Thursday, September 13, 2007

We Get letters

I think we should read and discuss more philosophy and chiropractic history with our patients in the clinic. After reading Simon Senzon’s book,The Secret History of Chiropractic / D.D. Palmer’s Spiritual Writings and the last Tuesdays talks with Richard I really understand that it so much more in chiropractic that I have not been taught in school and that me, we and the public and our colleagues need to know. I forward some thoughts from Simon Senzon published in Chiropractic Today 2006.

What I Wish I Had Learned In Chiropractic College By Simon A. Senzon, M.A., D.C.When I think back to chiropractic school, I have many fond memories. We planned to take on the world with our healing hands—to heal the world one spine at a time was our mission. When I think about what I could have learned more of, the obvious things certainly come to mind: more business, more strategic planning and even accounting would have been helpful. Yet, those things are not what I think of in terms of that grand mission.Don’t get me wrong; more entrepreneurial training would have been a great boon. But when it comes to changing the world, four things come to mind. They all come down to greater tools to communicate chiropractic to the world and especially to other chiropractors—the profession, the ones that were less fortunate in their education or not open to the true miracle of chiropractic, as espoused by B.J. and D.D. Palmer. As far as I am concerned, if these four things were taught to even a few hundred chiropractic students, the entire profession would be transformed and that mission above would be closer than ever. What I wish I had learned: to more fully understand the holistic depth and transformational power of the chiropractic adjustment on the human organism; to be able to articulate the intricate relationship of my finite consciousness to the infinite intelligence that pervades the universe; the history of chiropractic and how it emerged in our culture; and finally an integrative framework that would put all of these things together in a way that I could explain them to the world, to the profession, to my patients, and also apply this to how I operate my practice. As B.J. might have said, “Simple enuf!”It was quite lucky for me, actually, that I didn’t learn all of those things. I was luckier still that I had such wonderful teachers in my pre-chiropractic studies in history and philosophy. I consider this lucky because I have been able to spend the last 10 years filling in the gaps and searching out the answers to these questions, finding the things that I wish I had learned in chiropractic college. This is so important because of the conflicts in the profession today. I needed to know how to best address the core issues involved, the actual principles. a complicated pastThere is a revisionist trend in the history of chiropractic today, which claims that the philosophy of chiropractic was only developed to win legal battles. And now that the profession is established, the philosophy should be abandoned. This trend is partially true; the philosophy was indeed used to legalize chiropractic. The first landmark court case to establish chiropractic’s legitimacy was in 1907, Wisconsin vs. Morikubo. In the case it was shown that chiropractic had a distinct philosophy. After this case, B.J. Palmer had the faculty grant him a Ph.C., he re-titled his 1906 book to include philosophy in the title, and then in 1910 D.D. Palmer’s book was published and it, too, addressed philosophy. According to this revisionist approach to history, the philosophy of chiropractic was a legal ploy. Chiropractic became a distinct profession in the courts because it had a distinct philosophy and approach to health. The revisionists would have us believe the surface only. The fact is, there were about 3,300 court cases against chiropractors won on these grounds. B.J. was an expert witness in many of the trials. Are we to leave it at that or go deeper? I wish chiropractic school had prepared me to discuss these questions. This revisionist argument implies that D.D. Palmer used his final years to create a fictitious philosophical legal defense (that, by the way, was a clear descendent from his Mesmeric, and Spiritualist roots). Are we also to believe that his son B.J. was to spend the next 54 years espousing and evolving a philosophical system of life, health and spirit just for legal reasons? By simply understanding what Palmer was reading in the 1880s and how similar those writings were to the philosophy that he eventually wrote down in 1910, the whole revisionist argument falls apart. I suggest that Palmer used this new legal strategy as an excuse to finally write down his philosophy, a philosophy that he had held for many years prior to 1907. But it doesn’t end there. We are still left with the thorny questions of the philosophy itself; can you scientifically prove innate intelligence, or the more difficult components, dealing with spirituality, or rather, awakening to the universal intelligence from within as it relates to the chiropractic adjustment? Both of these components are linked in the Palmers’ writings, and no advances to the philosophy of chiropractic in the last 40 years can change that. And that is at the heart of the criticisms of chiropractic’s vital roots. These same critics don’t only challenge the history, but the philosophy, the principles—all of it.Communicating D.D.’s DiscoveryWhat else could I have learned in chiropractic school that would give me the tools to meet these challenges head-on? I would like to focus on the history of chiropractic and its context as this is vitally important to all the others as well as the revisionist argument. As most chiropractors know, D.D. Palmer was a magnetic healer for eight years prior to the development of chiropractic. Besides his scientific studies, he studied books on magnetic healing and spiritualism for 30 years prior to the publication of his first book. He wanted to know how to help the sick body to be healthy, and also how to assist humanity to develop new levels of spiritual depth—levels that would carry over beyond death itself. He wanted to know why one person was healthy and another ailing. None of his previous studies taught him this. It was only with his discovery of chiropractic that it became apparent. The fact that Palmer’s discovery grew out of the fertile American culture is relevant for us today. His thoughts, ideas and studies were linked to the ideas of his time and ideas, which had their roots in history and philosophy. Palmer’s discovery of chiropractic has been chronicled in several scholarly books on the history of religion and healing. In those books the links to nature religion in America, Mesmerism and Spiritualism are evident as these were Palmer’s philosophical and practical roots. Rather than some made-up legal defense, the philosophy of chiropractic was the product of a long lineage in Western and more specifically American history. I wish I had learned all of this. Learning these things would have better prepared me to address Palmer’s critics today. I would also be better able to communicate the richness of chiropractic to my patients and the world.Innate Intelligence, the Adjustment and Spiritual AwakeningBy focusing only on the physical processes that keep the body organized and optimally in a state of maximum health, a natural link is made to several important scientific theories of the 20th century. Alongside chiropractic’s growth and development, theories and models in biology have grown. Starting with holism and organicism in the 1920s, systems theory and cybernetics in the 1940s, open systems, dynamical systems and chaotic systems in the 1970s, complex systems in the 1990s, and currently nonequilibrium thermodynamic systems, there are literally over a dozen models of living organism that describe the inherent rules of self-organization and dynamic health. Chiropractic is a fertile research ground to test many of these theories. Could we show that the chiropractic adjustment assists the organism to self-organize with greater energy efficiency? Express health more dynamically? I should hope so.As to the relationship between the chiropractic adjustment and spiritual awareness, we cannot stay silent. The writings of B.J. Palmer sit waiting to be understood and interpreted for what they were—a precursor to the human potential movement, a foreshadow of the explanations of self-actualizing human beings, and a push into the mystical realms touched upon by the greatest sages the world has known. B.J.’s explanation of the relationship between the expression of health, the contact of the super-conscious, and the relationship to the universal oneness should really be viewed as some of the greatest spiritual writings of the last century. If only I studied these writings in chiropractic school and compared them to the first humanistic and transpersonal psychologists of the 1960s, to the originators of the human potential movement, or to the research into the development of consciousness. There is an abundance of research today that explores these higher reaches of human nature that Palmer described. If only we could rise to make these connections rather than shirk our historical origins. The obvious spiritual depth that is each person’s birthright can and should be linked to the chiropractic adjustment, but without the proper context, research and reference, it is a very difficult question to explore.And so, if I had learned these things, I would have applied them to practice from day one. All of my communications with patients, colleagues and the world, would have been different. My interactions with patients would have been transformed. Certainly my technique would be understood through the latest advances in theoretical biology. A more solid basis for history, philosophy and science would become part of the culture and society of chiropractic. New dialogues with critics and revisionists would emerge, new depth of understanding would unfold. My life would certainly be richer and so would each person that I touch. Healing the world, one spine at a time would be one chiropractor closer.

Suggested Reading- “Spiral Dynamics” by Don Beck and Christopher Cowan (Blackwell Publishing Limited, 2005)- “Integral Spirituality” by Ken Wilbur (Shambhala, 2006)- “Shadow Culture: Psychology and Spirituality in America” by Eugene Taylor (Counterpoint Press, 1999)- “The Law of Life” by B.J. Palmer (1957)- “The Known Man” by B.J. Palmer (1936)

Editor’s Notes:
I would like to add to the list
The “Celestine Prophecy” and “The Tenth Insight” by James Redfield
Also “Beyond Belief” by Elaine Pagels

Dr. Ric Wiegand Responds

Cat plays furry grim reaper at nursing home - Editor’s Notes: Dr. Wiegand, would you like to comment on this? I have often wondered what a dog or cat’s world actually looks like. I keep thinking about Jordie on “Star Trek” (Ok, Ok I’m trekkie!!!!) and wonder what his sensor visor allow him to see. Do you realize that all we really “see” is frequencies! That these frequencies are then transmitted to our visual cortex for interpretation and because of this we see objects, colors and shapes. So now I wonder what Oscar is seeing, but more than that, I wonder why we have lost so much of our ability to see? Could it be that we have learned to trust our 5 senses at the expense of other senses? Things that make me go - Hummmm!
Hi Richard,
You are on the mark! The neural system typically engages in ‘competitive inhibition’ when it processes information. Over- focus/ dependence on ‘standard’ 5 sense responses will inhibit awareness of subtler (subcortical) responses, which are produced by the neural system when it detects ‘ultra-weak’ stimuli (i.e., ultra-weak changes in a patient’s physiology).
Some recent, and exciting, research along these lines involves Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation/ TMS. TMS can be used to temporarily ‘turn-off’ selected brain processes. In one study TMS was applied to the occipital cortex region in order to temporarily ‘knock-out’ conscious vision. Researchers discovered that when conscious vision is turned-off, the human neural system will utilize a secondary, more primitive method of processing visual stimuli. This primal form of vision is mediated via sub-cortical structures and it does not generate colors or shapes when it detects visual stimuli. However, this type of visual processing does produce responses that enable a person to ‘sense’, and react to, various visual stimuli – even though the person cannot consciously see the visual stimuli they are responding to!
Researchers concluded that this primitive form of vision operates buried beneath the ‘flashier’ (my words) stream of conscious visual sensations. Furthermore, awareness of this primitive form of vision and the responses it produces, is inhibited by selective focus on ‘standard’ visual sensations that are generated by higher-level cortical structures
The reason this data has ‘real-life’ significance is that the human neural system customarily produces similar subcortical responses when it detects extremely weak stimuli - outside the ‘normal’ range of conscious perception. Although institutions have not caught on to this yet, most individuals can be quickly (re)trained to become aware of important subcortical responses. This expanded range of awareness enables a practitioner to connect with a patient/ client in an ‘innate to innate’ manner that cannot be achieved through ‘standard’ 5-sense perception alone.
Enjoy! Ric Wiegand
Editor’s Notes: Thanks Rick, I know CEO has been keeping you on the road first in Europe and now Australia, so once again thanks for taking the time to respond.

Ad Summum Nitamur
– (So far only two DCs have figured this out – Dr. Scott White and Dr. Justin Peatling! They get the sharpest tack award!)

Health Scare of the Week!

The Dangers of Junk Sleep!
Just as there are junk foods and junk tele­vision programs, there's a kind of sleep called 'junk sleep." and it's damaging our teenagers' healthy says the British Sleep Council. Many adolescents are so hyper-stimulated by the Web, iPods, video games, and other electronic pastimes that they don't want to go to bed. Deprived of proper sleep, they doze off while still con­nected to their electronic inputs. Instead of getting the recommended eight or nine hours of solid sleep In darkened rooms, 30 percent of kids 12 to 16 are getting between four and seven hours in rooms full of light from screens, electronic noises, and music, depriving them of the deepest, most restorative sleep cycles. "It's an incredibly worrying trend/' Dr. Chris Idzikowski tells Scientific American. This kind of junk sleep, he says, does not "feed the brain with the rest it needs to perform properly at school."
THE WEEK September -14,2007

Editor
And we wonder why we are moving back the start time for schools or that we are seeing an increase in ADD patterns!
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Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Responses to the Palmer Utube Video

Talk about a major Sub-Lux-A-Tion. The proverbial cranio-rectal a mostlethal form of interference and all too common in this world of ours. Canonly be rectified, no pun intended, by the one way amen BJ coal shovel inthe buttock method of removal.

Had Dr. Kurt Wood in Tri 2 at NWCC...not much has changed with him...I laughed my head off even though its quite sad...but then again, that's what Northwestern has been for a few decades...who wrote the commentary?

Phew, that was close. Our son might have actually gone to the Alma Mater. "There is nothing like the Palmer College education, adjustments and philosophy!"

I imagine a small tornado of BJ's ashes is occurring right about now. How sad.

Wow!!! We've sure come a long way baby!!

I will no longer recomend Palmer to prospective student. I’m PCC class 993 Graduate. Guy would never had let this happen. Sorry have to go clean up the vomit on the floor.

I have already seen it, and it makes me sick. "Truth crushed to earth shall rise again.'

thanks for sharing. Loved the commentary. Soooooooo sad.

Utube Video on Palmer College

Get ready this isn't pretty but it is what many have been warning you about for years.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=Sbr3Mr6FS2I I don't know who did the commentary in the presentation but the material speaks loudly and clearly with regard to the focus at Palmer College today. Palmer isn’t alone in this march to medicine as many other colleges are moving in this direction.
Alternatives -
I was very impressed with the New Zealand Chiropractic College after my visit there in May. Check it out if you are sending a student for a “Chiropractic” education.
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