Welcome Reception

We had a great open house on Saturday. The occasion was a reception held in Charlene’s honor to welcome her into our practice. As planned there were refreshments, door prizes and lots of fun. Despite a rainy day, many of our friends and practice members turned out bringing treats for all to share, gifts and most importantly their kindness and warm wishes for our continued success.
welcome update
Jim and Glenda Munch helped with set up, clean up and their support both before and after the event is deeply appreciated. Some of our supporters couldn’t be present but were there in spirit as well as with their gifts. These included David Graham from the Vitamin Depot, who donated a gift certificate as one of the door prizes; Donna Williams of DW Styles Hair Salon also donated a gift certificate. Pat Gann beautified the room with fresh flowers and she also made mini cupcakes and chocolate covered strawberries; Lynn Repasky brought a scrumptious cheese ball and crackers, and of course Kimberly Fabri’s pound cake was a big hit.
Several of our guests won the drawing for door prizes including Chuck Kewin, who won a gift certificate to DW Styles Hair Salon; Victoria Steward, the winner of a gift certificate to Vitamin Depot; Tammy Stowasser and Peggy Williams, each won gift certificates for chiropractic care; Grace Matson will receive a Kid Connections Magic Crystal Dinoland; Anne Ward’s number was drawn for a Make A Magic Kaleidoscope; Judi Potoff will get a set of Extreme stylus pens; Alex Stowasser’s name was drawn for a pair of Extreme ear buds; Dominick Noviello was the winner of an LED headlamp and flashlight set; and Chyloe Williams will receive a universal power bank.
Afterward, I asked Charlene how she felt about the event and she said, “I am very gratified for the support shown by so many people. It was a touching experience to receive such a special welcome.”

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Welcome Reception/Open House

The cavalry will be arriving soon. Oh, well not exactly the cavalry, but I’m excited to announce that the office will soon be functioning with more support and capacity because Charlene Brown will soon be joining us.

Charlene Brown, CT

Charlene Brown, CT

For the past 6 years she has been working on the Winthrop University campus for the Center for Educator Recruitment Retention and Advancement (CERRA). As a Pre-collegiate Specialist she has been busily coordinating much of what happened in the Teacher Cadet program. This highly regarded program is offered in nearly 200 high schools in South Carolina and has become the model for such programs in many other states. She also works with Pro-Team, another pre-collegiate program which is offered in many South Carolina middle schools. Both of these programs expose students to education as a career option and students taking the Teacher Cadet class even gain college credit for taking this high school course.
Beginning March 2nd Charlene will be here working to serve you better in our practice. Making a difference in the world isn’t anything new to her. In addition to bringing all of the experience and skills that she called upon at CERRA, she is now actually returning to her original career path. Charlene has a degree in Chiropractic Technology from Palmer College of Chiropractic, in Davenport, Iowa. The Palmer CT program prepares its graduates to function on many levels in a chiropractic practice including administrative, clinical, x-ray and patient education. In fact when we lived in Iowa she helped develop and work in the West Liberty Chiropractic Center, where we practiced for over 20 years before moving to South Carolina.
I look forward to having her here with us and I hope that you will help us welcome her at an open house reception here on Saturday, March 14th from 12 noon until 2:00 p.m. There will be free refreshments, door prizes and some fun, so please mark your calendar.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Love

February is a time of year when a lot of folk’s thoughts turn to love and many try to express it through St. Valentine’s wishes. valentines I’ve tried to look up the source of St. Valentine’s Day to better understand just how it came to be celebrated on the 14th of February. There are some conflicting explanations out there ranging from Christian martyrs to paganism, European folk traditions and ancient Greek mythology. There are also some places in the world where St. Valentine’s Day is frowned upon as being a “western tradition,” bringing with it unwanted cultural contamination. Whatever the source, here in North America and in much of the world it has become our modern-day opportunity to express love. Whether celebrated in poetry, delicious chocolates, or words expressed with a hug, it’s a great way to tell others that they mean a lot to us.
Pat Gann's miceEarlier this week Pat Gann, one of our most creative friends, brought in a plate of chocolate dipped cherry “mice” complete with chocolate kiss heads, almond ears and little white candy eyes.Pat Gann presenting miceYesterday afternoon while she was already running a myriad of other errands, Karen Gordon found time to drop by leaving us with a loaf of fresh baked bread still warm from the oven! Spontaneous acts of kindness like these say a lot and mean a lot. It really brightens up one’s day. It’s the same way for the person doing the giving – perhaps even more, so if you’re ever having a difficult day or feeling a bit down just do something like that for someone and it’s sure to make you feel better.
In that spirit our slogan for this week is, “Someone you love needs chiropractic.” someone you love We write our slogan for the week in English and Spanish on a little dry erase board in the adjusting room here. I speak Spanish, but it’s not my native tongue (I’m still learning). I always try to translate the slogan and sometimes it’s difficult to translate exactly what is meant into another language. But this time it was easy (Alguien que amas necesita quiropráctica) because love just isn’t a difficult idea to translate. I’m thankful for that, too.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Justice At Last

I’m thankful to reside and work in Rock Hill, South Carolina. We chose to live here after exploring numerous other options and determining that it was the right place at the right time. Time is important because every aspect of life is affected by it. Just imagine being in this same place a few hundred years ago. There would have been no great comforts in life, less personal security, no convenient transportation and few of the conveniences we have all come to expect every day. Change seems to be the only constant in life. Many things change quickly, yet like the small child anticipating growth, it seems so very slow when we are waiting for it.

At Gettysburg Lincoln reminded us that our country was, “…dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.” If he were speaking today he would have surely said, “…all men and women are created equal.” Turn the clock back a little further and we find that Jefferson originally wrote the passage in the Declaration of Independence prefaced with, “We hold these truths to be self-evident.” It’s also interesting to note that Jefferson’s original words were, “We hold these truths to be sacred and un-deniable…” Benjamin Franklin helped Jefferson with editing and that’s how it got changed to its final, famous form. As I think about the distinction between the two phrases it occurs to me that Franklin’s edit was probably smoother and more politically correct for the times, but in actuality I think that Jefferson got it right in the first place. The inherent equality of people is both sacred and un-deniable no matter how loudly or viciously any ideology or group tries to say otherwise.

Yesterday we saw the sacred and un-deniable truth play out in a Rock Hill courtroom when a Circuit Court judge declared the 1961 convictions of the “Friendship Nine” null and void. The young black men had been found guilty of trespassing for sitting at a segregated, “whites-only” lunch counter in Rock Hill. In vacating the conviction the judge called the evidence used against the Friendship Nine, “patently flawed and unjust.”

Clarence H. Graham

Clarence H. Graham

In the photo (left) see Clarence H. Graham, at the original site where he and other members of the Friendship 9 were arrested (photo by Megan Gielow and the NY Times).

Their incarceration also produced an historic turning point in the civil rights struggle when they refused to accept bail, introducing a new tactic, “Jail, No Bail.” The strategy caught on ultimately playing an important role in the movement.
One of the most important parts of yesterday’s event was hearing the prosecutor not only apologize, but then go on to thank the Friendship Nine on behalf of the State of South Carolina. There may be those who say that justice delayed is justice denied, and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. repeated that basic principle in his famous Letter from Birmingham Jail, but I’m also reminded of the words of Mahatma Gandhi, whose influence on King’s non-violent approach is well-known, “It’s the action, not the fruit of the action, that’s important. You have to do the right thing. It may not be in your power, may not be in your time, that there’ll be any fruit. But that doesn’t mean you stop doing the right thing. You may never know what results come from your action. But if you do nothing, there will be no result.” Justice is welcome, whenever it comes. Sometimes justice comes much later, like in the case of Galileo Galilei who after being imprisoned and excommunicated in 1632, was officially exonerated by Pope John Paul on May 9, 1983. Did it matter after hundreds of years? It’s hard to argue that it did any good for Galileo, but let’s remember that he was also given the same choice between truth and jail.
Yesterday’s event here in Rock Hill made me feel proud to be a citizen of a community that is willing to correct its errors.

Friendship Nine        Afro American Newspapers, via Getty Images

Friendship Nine Photo credit: Afro American Newspapers, via Getty Images

To read more about this check out the New York Times and these other links: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/27/us/more-than-50-years-on-south-carolina-city-seeks-to-make-it-right.html?emc=eta1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9H7GOcWLHCE&feature=youtu.be
http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/2015/01/28/4755841/rock-hill-prosecutor-in-1961-friendship.html#storylink=cpy
http://www.thestate.com/2015/01/28/3955966/rock-hill-prosecutor-in-1961-friendship.html#storylink=cpy

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Let’s get started!

My sister-in-law Joy Brown writes a weekly newsletter full of interesting tidbits of information for chiropractors to distribute to their practice members. In this week’s, Your Healthy Tidbits she included a great one that says, “The most important part of any new habit is getting started…” I couldn’t agree more.

Ms. Joy Brown

Ms. Joy Brown


Now it’s that time of year when many people reassess their lives and resolve to start exercising, eating right, watching TV less and reading more, etc. We all know that we can improve our family’s lives in many ways – and the most meaningful of these are often the simplest building blocks of wholesome living that we all learned as small children ourselves. So, if it’s so simple then why does it become such a struggle to us?
Often we make good decisions and determine a course of action but then, for whatever reason we procrastinate. The great philosophers have talked about the problem for thousands of years. Here’s my favorite:
There is one elementary truth, the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans; that moment one definitely commits oneself, then providence moves too…Whatever you can do, begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it. Begin it now. – Johnann Wolfgang von Goethe
Another really simple way to express this idea was brilliantly put out in an advertising campaign by a shoe manufacturer when Nike said, “Just do it!”Nike
It’s obvious then that the magic ingredient is, just like Joy said, to get started. Joy also said, “It’s about consistently taking action.” Inactivity ultimately brings failure, so perhaps the most important idea in all of this is not to be afraid. We won’t be perfect at first. Mistakes will happen anyway so why not get started into a better life now?
For more ideas on this subject you may wish to read the two-minute rule: http://www.lifehack.org/articles/productivity/how-stop-procrastinating-and-stick-good-habits-using-the-2-minute-rule.html

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

A Time to be Thankful

Well another November has rolled around and later this week marks our official celebration of Thanksgiving. In thinking of what commentary to make and which tone to express I am reminded of the great Earl Nightingale.
Broadcaster, author, philosopher and Dean of Motivational Speakers, Earl Nightingale told us that, “Each of us creates his or her own life largely by our attitude.” That’s why thankfulness, gratitude, appreciation and love are all life enhancing attitudes that lead to the same place, a happier life. Curious isn’t it that so many of us almost seem to go out of our way to avoid those attributes. I guess it’s one of those many ironies of life that negativity flows abundant while positive attributes need to be cultivated just like a beautiful garden. EarlNightingale
Nightingale also told us that, “It is our attitude toward life that determines life’s attitude toward us. We get back what we put out.”
With these thoughts in mind I wish our friends and practice members a happy and abundant Thanksgiving holiday.
I’m thankful for the opportunity to be a chiropractor and I’m also thankful for all the people that have become a part of this practice.
The office is open 4 days this week, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday.
Happy Thanksgiving!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Office hours different next week

Next week (the week of October 27th – November 1st) the practice will be open 2½ days instead of the usual 5½.
I will be out of town on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday (October 29 – 31) in order to serve as a volunteer at the teacher’s Pre-Collegiate Fall Renewal Conference in Myrtle Beach. I will accompany my wife Charlene Brown, who works as Pre-Collegiate Specialist for the Center for Educator Recruitment Retention and Advancement (CERRA). CERRA fall renewal conf CERRA, an agency of the State of South Carolina, is located on the Winthrop University campus and her work involves the Teacher Cadet program, which is offered at nearly 200 high schools in South Carolina and is the highly regarded model for such programs in many other states. She also works with Pro-Team, another pre-collegiate program which is offered in many South Carolina middle schools. Both of these programs expose students to education as a career option and students taking the Teacher Cadet class even gain college credit for taking this high school course. For more information about this worthy organization click here: CERRA.
Note: we will return on Friday night and the office will be open for regular hours at 8:30 on Saturday morning. If you need an appointment, I will be checking phone messages regularly as well as E-mail from the hotel, so feel free to get in touch. You may request an appointment by clicking: http://YouNeedChiro.com/joomla/appointment or phone 803-366-8100. If your call goes to voice mail please leave a message and I will be sure to respond.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Where Do We Put Our Faith?

About a week ago while interviewing a new practice member, we discussed his current health. The form he filled out asked if he was being treated for anything, to which he responded, “no.” When asked if he was taking any medication he said he was not. Further into our conversation he mentioned that he takes an aspirin every day. I asked what he was treating with it and again he said he was not treating anything. So naturally I asked, “If you’re not treating anything, then why are you taking a drug?” He said, “Oh, I don’t take any drugs, just aspirin.” As we talked more he soon came out with it and said, “OK, I know that aspirin isn’t a food, it’s a drug!” Interesting though, until he really he thought about it, he would have said “it’s just an aspirin.”
Then I asked him why he takes it. He said that his physician told him to start taking it several years ago when another biblefamily member had some heart trouble. The physician believed that the drug would reduce his risk of difficulty and the patient faithfully did what he was told. It turns out that over the past couple of decades millions of people have placed their faith in physicians who believed in this drug. Faith and belief are important to our spiritual well-being, but shouldn’t medical decisions be based in science?
Now hold onto your seat if you haven’t heard about this. In a consumer update from none other than the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the FDA says it has combed the scientific evidence and concluded that people who have not had heart problems, even if they have a family history of it, will not benefit from taking a daily aspirin. It has been estimated that more than 40 million Americans take an aspirin every day. To me it’s shocking to think that such massive drugging has gone on without good science to support it. It seems understandable that corporations are willing to sell drugs, but why did physicians act on faith? Who told physicians to make these recommendations, the drug manufacturers?
Ironically, it seems that greed on the part of a leading drug manufacturer, Bayer, may have played a role in causing FDA to take a look at this. It is reported that FDA denied Bayer’s request to make the claim on its label that aspirin can aid in the prevention of heart attacks in people without a history of heart disease.
To learn more check out these recent articles appearing in Newsday http://www.newsday.com/news/health/fda-rejects-labeling-aspirin-as-heart-attack-prevention-1.7929168 and Time http://time.com/89681/do-not-take-daily-aspirin-if-you-havent-had-a-heart-attack-says-fda/. drugsAnother article that may be of interest to some is by Dr. Mercola, a physician who says that, “even “low-dose aspirin” (LDA), may do far more harm than good” http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2014/08/04/daily-aspirin-side-effects.aspx#_edn3.
Contrary to popular belief aspirin should not be viewed lightly, like eating a piece of candy. Mercola’s article questions the safety of the practice and lists numerous dangerous consequences of using the drug.
I don’t share this conversation with my readers to try to convince them to leave their physicians. In fact I wouldn’t want to live in a world without them. But neither should we blindly believe in physicians. The message is simple, we need to question everything and think for ourselves.
Now, back to my discussion with our new practice member. He then asked me whether I thought he should stop taking aspirin. I explained that I don’t have an opinion about that, or any special training about drugs. Chiropractic isn’t about drugs; it’s about improving a person’s life. We discussed what to expect from his experience in receiving chiropractic care and went to work.Chiropractic isn't like taking a drug

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

What’s Safe in Health Care?

In a conversation with a practice member yesterday we were discussing some concerns she had about certain symptoms she was experiencing. She said she understands that as her chiropractor it is my role to locate and correct spinal subluxations to allow her body to function properly. She recited, almost as if her words came out of my own mouth that, “good nerve supply is essential for me to heal this.” Then explained that she just wanted me to be aware of what she was going through. So while her symptoms can’t show us if, or what needs to be adjusted, she wanted me to check her spine to be sure she was doing everything possible to heal naturally and effectively.
When the conversation turned to what she was doing to try to feel better she revealed a surprising concern. A close friend had told her to see her physician to get something that might bring relief. The two of them argued about it, but she so dreaded going through another medical run-around that she decided to avoid it at all costs. I asked her what she meant and she launched into quite a harangue about her last experience, being referred from one specialist to another, being made worse and worse by each “procedure” and getting more drugs to counteract the effects of the medication they gave her to treat the original problem. A year of worsened suffering and many thousands of wasted dollars later, the only way she finally got well was to quit seeing them altogether! She confided in me that, “I wouldn’t want my doctor to hear me say it, but I just don’t feel safe under medical care.” Businessman Wearing a Hard-Hat Looking at a Hazard Sign Sounds terrible, but it’s the kind of thing I seem to hear more and more these days.
With that conversation still fresh in my mind I opened an E-mail today to see a message from a colleague who was very upset by a silly statement made in an article appearing in the latest Redbook magazine. The article, written by a neurologist about things people can do to prevent stroke, had some useful information and some harmful misinformation. In between some otherwise informative content the physician slid some silly non-sense against chiropractic. Although the magazines editors should have caught and removed the dribble, somehow they let it slip by them. In my colleague’s anger and disgust, he wrote a number of things to defend chiropractic and show how much more dangerous it is to see a physician than to see a chiropractor. Even I was surprised at some of the information he found. One article he cited by Anthony Rosner, PhD (http://www.dynamicchiropractic.com/mpacms/dc/article.php?id=15480) showed the safety of chiropractic compared to the risk of medical care:
o two times greater risk of dying from transfusing one unit of blood;
o 100 times greater risk of dying from general anesthesia;
o 160-400 times greater risk of dying from use of NSAIDs;
o 700 times greater risk of dying from lumbar spinal surgery;
o 1000-10,000 times greater risk of dying from traditional gall bladder surgery;
o 10,000 times greater risk of serious harm from medical mistakes in hospitals.
Of course pointing out the risk of medical care isn’t what makes chiropractic great. It’s the results in people lives that prove the safety and effectiveness of chiropractic.
Nevertheless, anything done in health care has certain risks with it. Let’s keep in mind that if something can help, then done at the wrong time or in the wrong way, it can harm. But amongst all the health care professions, chiropractic is one of the safest, most effective things a person can do to assure that their children have the best opportunity to grow into healthy, happy adults. For more information on the safety of chiropractic care, research, expert opinion and chiropractic during pregnancy click here: (https://www.youneedchiro.com/blog/?s=safe).

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Bigger Fish to Fry

Here I am, a vegetarian using an expression that ought to be reserved for those of the carnivorous persuasion. Yet the phrase, “bigger fish to fry” comes to mind often when I review clinical findings with persons under care in the practice. That’s because many, if not most of the people we see begin their care here thinking that chiropractic is going to help them feel better. Certainly that seems to be a worthy goal, but when one understands the real value of what we do, then getting out of pain or shedding one’s other symptoms seems trivial by comparison. Yes, people come here with the worthy, yet minimal expectation of feeling better. Little do they know that a precise adjustment, done at the right time and place does so much more. That’s why I say, “I’ve got bigger fish to fry!” big fish

Here’s the point, those spinal bones that sometimes need to be adjusted have a really important job to do. They protect the vital nerves that link the brain with the rest of the body. We all know that the brain controls and coordinates all functions of the body. And we know that the bones of the spine protect the nerves that link the brain and body. So when a vertebra (spinal bone) isn’t doing what it’s supposed to do it isn’t able to properly do its job of protecting the spinal cord and nerves. Instead it becomes a big insult to the nerve system, literally interfering with life’s communication within the body itself. not about your
All of this is why we say that our job as chiropractors isn’t to change how you, it’s to allow the body to function properly. There’s a great inner wisdom that knows exactly what to do when that power is unleashed by a gentle, precise adjustment. So remember, chiropractic isn’t about your back and it isn’t about your pain, it’s about your life!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment