Monday, January 30, 2012

Common Stresses Lead To Need For Chiropractic In Children

In the January/February 1995 issues of the ICA International Review ofMaxine McMullen, D.C. reports on the physical stresses children are
Chiropractic,
subjected to that can lead to spinal problems requiring chiropractic care.
Dr. McMullen, Dean of Chiropractic Sciences at Palmer College, is the chair of
the International Chiropractors Association Council on Chiropractic Pediatrics. In
the article, McMullen points out that stress on the infant encountered during the
medically assisted delivery process (from mechanical extraction, such as forceps,
suction devices or cesarean section) can cause severe problems from too much
force being applied to the infant’s neck. Problems that can result include
irritability, colic, failure to thrive, and lowered immune response syndromes.
Developmental problems also occur as the child grows older. When a woman
breast feeds her baby, movement on one side of the baby’s body is constricted
while freedom of movement is allowed on the other side. This process is reversed
as the baby is changed from one breast to another and allows for a balanced input
of perception into the baby’s central nervous system, a necessity for proper
development. Mothers who bottle feed their babies tend to choose the side that is
most comfortable for them and stick with that position during every feeding. As a
result, there is not a balanced perception input and therefore improper nervous
system development can occur.
When babies starts to cross-crawl at about six months of age, it is important not to
put them into playpens, walkers or hanging baby seats. Forcing erect posture on a
baby too early puts stress on structures not yet ready for such forces. Predictably,
problems result. If the problems are not corrected, as they are under Chiropractic
Care, they degrade into scoliosis (lateral curvature of the spine), muscle
imbalances, motor dysfunction and symptoms of unknown origin which may not
present themselves until much later in life along with the complaint “but I didn’t
do anything” to make it hurt.
Dr. McMullen closes the report by saying “Those children one cares for
chiropractically on a regular basis develop strong, well-balanced, musculoskeletal
structures accompanied by attitudes [mindful] of the need to take responsibility for
one’s own health, not merely the absence of disease. This trend should be
consistent rather than sporadic as it is at present.”

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Connection Found Between Body's Gene Repair System And Innate Immunity

A study published in the December 8, 2000 issue of the journal
discovery that an enzyme normally involved in the body's genetic repair system is
also involved in the body's innate immunity, its first response against outside
invaders such as viruses, bacteria and toxins.
The finding that the enzyme, DNA-PK provides a link between the body's genetic
or DNA repair mechanism and its innate immunity confirms that the two systems
are activated when the body encounters invading bacteria, viruses or toxins.
The body's innate immune system, when functioning correctly, identifies invaders
by their structure and very quickly, within minutes, produces a large amount of
natural killer cells to deal with the invader. The adaptative immune system will
memorize this contact with an invader and over a period of days will gear up its
attack with B- and T-cells. The adaptative immune system is also responsible for
attacking the invader again if the body encounters it in the future.
In commentary, there is no question that the body has an inborn, innate immune
system that is capable of protecting it from both internal and external dangers and
we are happy that medical science is finally "discovering" this fact. Since its
inception in 1895, chiropractic has held that this system will work correctly
provided there is nothing interfering with how it functions. Chiropractic Wellness
Care will make sure that your innate immune system will function to the best of its
ability, keeping your body in a higher level of health.
Cell reports the

Monday, January 16, 2012

35 Fast Tips to Make This Your Best Year Yet

Best Year YetI’m sitting on an airplane thinking about what the best performers and most successful people do to continually outperform everyone around them.
As we enter what I hope will be the single best year of your life yet, I’ve come up with 35 Tips that I invite you to concentrate on. Share these tips, reflect on then, post them where you can see them – and allow them to infuse your mindset:
  1. Remember that the quality of your life is determined by the quality of your thoughts.
  2. Keep the promises you make to others – and to yourself.
  3. The project that most scares you is the project you need to do first.
  4. Small daily improvements are the key to staggering long-term results.
  5. Stop being busy being busy. This New Year, clean out the distractions from your work+life and devote to a monomaniacal focus on the few things that matter.
  6. Read “The War of Art”.
  7. Watch “The Fighter”.
  8. In a world where technology is causing some of us to forget how to act human, become the politest person you know.
  9. Remember that all great ideas were first ridiculed.
  10. Remember that critics are dreamers gone scared.
  11. Be “Apple-Like” in your obsession with getting the details right.
  12. Take 60 minutes every weekend to craft a blueprint for the coming seven days. As Saul Bellow once said: “A plan relieves you of the torment of choice.”
  13. Release your need to be liked this New Year. You can’t be a visionary if you long to be liked.
  14. Disrupt or be disrupted.
  15. Hire a personal trainer to get you into the best shape of your life. Superstars focus on the value they receive versus the cost of the service.
  16. Give your teammates, customers and family one of the greatest gifts of all: the gift of your attention (and presence).
  17. Every morning ask yourself: “How may I best serve the most people?”
  18. Every night ask yourself: “What 5 good things happened to me this day?”
  19. Don’t waste your most valuable hours (the morning) doing low value work.
  20. Leave every project you touch at work better than you found it.
  21. Your job is not just to work. Your job is to leave a trail of leaders behind you.
  22. A job is not “just a job”. Every job is a gorgeous vehicle to express your gifts and talents – and to model exceptionalism for all around you.
  23. Fears unfaced become your limits.
  24. Get up at 5 am and take 60 minutes to prepare your mind, body, emotions and spirit to be remarkable during the hours that follow. Being a superstar is not the domain of the gifted but the prepared.
  25. Write love letters to your family.
  26. Smile at strangers.
  27. Drink more water.
  28. Keep a journal. Your life’s story is worth recording.
  29. Do more than you’re paid to do and do work that leaves your teammates breathless.
  30. Leave your ego at the door every morning.
  31. Set 5 daily goals every morning. These small wins will lead to nearly 2000 little victories by the end of the year.
  32. Say “please” and “thank you”.
  33. Remember the secret to happiness is doing work that matters and being an instrument of service.
  34. Don’t be the richest person in the graveyard. Health is wealth.
  35. Life’s short. The greatest risk is risk-less living. And settling for average.
I genuinely wish you the best year of your life.
Stay Great.
Robin Sharma

Friday, January 13, 2012

Aligning Goals with Your Purpose

Many people subscribe to the Protestant work ethic, which says you must work hard to prosper. But success does not require struggle and suffering. It can be effortless, meaning that you are having fun while pursuing your goals, even when you’re working incredibly hard.
The key to unlocking effortless success lies in the goals that you choose to pursue. The more your goals are aligned with your purpose, the more fun you’ll have … and the more easily you’ll achieve the success you desire.
The Key to Effortless Success
We each have a unique purpose to fulfill here on Earth. Identifying, acknowledging and honoring this purpose is perhaps the most important action successful people take.
Without a purpose in life, it’s easy to get sidetracked and end up accomplishing very little. But with a purpose, everything seems to fall into place. The people, resources and opportunities you need naturally gravitate toward you. The world benefits, too, because when you act in alignment with your true life purpose, all of your actions automatically serve others.
What Alignment Means
We’re all gifted with a set of talents and interests that tell us what we’re supposed to be doing. Once you know what your life purpose is, organize all of your activities around it. Everything you do should be an expression of your purpose. If an activity or goal doesn’t fit that formula, don’t work on it.
For example, I frequently am invited to participate in multi-level marketing companies and have on several occasions. But when I have, it’s left me feeling drained, even though the companies and their products were superior. The reason is that hosting meetings and selling opportunities to others does not support my purpose – to inspire and empower people to live their highest vision in a context of love and joy. I’ve learned through experience that the best way for me to work with MLM companies is by speaking to and training their distributors, an activity that allows me to fulfill my purpose.
Aligning with your purpose is most critical when setting professional goals. When it comes to personal goals, you have more flexibility. If you want to learn how to paint or water ski, go ahead and do so. If your goal is to get fit and lose weight, move ahead with confidence. Nurturing yourself emotionally, physically and spiritually will make you more energized, resilient and motivated to live your purpose on the professional front.
However, don’t ignore the signs that your job or career is not right for you. If you dread Monday mornings and live for the weekends, it may be a sign that it’s time to follow your heart and pursue the work you long to do.
Are You Aligned?
There are a few ways to gauge whether your goals are aligned with your purpose. The first is to simply check in with yourself and ask whether achieving the goal supports your life purpose. If not, the goal is not something you should pursue.

Conveniently, human beings are equipped with an inner guidance system that tells us when we are on or off purpose based on the amount of joy we are experiencing. When you feel like you are in “flow,” you are on purpose. When working toward your goals is a chore or success is extremely difficult, stop and evaluate whether your goal is aligned with your purpose.
A final technique you can use is to probe deeper into your desire to achieve a particular goal. Ask yourself, “If I achieve this goal, what would I have then that I don’t have now?” When you have an answer, ask the question again. Continue the process until you’ve reached your root desire. Then ask whether you truly need to achieve the goal to get what you really want.
For example, you may say that you want to earn $1 million. But upon further examination, you may realize that what you really crave is the joy of pursuing what you really want to do in life, which you would be able to do wholeheartedly once you had enough money to ensure financial security. Must you become a millionaire to experience joy? Of course not. Instead, consider all the ways that you can experience what you truly want to feel and be, then make those your goals.
At its heart, effortless success is about fully embracing and expressing who you are. It means following your inner guidance to ensure that you are living your very unique purpose as much as you can. Use the tips shared in this article to identify the right goals to pursue in 2012 – and watch how much easier it becomes to achieve your dreams.- Jack Canfield

Monday, January 9, 2012

Question: How Do You Eat A Elephant?

Answer:  One bite at a time.

How are your New Year's resolutions going?  Are you sticking with the plan and achieving some results?  I hope so.  If not, take small incremental steps on your way to reaching those BIG goals.  Consistency is the key.

Determined persistence is the key to lasting success and achievement. - Bill Harris, D.C.