3. Remember: value matters, especially now

Healthcare has changed a lot since I started practicing. Rising copays and deductibles mean patients think carefully about how they invest their time and money. That reality can feel discouraging, but it’s also an opportunity for us to show the true value of what we do. Boston Voyager+1
To me, that means:

  • Delivering exceptional outcomes grounded in evidence and best practices.
  • Making each visit efficient and meaningful, not just “filling the time.”
  • Communicating clearly so patients understand why therapy matters and how it’s helping.

You’re not just providing exercises—you’re offering a path back to the things that make people’s lives full: work, family, hobbies, sports, independence. Don’t underestimate that.

4. Get out into your community

One of the things I’m most proud of at Peak is how involved we are outside the clinic walls—from athletic partnership programs and sports injury prevention talks to senior center presentations on fall prevention and aquatic therapy, and education on posture and body mechanics in local schools. Boston Voyager+1

You’ll have similar opportunities where you are:

  • Speaking to teams or clubs about injury prevention.
  • Educating older adults about staying active and safe.
  • Partnering with schools or community organizations.

Every time you show up in those spaces, you’re not only helping people—you’re also shaping how your community understands physical therapy.

5. Keep evolving—and protect the joy in what you do

From the first Norwell clinic to multiple locations and now partnering with organizations that share our commitment to excellent, community-focused care, growth at Peak has always been driven by one question: “How can we make the patient experience even better?” Boston Voyager+2PR Newswire+2

That mindset will serve you well:

  • Be willing to adapt as research, technology, and healthcare systems change.
  • Stay creative in how you design plans of care and how you communicate.
  • Make your workplace one where patients feel welcome—and where you and your colleagues actually enjoy coming to work.

Burnout is real. But so is the satisfaction of watching someone walk back onto a field after a major injury, pick up a grandchild without fear, or simply wake up without the pain that’s been limiting them for months or years. Those moments are worth fighting for.

To all of you just stepping into this profession:

Thank you for choosing a career built on movement, science, and human connection. Thank you for the late nights, the hard work, and the resilience it took to get here. I’m excited for the clinics you’ll shape, the innovations you’ll bring, and the countless people whose lives you’ll improve—some in big, dramatic ways, and some in quiet, everyday ones.

On behalf of all of us at Peak Physical Therapy & Sports Performance:

Congratulations, and welcome to the field. I can’t wait to see what you do next.

With appreciation and respect,

Eric
Eric Edelman, PT
Founder, Peak Physical Therapy & Sports Performance

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