Chiropractors deal with misalignments of the spine called
subluxations that place pressure and tension on the nervous system. Just like other health problems, subluxation
is caused by excessive amounts of physical, chemical, and emotional levels of
stress beyond what the body can adapt.
In fact, for a bone to become misaligned, there must be an imbalance of
the muscles that are designed to keep the bones aligned, and at least five
ligaments of the spinal joints will have been compromised as well. The number one complaint about chiropractic
care is that people respond and do well while they’re under active care, but when
care is reduced the problems begin to come back. Realize, this is not a chiropractic problem;
this is either a stability or lifestyle problem. In terms of stability, most people have
imbalanced or weak muscles from sitting too much or doing the same activities
over and over causing some muscles to be over-developed and others to be
under-developed. This phenomenon creates
inherent stress on a joint and makes it very difficult for people to “hold
their adjustments.” In physical therapy,
they would rehab those muscles to stabilize that joint. My concern with this is what if the joint was
imbalanced to begin with and we’re strengthening an improper structure? In the past, as a chiropractor, I used to
believe that all I had to do is restore the alignment and movement of the joint
and the body would take care of the rest.
I have learned this is not true when that joint is supported by weak or
imbalanced muscles. When you restore
alignment and strengthen at the same time, it’s a win-win. In terms of lifestyle, I hope it’s only
common sense that if I go back to the same faulty lifestyles that caused my
problems to begin with, of course my symptoms will return. This is why the physical, chemical, and
emotional components must all be addressed.
When people address their physical stressors and begin to exercise, when
they clean up their inflammatory diets, and when they work at reducing stress
in their life through exercise, meditation, or other techniques, this is when
health is truly restored.
We need to look at health as a three-legged stool where
physical, chemical, and emotional well-being makes up the foundation. When any one leg is compromised, the whole
thing suffers. We live in a world of
numerous demands and stressors that complicate healing. Whether we’re talking about a chiropractic
problem or any health problem, you need to look at healing as a
multi-dimensional process where you will likely need to make changes on more
than one level to achieve real results.
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