What about Fibromyalgia, arthritis and other
so-called diseases and Advanced BioStructural Correction?
Many people think Fibromyalgia is a mystery.
It is not. First is to understand that doctors have a habit
of naming effects they observe on bodies in Latin and then
calling the name of the observations a "disease".
It is silly because it does not note a cause of the effects
and does not lead to being able to handle or correct what
is causing the effects.
Fibromyalgia and arthritis are two good examples. Fibro-
is Latin for fibers. -myo is Latin for muscles. -algia is
Latin for pain. When someone says you have Fibromyalgia all
they are saying is that your muscle fibers are painful to
you. They might as well call it "muscle pains" in
English. The question is WHY DO YOUR MUSCLES HURT?
If you think chemically as medical docs do, it is a big mystery
(this is not to put down medicine in general the discoveries
of what antibiotics could do changed more things on Earth
than you might imagine). But not everything is chemistry.
One of the things that happen to bodies is that they get
parts stuck in positions they cannot get them out of. An example
is in the spine. If you look at the anatomy of the body (how
the body is put together), you will notice that muscles attach
to bones and pull on them. That might seem elementary but
some people have the idea that muscles can push -- they cannot.
Muscles only pull. The way you seem to push is by pulling
on a bone designed as a lever. An example is the arm. The
way you put your arm out in front of your body is to pull
on the upper arm at the shoulder (which raises it out from
your body) and then you pull on the back of your elbow (which
straightens the arm).
The reason I bring this point is up to explain how bones
in your spine (spinal bones = vertebrae -- vert-a-bray) move
out of position in a direction your body cannot correct on
its own. This is covered more completely in the article How
your body untwists through old injuries (if treated properly).
but briefly here. If you check the muscle attachments on your
vertebrae (spinal bones) you will find you have muscles that
attach from the sides of the vertebrae to the pelvis and ribs
which are more to the side of the body than the vertebrae.
This means that if a vertebra moves out of position to the
side the muscles from the other side can pull it back into
place. So a vertebra moving out of place sideways is no big
deal -- your body can self-correct that.
If you check the front of the vertebrae, you have muscles
that attach from the front of the vertebrae to something in
front of the vertebrae. They go from the vertebrae to the
front of the pelvis and from the vertebrae to the front of
the rib cage. So, if a vertebra displaces backwards it is
no big deal, your body has muscles that can pull forward and
reposition it.
If a vertebra in the spine slips out of place in the forward
direction you have no muscle or muscles that can pull it backward.
You can lean your body backward -- and have to, or you will
fall over. But, if a vertebra gets stuck forward, there is
no way your body can pull it backward to reposition it. This
is THE thing that leads to many problems in your body.

There are no muscles that pull in the direction
of the arrows shown as A.
What does happen is shown below:

This is the way the muscles attach......

.....and this is what happens when the muscles pull.
It is not that the vertebra get pulled backward it is that
they are tilted or rotated backward.
The result is your body leans backward from that point up
and has to work to keep its balance.
You will notice that even in that last picture the middle
vertebra is still stuck forward though the body is tilted
backward and stays upright. It is not well balanced with one
vertebra tilting one way and others tilting another way, but
it is upright.
This is a simplified version of what happens
in your body BUT, it happens every time you get a vertebra
pushed out of place forward. This may seem silly but vertebrae
are pretty hard to move forward enough to get stuck there.
Even if it happens, sometimes life will push them backward.
If you fall on your chest the ground can hit the ribs and
push the vertebrae backward and other things. For the most
part though, your body can twist and compensate to keep you
upright. You then have an injury-compensation complex that
you lock in.
Imagine getting one thing stuck forward when you are a little
kid who is not so strong. Your body twists to keep from falling
over from that moment on. Just imagine having 20 or thirty
of these one on top of the other. It is no wonder bodies are
so twisted up and so many people complain.
If you are strong muscled you can use your muscles to better
hold you upright but if not your muscles get tired and begin
to spasm: Muscles in spasm for long periods hurt = painful
muscle fibers = Fibromyalgia.
If your body is able to tilt and twist so most of the mechanical
stress is on the bones and not on the muscles, the extra mechanical
stress begins to wear the bones at the joints and you get
inflamed and degenerating joints which can be painful or not
depending upon how the body shifts and compensates. ARTHR-
= joint, -ITIS = inflamed there you have the basis for ARTHRITIS
which is otherwise known as degenerative joint disease.
It is not a disease. It is an effect of the body not being
able to self-correct certain misaligned bones -- actually
when it is that bad you can bet it is many sets of misaligned
bone-compensation complexes.
Can it be that simple? Yes. Why has nothing worked to correct
this before? Those are all answered here. See the testimonial
(one of thousands from Advanced BioStructural Correction
practitioners around the world.
As the article How your body untwists through old injuries
(if treated properly) shows you and explains how, when you
get treated properly, your body untwists backward through
your sets of old injury-compensation complexes and then heals.
One patient treated by an associate of mine who had improved
immediately, suddenly noticed she was getting a bad pain in
her side. It took about a week for her body to untwist though
it. One day she grabbed me in the hall told me that she remembered
when she first had that pain. Her dad used to pull her by
the arm when she was little and she remembered on time when
he pulled and it hurt.
The reason the woman was so excited was that she had also
had asthma since she was in about 5th grade -- just after
the time her dad pulled on her arm -- and it just disappeared
over after the last visit when she had her
Advanced BioStructural
Correction. She was suddenly able to breathe fully and
had no congestion whatsoever.
Her asthma was from a mechanical problem with her ribs.
Stories like that are common. Here is one from a patient
of chiropractor Dr. Chari Markos in Shoreline WA.
Dear Dr. Jutkowitz,
This letter is to attest to the
Advanced BioStructural Correction.
I am 58 years-old and have had Fibromyalgia Syndrome since
childhood. In my 20's I would have to rest during lunch and
was
I have sought and used many therapies and remedies over the
years, even psychotherapy because they told me it was all
in my head!
At the time I started with Dr. Markos I had been getting
traditional
After only a few weeks of the
Advanced BioStructural Correction
treatments with Dr. Markos, I experienced significant improvement
in posture (fast) and incredible improvement in the muscle
pain in my back, shoulders and neck. the spasms have worked
out and have not returned plus I have fewer and fewer headaches.
I became quite irritated when I had a headache the other day
and was quite surprised when I realized I had not had one
in quite some time. What I had constantly before is occasional
now.
This has not been a complete miracle cure (at least not so
far!).
I can say without reservation that
Advanced BioStructural
Correction is the only thing I have tried in my life
that has had significant results. I recommend it for anyone
with Fibromyalgia and hope your people with this disorder
receive this help much earlier and thus avoid the years of
pain I have had to endure.
Sincerely,

Anne McClure