Showing posts with label Thinking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thinking. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

Clearer Thinking

Concentration and Memory

Science has only very recently begun to realize the relationship between the organs and the other parts of the body.  In a push toward specialization in health fields during the second half of the 20th century, the interrelationship and interdependence of the body’s parts was all but lost.  Now the tide is turning and people are realizing how important it is to address every aspect of the body in order to experience true health, maximum potential and overall well being including the ability to think clearly, concentrate and remember things.
            Some educators have realized that for students to do well in their studies, especially in the lower grades, it is important that they get a good breakfast, one that has protein rather than one that is full of worthless carbohydrates from sugar.  Of course, others think the answer to our many sugar-high, grade-school students is to prescribe some drug for them.  The corporate world has begun to realize that by providing exercise for their executives, not only will they be healthier and have less absenteeism but that they will also be mentally sharper and more productive when they are working.  We have all experienced the drowsiness and mental dullness that follows a big Thanksgiving Day meal, when our digestive systems make significant changes in our body chemistry.  Alcohol not only affects your mental abilities when it is in your bloodstream but in sufficient amounts will affect your mental activity even the next day (we call it a hangover).  Get a bad night's sleep and your mental sharpness will likely drop a noticeable level the next day.
            All of the above examples of things that can affect our ability to think clearly are quite obvious and easy for us to understand.  What is more, if these examples are true in the perceptible realm, then they are also true in the imperceptible realm.  Any change in body chemistry whether it is due to over-the-counter medication, alcohol or even poor eating habits is going to adversely affect your mental acuity, your memory, your reasoning ability, your reaction times, and your ability to focus and concentrate.  Perhaps the decrease is not noticeable to you but it may be to your boss or to those around you.  Sometimes it is noticeable to us.  When we are “coming down” with the flu or a cold, we realize that our mental productivity is down.  However, more often it is not noticeable or at best we realize that we are just not “up to par” that day.
            The reasons for this may be numerous.  One of these reasons is invariably vertebral subluxation.  When your spine is subluxated your nerve system is not able to work at its full potential.  Your nerve system is interrelated to every other system in your body.  Every system is dependent upon a full complement of mental impulses in order to work properly.  You cannot be fully energized without a good nerve supply.  You cannot digest your food properly without a good nerve supply.  Your body chemistry is less than it should be and your mental ability is decreased.  You probably do not even notice it or if you do, you usually relate it to “having an off day.”  Well no day should be an off day.  Our bodies were created and meant to work properly all the time.  If you want the most out of life then you want your mental faculties to be working their best, all the time or at least as much of the time as possible.  That can only happen if you are seeing your chiropractor on a regular basis so that subluxations can be corrected before the cumulative affects of them rob you of your mental alertness.  Sure you are going to have off days because of wrong choices you make like staying up too late, lowering your body’s resistance, or not eating well, but that is all the more reason to make sure that your mental alertness on the job, in the car and in relating to people is not impaired by vertebral subluxation.



Our bodies were created and meant to work properly all the time.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

What Is Your Level Of Thinking?

Little Johnny
Little Johnny was born in the hospital.  His mother was given medications to “assist” her in the process.  The drugs slowed her contractions and as a result, it was recommended by the experts that a Caesarian be performed as to not risk the damage that a protracted delivery may cause.  The motions around Johnny’s mother became frantic and after cutting her open they grabbed Little Johnny’s neck and twisted and pulled.  There was great concern in getting him out.  There was little concern about the excess physical, chemical, and emotional stresses produced by the process.
When Little Johnny was an infant, he “caught” a cold.  The people who loved and cared about him the most put a medication formula in his bottle and smiled as he drank it, because they felt assured that he would now get  better.
At five years old, Little Johnny fell off his bike, scraped his arm and “twisted” his neck.  The people who loved and care about him the most, his parents, cleaned his wounds and gave him two St. Joseph’s aspirin.  They smiled warmly and explained to him that now he would be fine and that the pain in his neck would be made better by the aspirin.
At nine years of age, Little Johnny was playing little league football.  Going through the line, he took a hard hit to the helmet.  He came off the field complaining of neck pain.  The next morning, he woke up with a scratchy throat and congestion, his neck still sore.  The parents left reassured because now he was old enough for Junior Tylenol.  How wonderful, they thought, that their boy was getting old enough to have more medications available for use when necessary.  The people who loved and care about him the most gave him the drugs, feeling good because their fears were laid to rest as they helped their boy.
At 12 years of age, that same sore throat congestion came back, however this time the Junior Tylenol didn’t work.  Johnny’s symptoms persisted.  So now the people who loved and cared for Johnny the most took him to the person they respected the most in such matters, the guy or gal in the white coat, the pediatrician.  The pediatrician did a very thorough evaluation of Johnny, talked to his parents, and then gave Johnny drugs.
Johnny’s experience for his entire life has been when he felt bad, the people who loved and cared about him the most gave him drugs.  And the people who we respect the most as having the greatest amount of knowledge in these matters have him drugs.
Now Johnny is 16 years old and in high school.  He doesn’t make the basketball team and the girl he likes rejects him.  He feels bad.  What has been his training and programming his entire life?  And we can’t understand why the youth of your nation take drugs when we’ve programmed them to do it their entire lives.  The average 18 year old in the USA has seen 20,000 hours of drug commercials!  Image the contradictions we feed our children as they are taught to “just say no” to drugs while we feed drugs to them in record proportions.  We are not winning the drug war in this country, nor shall we as long as the culture persists in such a way.  To paraphrase Einstein, “You cannot resolve problems with the same level of thinking that existed when the problem was created.”  We have a problem.  What is your level of thinking?