WHY I PRACTICE THIS WAY

For much of my life, I lived with health problems that did not fully resolve. I was not searching for a philosophy. I was searching for relief. I tried the approaches that clearly made sense. When they failed to produce lasting change, I branched into others because I needed something that worked.

For decades, I lived with a constant headache — broken only three times for less than a day each. I also dealt with chest pain, restless legs, digestive disturbance, disrupted sleep, neck and shoulder pain, and low back pain. I functioned, but the symptoms were exhausting.

I entered graduate-level training in physical therapy and later pursued nursing. In each environment, I saw patients improve within the scope of what was being treated.

Over time, a pattern became clear. Every discipline I encountered was effective — but limited. Each system helped many people, but none addressed most of my symptoms.

I began to view myself as a case study. If I could find durable change in a case as persistent as mine, what I discovered would likely help others who were not improving elsewhere.

My low back case illustrates this clearly. The disc itself was part of the issue, but deeper visceral tension related to the kidney was also contributing. When both layers were addressed, movement felt mechanically different — not just quieter, but stable.

I have completed the full curriculum within my primary disciplines and continue to attend updates and refinements. I do not assume every problem can be solved, but I do not stop evaluating prematurely.

Chronic problems are complex. They are also often more changeable than people assume. My role is to evaluate carefully, work precisely, and help determine what is realistically possible in your case.