Archive for February, 2010
Some Thoughts from the ER
I sit here in the Emergency room waiting for a doctor for my wife. It appears that she’s having a severe bout of appendicitis or an ovarian cyst rupture. Persistent, worsening pain in her right, lower quadrant, pain that comes in waves. Touching her abdomen sends her through the roof. She’s cursing at me like a sailor.
How ironic is this? Me, one who is extremely critical of the medical system is knee deep in it—and turning to it for help.
Medicine’s genius is in FIRST Aid. Emergency care to prevent impending doom is where the magic of the profession is.
People come from all walks of life in to see me, and a lot of them are in acute care… sometimes even emergency situations… A great majority of them, we as chiropractors help them along, make them feel better, teach them to live in better ways, and sometimes miraculously after an adjustment, or a series of adjustments, they feel like a new person.
But in this case, I feel powerless. My wife, now resting, was screaming, writhing in pain, so I have no choice but to turn to the First Aid experts to do what their major strength is—help prevent impending doom. And I humbly step aside for them to work their magic. This is likely going to be a surgical case. Ironic that I make my living provide the means for my patients to avoid drugs surgery at all costs.
As I sit here in the Emergency unit, I’m surrounded by people who are at their worst. As my wife is now high on morphine, she’s fast asleep, and I’m constantly interrupted by beeps and coughs and sounds of vomiting and moaning patients. The staff here appear to be miserable. I don’t blame them. The long hours, the suffering they are surrounded with. Our environment does have a great deal to do with our pain.
From my research, I know statistically that 75-90% of all problems that people are in here for are lifestyle related. These are conditions related to how we eat, how we move, and how we think. The major killers? Diabetes, Heart Disease, Cancer, and Adverse Reactions to Medications.
I can’t help but think of how that means that about 8 out of every 10 people who are in here could have prevented their need for being here. What’s worse is that the majority of people who are around me are already on copious amounts of medication—I overhear them listing all the medications they are on.
Our doctor’s offices are jam packed every day because people aren’t taught the why’s and how’s of what keeps them healthy and what makes them sick. That’s because the system isn’t equipped for that. While there are many places to go to get a diagnosis and a treatment, there aren’t too many places that will teach you why you got there in the first place and what role YOU have to play in getting yourself out. That is too time consuming, and it’s not very profitable for the drug industry.
Doing research, attending health conferences, changing my own lifestyle habits… I was made aware that the only way our healthcare system can survive is to have LESS SICK PEOPLE.
This, fortunately, is not in the hands of the sickness care “health care” system. It is entirely in your hands. It is in the choices that we make every single day in how we eat, move, and think that will determine if you will be dependent on the system (drugs and surgery) or you will leave the system to what it is really there for: First Aid.
My focus has now changed from “treating symptoms” to “teaching and helping the individual create health.” Using the logic of turning on light to remove darkness instead of focusing on the dark, I teach classes now in my office about lifestyle—how to eat, how to move, and how to even think– because people still live under the illusion that their genes control their health. Even though it’s now been proven in science that your genes are not your destiny (as was the “Central Dogma” of Medicine). It’s now undisputable in the literature. Your environment, (how you eat, move, and think), not your genes, determine how your body expresses health or disease.
Let me give you an example: When you are under any stressor, from family, to work, to even dietary stressors like too much processed foods; your body goes through a “fight or flight” response, liberating a great deal of energy triggered by the lower brain into an emergency protective mode. Like a tiger chasing a gazelle, the only thing on the mind is survival for both lion and gazelle for that temporary time—just until the chase is over, and the gazelle returns to safety.
The gazelle, 20 minutes later, returns to grazing, and the tiger returns and rests shortly after, but we humans are so intelligent that we have the ability to re-live that lion attack
over and over again, day after day, month after month, year after year, decade after decade.
Now, we don’t have to worry too often about being chased down by a tiger here these days—unless you’re on a safari… But we are programmed to react exactly the same for our own version of tiger attacks—Family stress, work stress, lack of feeling of control of our environment, insecurity, divorce, financial pressures, low self esteem, resentment, anger, victimhood.
We re-live these emotions and repetitively wire our nervous systems with this damaging biochemistry, year after year, and our health falls apart—and we run to the doctor for an answer. We line up in hospitals and in doctor’s offices. And we end up spending more and more money, year after year. We’re reaching a breaking point, and simply can not sustain what we’ve created. We call them chronic “medical conditions”, it’s but I can show you beyond the shadow of a doubt that 75-90% are simply the body making a

normal response to our lifestyle and thoughts. And the system is designed in such a way that the only solution is in the form of a test, a pill or a knife, which has been proven to do a little to deal with the symptoms, and NOTHING to deal with the cause.
So what’s the solution to our long hospital waits (it’s now been 6 hours already and we haven’t seen a doctor—let’s hope her Appendix doesn’t rupture in the meantime–if it’s appendicitis)? Simple: LESS SICK PEOPLE. And that, my friends, is not in the hands of a doctor. It’s in your hands. Everyone knows they should drink less alcohol, stop smoking, exercise more, eat more veggies, control our stress, etc. But the problem with our system is that it doesn’t teach us the why or the how.
When you realize that you simply can’t express your health potential without exercise, and you are taught how to slowly incorporate it in your sedentary life, change becomes easy.
When you realize the processed foods we are eating are toxic, and how our cells respond to the deficiency of proper nutrients in our fast-food diets, and then we are shown how to overcome our food cravings, change becomes easy and the pounds start to fall off.
When you realize that just as your thoughts have the capacity to make you sick, your thoughts also have the capacity to help make you well—once you’re shown how to get out of survival mode and into creating the life you want, change becomes easy.
Sitting and talking endlessly about our problems re-creates the emotions, biochemistry, and physical illness patterns. When we are taught how to overcome our fears, guilts, anxieties, and depressive patterns of thinking with some simple tools, we can heal the mind (and then the body) from all sorts of dis-eases. Instead of blaming our current misery on what happened weeks to decades ago, we can learn to be grateful for what we have NOW. And our biochemistry begins to change.
Far less costly on the system and far more effective than anything the system could offer, If these lifestyle changes could be bottled and sold in pill form, it would be the next blockbuster drug. These changes have been shown to cure diabetes, reverse heart disease, and heal cancer.
But they’re not available in pill form. They’re choices that require empowering yourself rather than being a victim to your environment or heredity. A difficult choice for most of us, but without taking action personally on this STARTING TODAY, our collective physical, mental, and financial health has ZERO chance of survival. It’s that serious.
It’s the reason why I’m dedicating my life to teaching how to create wellness and avoid the use of drugs or surgery, rather than treat disease. The biggest challenge my patients face is not how to change– It’s making the time to do it. The hopeless cases are all the ones who “never seem to have the time”. Even though they have all the resources I may offer at their disposal, from wellness chiropractic spinal care, to exercises, to attending classes on posture and stress: “I’m just too busy.” And then eventually their body seems to force them to make the time. And I watch them deteriorate year after year. So it fuels my passion to teach. “Doctor” in Latin doesn’t mean “pill pusher.” It means “Teacher”.
Side note: It’s now 2 in the morning, and the doctor has just come in and narrowed it down to 3 possibilities: Kidney stone, or Appendicitis, or Ovarian Cyst Rupture. Since CT scans have high levels of radiation, we’ve elected to do an Ultrasound in the morning. Took us 8 hours to get to this conclusion—and now we have to wait another 7 hours for another test to determine the next course of action. I’m staying with her in the hospital and I write this amidst the moans and screams of other suffering people. My heart goes out to them because I know many of their problems are preventable if they only took the time to learn how. Here’s a list of how most of them could have avoided being here in the first place:
1) If you want to be more alive than dead, eat foods that are more alive than dead. Find resources to teach you strategies how to overcome your food addictions.
2) When you wake up in the morning, don’t get out of bed without first thinking about all the things that you are grateful for, and what you would love to create in your day. If you don’t take time to do this, your day will be filled with things you will be ungrateful for. Guaranteed. Re-program healthy brain/body biochemistry by THINKING WELL—Think better than how you feel. Learn strategies to deal with the inevitable adversities of relationships and of life. Everything begins with a thought.
3) Keep your spine moving with exercise. 50% of all body movement nerve pathways are in the spinal joints and if it doesn’t move sufficiently, or it gets stuck, you could be in a great deal of trouble. See your chiropractor regularly to keep it moving properly.
4) Balance your movement and rest. If you don’t get enough movement and exercise in your day, or you don’t get enough sleep—your cells become resistant to insulin—which has been shown to be the underlying root cause of all chronic degenerative illness—diabetes, cancer, heart disease, aging, osteoporosis, even mental disorders like Alzheimer’s and depression.
The hospital is a horrible place to be, but thank God it’s there in emergency cases like the one Maria finds herself in right now. Doctors and nurses can be heroes. But when we turn to doctors and nurses to treat diseases caused by poor lifestyle choices—we are playing with fire, and it’s a game we can’t win. I’ve dedicated my life to teaching strategies on how to dramatically reduce our need to ever play.
P.S. Turned out to be a ruptured ovarian cyst, and Maria is home recovering beautifully. We elected for no surgery, and it turned out to be the right decision. Many thanks to the doctors and nurses and Paramedics at Burnaby Hospital, and to our friends and family for their support.
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