“Don’t adjustments make the spine ‘too loose’?”
“Doesn’t repetitive ‘cracking’ of my joints make them unstable and lead to arthritis?”
“I always heard that cracking your knuckles was bad…why is cracking your spine good?”
The list of these types of questions is long, but they are important questions. The answer to all of these questions lies in an understanding of exactly what happens during an adjustment.
It’s important to understand that there is no randomness to an adjustment. There is always analysis, assessment, correlation, planning, and execution involved.
In other words, as an engineer, it is my responsibility to restore normal mechanics to the joints of your body. If that is my responsibility, then I need a method to analyze and assess what is normal and what is abnormal. Once I find abnormal posture or movement (at a joint level or in global motion patterns), I must have a method of correlating that abnormal movement to the muscles attached to the area and the nerves affected by the dysfunction. Then I must develop a plan to correct the abnormal motion in the most efficient and least invasive way. Then I must execute my plan properly and re-assess to ensure I’ve done my job. This process happens on every office visit with every patient.
Adjustments are only ever done to improperly moving joints. Joints that don’t have their full range of normal motion. Adjustments are never done to properly moving joints that already have their full, balanced, normal range of motion. Adjustments restore normal from abnormal. This is how adjustments differ from randomly “cracking” knuckles. When someone cracks their knuckles, they are taking normal joints and pushing them past their normal limits of motion to get them to cavitate, or “crack.” This movement past normal end range causes the capsule (the retaining ligaments around the joint) to stretch over time. A stretched out capsule causes sloppy joint movement over time, a condition known as hypermobility. Hypermobile joints wear out faster, causing early arthritis and weak, painful movement in those joints.
So, the real answer to the original question is that adjustments restore normal motion and position to spinal joints, allowing both the spine and the nerves it protects to function in a healthy, balanced way. The joints don’t get looser. In fact, they become better at doing the job they were designed to do. The people you know who regularly visit their chiropractor aren’t crazy. They’re just used to a healthier, more balanced function in their body. The only thing you will get addicted to is not putting up with the dysfunction of your nervous system and the symptoms that come along with it!
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