MyAchyBack Potential Pain Solution: Chiropractic
Chiropractic Feature Article
Conservation of Energy
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Breakfast - Meal of Champions
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"Eat a good breakfast!" We've heard this advice all our lives. Most of us
completely ignore this ancient recommendation, rushing out the door every
morning to try to avoid being late yet again for school or work.
Others,
feeling guilty because they know they "should" be eating better, grab a frozen
pastry or gulp a glass of orange juice as they desperately try to find where
they tossed their keys last night.
In fact, eating a "good breakfast" is
a sound nutritional policy. Eating breakfast restores badly needed energy to
your depleted systems. Without breakfast, the needle on your internal gas tank
is on "empty". you're literally "running on fumes".
Breakfast renews
your resources. You have available energy to do the things that need to get
done. And, it's easy to put together a good breakfast. Two pieces of whole wheat
toast spread with peanut butter. Or a cup of yogurt mixed with a half-cup of
cottage cheese. Or a hard-boiled egg, a stick of string cheese, and a banana.
It's so simple to eat a healthy breakfast. It takes five minutes, tops.
You derive the benefits all day long. |
Renewability,
sustainability, and energy conservation are all over the news. Every newspaper's
front page and every television nightly news program features sustainability
daily. These are important issues, not only for the health of our planet, but
also for our physical health and well-being.
Our physical health depends
on how we maximize our available energy resources - how we use our body's stores
of energy, how we replace and renew that energy, and how we practice
conservation of our physical energy.
The interaction of all the elements
of human physiology is exactly analogous to the interaction of ecosystems in the
global ecology. It's an interesting and powerful comparison.
Energy
resources in our body consist of nutrients obtained from food, oxygen, and
stored energy in the form of sugars (glycogen) and fats. We gain energy by
eating good food and balancing our nutritional choices from all the major food
groups.
1,2 We gain energy by having efficient and well-toned
cardiovascular and respiratory systems. We gain energy by having strong muscles.
And we gain energy by getting sufficient rest.
How we use these
resources depends on instructions from the nerve system. Being able to use these
resources efficiently depends on the underlying tone of our cells and tissues,
which in turn depends on normal flow of information in the nerve system.
Hyperactive nerve systems and sluggish nerve systems - due to a variety
of causes - create imbalances up and down the line.
3 Systems perform
abnormally. Your metabolism slows down or speeds up. You don't digest your food
properly. You use too many or too little resources for a given task, and the job
doesn't get done properly. Muscles get tight. Joints get stiff. You have pain.
You get sick.
In these cases you're using more energy - due to
inefficient systems - than you're taking in. You're not sustaining your
resources, you're depleting them. Sooner or later, your entire system will begin
to breakdown. You have chronic pain, you're tired all the time, you toss and
turn when you should be sleeping, and you're irritable during the day.
Energy is not being renewed. Your body's out of balance, physically and
metaphorically.
Chiropractic treatment directly addresses these energy
concerns. Chiropractic care is all about energy management and conservation of
resources. Gentle chiropractic treatment focuses on restoring balance to nerve
systems, muscular systems, and physical structure. Energy begins to flow to
where it's needed most, chronic pain begins to resolve, and you begin to sleep
more restfully. You have a greater focus and get done the things you want to get
done during the day. Your relationships with family and friends are more
enjoyable, and life itself becomes much more fun.
Your chiropractor -
your energy conservation specialist - is an important natural resource for your
well-being and your family's well-being.
1Katona P,
Katona-Apte J: The interaction between nutrition and infection. Clin Infect Dis
46(10):1582-1588, 2008
2UNESCO, Regional Office for Education in
Asia and the Pacific: Population, nutrition, and health. Bull Unesco Reg Off
Educ Asia Pac 23:260-268, 1982
3D'Melllo R, Dickenson AH: Spinal
cord mechanisms of pain. Br J Anaesth April 15, 2008
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