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Are you courageous?

“The simple step of a courageous individual is not to take part in the lie. One word of truth outweighs the world.” – Alexander Solzhenitsyn

How often do you fail to inform a person on the relationship between their spine, nerve system and health?

How often do you not recommend optimum frequency of care for a person? How often do you not recommend appropriate care beyond symptoms for your people?

How often do you not take the time to explain to people the absolute necessity for children to have lifetime chiropractic care?

How often do you fail to plant the seed of a career in chiropractic with the children in your practice?

How often do you avoid holding health care classes in your practice?

How often do you take the easy way out?

How often do you take part in the lie?

The great people of history developed their new levels of thinking by disputing the fundamental principles of the past. Plato, Aristotle, Newton, Franklin, Morse, Marconi, Edison, Morse, Wright Brothers, Ford, and D.D. Palmer to name a few didn’t take the easy way out, they didn’t take part in the lie. They rejected the limited aspects of the philosophy and science of the day. They were willing to face the rejection of the world to create and produce something better.

We are constantly being faced with the choice of taking the easy way out. One of the greatest complaints in the public mind about chiropractic is “they keep you coming back”. This objection is understandable if the person thinks that chiropractic is just a little craft group that gives therapy for minor, non life-threatening back problems. Who, in their right mind would want to spend their hard earned money on ongoing services from these people?

The sadder part of living the lie that chiropractic is acute back pain therapy is that when its said long enough and loud enough it becomes the reality of the profession as well as the public. The infiltration of this preposterous lie into our colleges and universities is producing students who are disillusioned with chiropractic. This diminished vision leads to a powerless and dispassionate profession and a steady reduction in numbers of people being served per chiropractor.

As an individual and as a chiropractic practice, your philosophy must be defined. It is usually contained within your statement of purpose. Every time we, as an individual or as a profession violate our purpose statement it’s like making a withdrawal from a bank account of power. Every time we muster the courage and confront the world and state our truth it has the effect of depositing into our bank account of power.

At the end of the day our level of power and therefore our ability to influence change and innovation in our lives, practices and the health mindset of the public, is in direct proportion to our willingness to ‘tell it like it is’. Without fear or favor, to confront our truth and publicly affirm the real dimension of chiropractic.

Are you a courageous individual?

Are we a courageous profession?