QUESTION:
I am a 20 year old male nasm certitfied personal
trainer. I have played sports year-round all my
life with NO funcional flexibility. I have an
anterior pelvic tilt (tightnes in lats, psoas,
and quadratus lumborum). The tightness in my hip
flexors really inhibits my TVA. I do tons of corrective
exercise and even more flexibility and foam rolling.
Do you think most postural corections can be achieved
through just corrective exercise or will results
be better with chirocpractic care and corrective
training? The reason i ask is i have talked to
a chiropracter and he says his care is vital to
achieve ideal posture. Do you think it is for
real or is he trying to find a new client?
To “There is no I in team!”:
When it comes to health and vitality, there are
many pieces to the puzzle. Every piece in a puzzle
is just as important as the next piece. Not one
piece is vital; they are all vital and make up
the happy end result. A puzzle has many pieces
to it, so does the body when it comes to creating
homeostasis within all vital systems (mind, body,
and soul). The body is such a complex machine
and to segmentalize it like society does, gets
us in a whole heep of trouble. The problem with
medical industry or any industry for that matter,
is that everyone thinks what they do is so vital
in the evolution of life. That creates huge egos,
lots of conflict, and the only winner is the clinician
himself, not the client. There are so many Chiropractors
and other Health Professionals in this industry
today. The concern that I have as a CHEK Practitioner
is that everyone is always looking out for their
wallet and not the best interest of the client.
“No man is wise enough by himself”
Titus Maccius Plautus. Money is the driving factor
in businesses of today and when that comes to
health and vitality, they are playing Russian
roulette with your life.
I am not here to lecture you on my opinion of
Chiropractic Care. I am not against it, but you
need to find a good one to work with, preferably
find a NUCCA (National
Upper Cervical Chiropractic Association) Chiropractor.
These professionals specialize on the cervical
spine, mostly with atlas and axis adjustments.
The basis behind a NUCCA is correction of the
topmost vertebra on the spinal cord which is also
called the Atlas or C1 vertebra. The Atlas is
concave on top to accept the convex base of the
skull, and it is convex on the bottom to fit into
the concave of the next vertebra. Central to the
vertebra runs the spinal cord, carrying a host
of body control messages from the brain. Between
each pair of vertebrae are 31 pairs of nerves
extending out to organs and muscles. Misaligned
(or subluxated) vertebrae can impinge on the nerves
and hamper body function (visceral and musculoskeletal).
Another major importance of adjusting the C1 vertebra
is because of its correlation with the L5 vertebra.
As you can see, as above, so below when it comes
to spine mechanics.
There are a lot of people walking around in society
with L5/S1 issues, pelvic rotation, vertebral
torsion and much more. I am not saying that getting
you C1 vertebra is the end all, but it is one
very important piece to the puzzle. It will assist
the rest of the spine back into alignment, relieving
nerve compression/impingement, ischemia, visceral-somatic,
visceral-visceral, somatic-visceral, and somatic-somatic
reflex dysfunction, as well as decrease overall
sympathetic overload. To explain why these two
areas are important could take a while, so check
out this site www.nucca.org to find a NUCCA in
your area.
My intuition tells me that if you feel like he
is trying to find a new client, he is. Intuition
is a powerful tool that most people ignore, as
well as afraid of. Sometimes our intuition goes
against what are ego wants and that’s why
people go with the egos decision. The ego is there
to protect us and make us feel safe. Who doesn’t
like to feel safe? The problem with that is we
are in a society that loves instant gratification,
pleasure and joy. So our decision making skills
are at an adolescent level not thinking of the
consequences, just on the joy for that particular
moment. When it comes to the possibility of working
with this Chiropractor, your intuition is telling
you NO, but you ego is telling you YES! The important
thing to get out of this is that the ego loves
instant gratification and security. Is it always
looking out for your best interests though?
Society lacks the understanding that everything
in life vibrates. So what you are feeling intuitively
from this Chiropractor is some of his negative
vibrations. Before I do anything to my body (acupuncture,
EFT, massage, Rolfing, etc.) or take anything
(herbs, cleanses, essential oils, etc.) I educate
myself about them. As well, I try to find skilled
practitioners in my area that are knowledgeable
on the certain topic that I am interested in.
This will allow me not only to become educated
for myself and my clients, but will assist me
in establishing a great relationship with someone
who I can trust and refer clients to. We are all
or should be in this business to help others,
help themselves. So if you meet someone like this
guy, I am sure he is in this business to help
himself and himself only. Go out into the fields,
meet with various NUCCA’s, chiropractors,
acupuncturists, massage therapists, herbalists,
naturopaths, osteopaths, MD’s, PT’s,
etc. to establish not only relationships with
these people for referrals, but to find out who
is out there helping others help themselves. You
will know right away who is in this business for
personal gain vs. client health.
Here is some basic insight to what you have included
in your question about your postural issues. Most
people walking around today have not just one
postural distortion. Secondary to society working
more and moving less, we see lots of upper cross
syndrome, coupled with lower cross, which is usually
coupled with a pronation distortion. If the pelvis
anteriorly or posteriorly rotates, you will have
coupled upper and lower body compensations. This
is why you see and hear about so much injury,
pain, and discomfort within our gyms today. Not
only do we work more and move less, our gyms are
filled with junk that reinforce the distortions
that we already have. On top of that people are
living unhealthier lifestyles than ever before.
From what you have told me, an anteriorly rotated
pelvis is coupled with adduction of the femur,
internal rotation of the tibia and pronation at
the ankle. Secondary to the pull of the psoas
anteriorly on the pelvis, the abdominal wall becomes
lengthened, inhibiting the inner unit from working.
As well, common tonic muscles are: psoas, rectus
femoris (not always), sartorius, TFL, IT band,
erector spinae, biceps femoris, and adductors.
Common phasic muscles are: gluteus maximus/medius,
inner unit (TVA, Multifidus, internal oblique,
diaphragm, pelvic floor muscles), medial hamstrings
(semitendonosis/semimembranosis), hip external
rotators (piriformis, gemellus superior, obturator
internus, gemellus inferior, obturator externus,
quadratus femoris).
Common dysfunctions are as follows:
• Low back pain
• Lateral tracking of the patella
• IT band syndrome
• Piriformis syndrome
• Hamstring strains
• Non contact ACL tears
• Achillies tendonitis
• Shin Splints
• Inner unit dysfunction
• Stomach, small intestine, large intestine,
and genital dysfunction
• Visceroptosis
• Poopy problems
• Food intolerance
• Depression
• Forward head posture/increase first rib
angle
• Sternoclavicular pain
• Headaches/Migraines
• Eyesight problems
• Mal-occlusion
• And much more!
The interesting thing that most people are unaware
of is that your physical being is a manifestation
of your mental and emotional stressors. Having
that said, you will find that most people that
have inner unit dysfunction secondary to gastrointestinal
issues (constipation/diarrhea, IBS, leaky gut
syndrome, hypochloridria to name a few) stemming
from stress. This causes the average person to
have GI inflammation, become bloated, get visceroptosis
(drooping organs), causing visceral-somatic reflexes.
This will intern inhibit the inner unit, tilting
the pelvis anteriorly and cause a myriad of musculoskeletal
and visceral dysfunction. That means you can do
all the lower abdominal and corrective exercises
you want, but if you have visceral dysfunction
you are trying to teach the tail to wag the dog
and not the dog to wag the tail by just performing
corrective exercise.
Stress is the number one cause of GI dysfunction.
There are so many kinds of stress, such as:
1. Not eating organic foods or ones for your Metabolic
Type
2. Not getting 8 hours of sleep each night
3. Not drinking enough water
4. Thinking in a negative way all the time
5. Exercising incorrectly or above you current
skill level, having poor posture
6. Chemical stress
7. Environmental stress
8. and so on…..
It is hard to give you exacts of what is going
on with the spine as well as the rest of your
body without any information on it. My advice
at this point would be to find a CHEK Practitioner/NLC
in your area by going to www.chekinstitute.com
in order to get properly assessed both physically
and nutritionally. As well, purchase Paul’s
book How to Eat, Move and Be Healthy.
To sum it all up, “there is no I in team!”
When it comes to making a puzzle or putting the
body back into alignment (whether mental, emotional,
physical, spiritual, nutritional), there are many
people that need to be involved. To answer your
question, no I do not think most postural distortions
can be corrected with corrective exercise alone.
Yes it is a piece to the puzzle, but as you can
see above most of the time our distortions are
stress (nutritional, chemical, environmental,
mental, emotional, spiritual, and physical) related.
Finding a CHEK Practitioner/NLC, NUCCA Chiropractor,
and a St. John’s NMT Therapist will aid
you in your goal to homeostasis, as well as covering
all the areas mentioned above.
Namaste!
Joshua Rubin, OTR/L
CHEK Level 3 and NLC 4
jr@eastwesthealing.com
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