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Hi [[leadFirstName]],
Vertebral subluxations happen when we experience physical stress, and a vertebra moves into an incorrect position and stays there. This can be such a slight injury that many people don’t even realize it has happened to them.
You might feel some pain at first, but the human body is made to adapt. It is so good at adapting, in fact, that the muscles and soft tissues in your spine surrounding the affected area will quickly change to match the new position, so that within a few days, most of the pain goes away.
Problem solved, right?
Not quite.
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When a vertebra is in the incorrect position, it means the spinal nerves exiting the intervertebral foramina are also now in an incorrect position. Anytime that happens, some percentage of the messages they carry become lost in transit.
A subluxation is “the condition of a vertebra that has lost its proper juxtaposition with the one above or the one below, or both; to an extent less than a luxation; which impinges nerves and interferes with the transmission of mental impulses.”
We’re basically talking about a near-dislocation of the central nervous system’s ability to communicate with the body!
The other classic example is to compare nerve flow to water in a garden hose. When a hose is flowing normally, it is not always completely filled. Minor dents in the hose—or minor subluxations—might only be noticeable at times when an extra amount of current is needed, likes times of duress when there are high levels of stress on the system, or when you’re pushing yourself a little too hard.
But when the pressure on a nerve gets so bad that normal, natural flow can’t get through, even in ordinary circumstances, that is when real, noticeable problems start to occur.
The danger of a subluxation is its potential “to insult the nervous system to the extent that it retards the vivification or the life-giving processes of the body.” The human body has the amazing power to adapt and heal itself, but a subluxated body is robbed of that full capacity.
If nerves are being squeezed or pinched, the pressure “reduces [the] quantity of flow of mental impulse supply from that point outwardly going to an individual organ.” That’s what causes “bad” organs. The organ isn’t bad; it’s just not getting the signals from your brain! How can you blame the organ for that? That would be like blaming the lightbulbs when the power in your house goes out! Or blaming the flowers because the garden hose stopped working.
Put simply, a subluxated body is not healing. Pressure on the nervous system leads to interference, which leads to a multitude of problems that can range from headaches to asthma to seizures to mental disorders to just about any other symptom you can think of. Have you ever visited a psychiatric hospital? That’s what subluxations do to people.
It's the chiropractic adjustment that fixed these subluxations, so the body can function like it is supposed to!
LIVE CLEAR,
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