If you aren’t already on Serving Life Chiropractic Studio's mailing list please join by sending us an email at list@servinglifechiropractic.com with
the subject “mailing list”.
Four Seasons of Emotion
As we begin to head into the cold short days of winter it reminds us that we have a winter season inside of us. In fact, we have all four seasons inside of us and they reside in a fabulous part of our nerve system called emotions. As chiropractors, we realize that our emotional being is often times overlooked for how significant it truly is in our health. Every symptom, sickness, dis-ease, and disease has an emotional component.
Let’s examine the quickly changing seasons of emotions. When we are in our “winter” emotional season our being yearns to hibernate and go within. This is a time of reflection and surveying where growth can take place. Often times this does not feel the best, yet necessary for growth as a human being. The emotional season of “spring” brings growth, where personal work and openness of our being happens. The “summer” emotional season brings lightness, ease, and flow to our life. “Fall” rounds out the seasons with harvesting information of how we may look deeper into ourselves. Symptoms and dis-ease occur when we get stuck in any one “season”. Many times, awareness alone will bring a flow of seasons to our emotional being.
We experience all of life through the nerve system by way of our senses and, in turn, express all of who we are through the nerve system. Emotional, chemical and physical stress creates tension in the body decreasing the optimal range of motion of the spine and thereby decreasing optimal range of experiencing and expressing emotion.
At SLCS, we help your life move forward by facilitating clarity in your nerve system through the chiropractic adjustment, educating on the emotional components of health and our body’s magnificent ability to heal itself.
If you wish to unsubscribe to this newsletter email us at list@servinglifechiropractic.com with the subject "unsubscribe"
previous newsletters: December 2007 • January 2008