On the Energetic Nature of Chiropractic Care
Sunday, July 11, 2010 at 4:05PM 
After twenty years of service to my fellow humans in the care of their spines and neuromusculoskeletal systems, a theory once old has become new. By that I mean that in Chiropractic we have always had the concept of the subluxation. A subluxation, in chiropractic terminology, is the misalignment of two adjacent vertebrae blocking the flow of innate energy down the nerve. The theory had the duality of the physical (bone, muscle, nerve) interacting with the energetic, i.e. flow of innate energy in the nervous system. In an attempt to become more “medical” as a result of much heavy criticism from the medical/pharmaceutical industry, chiropractic has turned away from the energetic approach of the subluxation, to a more empirical one, or one that can be understood by the medical community. Furthering the attempt to appease the medical community, terminology has changed as adjustment has become manipulation and subluxation has become misalignment. Many chiropractors have thus turned to a more conservative orthopedic model of spinal care. While this model is effective it can be limiting. The essential question of why the results seem to be more than expected is not answered. In fact, the lesion called the subluxation has never been found on a x-ray. Measuring systems can be used to find bone misalignment, pathological conditions can be illustrated, but the flow or lack of flow of innate energy cannot be demonstrated with the current level of technology. It requires the human touch.
In opposition to the more orthopedic type of care that is highly dependent on the use of x-ray to find the problem, there is a re-emergence of the traditional skills of palpation (the use of the hands) in feeling neuromusculosketal problems and energetic anomalies. Newer methods of muscle challenge and kinesiology have given the doctor additional methods to detect the subluxation. As we enter the new millenium a re-emergence in the skills of the healer has begun to take its place along side of the skills of the doctor. As a society we are spending millions of dollars a year on “alternative” health care. We are starting to realize that putting more emphasis on staying healthy is better than getting sick, then trying to get well. The old saying, “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure,” comes to mind.

