If a person with terminal cancer came into your office subluxated every week, could you conclude that the cancer was a cause of constant re-subluxating? Would you then choose to address the cancer as a cause of the vertebral subluxation in that particular person? Your answer would probably be “no.”
Is treating certain muscle problems or otherwise mixing in areas such as lack of good nutrition or poor excercise any different? If these other areas can cause the spine to re-subluxate, it seems that you could justify addressing any medical condition as a cause rather than limiting your practice to correcting vertebral subluxation.
good example!
There are two separate roads being traveled here. Road 1 is about body PARTS/SYSTEMS that have been labeled during their physiological transformation under their particular circumstances [in other words, their body is ADAPTING to the best of its ability under that particular circumstance]. Road 2 is about the BODY which is ALWAYS in the state of striving. As Chiropractors, we want to improve the body’s circumstance by addressing vertebral subluxation. If I were medically described as having a cancer, a broken bone or any other parts/system description, I still wish my body to be free of vertebral subluxation, thus allowing my BODY a better circumstance to strive..