『Episode 41: Debunking Ontario Wellness Myths — "I Just Need to Crack My Back": Why Self-Adjusting Is Making You Worse』のカバーアート

Episode 41: Debunking Ontario Wellness Myths — "I Just Need to Crack My Back": Why Self-Adjusting Is Making You Worse

Episode 41: Debunking Ontario Wellness Myths — "I Just Need to Crack My Back": Why Self-Adjusting Is Making You Worse

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

このコンテンツについて

**"I Just Need to Crack My Back": Why Self-Adjusting Is Making You Worse** You wake up stiff. Something feels "stuck." So you twist, rotate, and push until you hear that satisfying pop. Instant relief. Problem solved. Except it's not solved. And that habit might be making you worse. --- **What's Actually Happening When You Crack** The sound you hear isn't bones cracking or things "going back into place." It's cavitation—the rapid release of gas bubbles from the synovial fluid in your joints. When you stretch a joint beyond its normal resting position, dissolved gases come out of solution and form a bubble. When that bubble collapses, you hear a pop. That's it. **Why It Feels Good:** 1. Temporary increase in range of motion (the joint capsule has been stretched) 2. Neurological response—mechanoreceptors send signals that temporarily override stiffness sensations (like hitting a reset button) --- **The Self-Cracking Trap** The relief is real—but temporary. Usually 15-30 minutes. Then the stiffness comes back, often worse than before. So you crack again. And again. You've created a dependency. **Here's the critical problem:** When you self-adjust, you're not targeting the segment that actually needs to move. You're cracking the segments that move most easily. Your spine has 24 vertebrae. When one segment becomes restricted (hypomobile), the segments above and below compensate by moving MORE (hypermobile). When you twist and crack yourself, you're almost always cracking the hypermobile segments—the ones that already move too much. The restricted segment stays locked. **The Result:** Temporary neurological relief, but the underlying problem remains. You're making unstable segments more unstable while the actual restriction persists. --- **Professional Adjustment: A Different Approach** A chiropractor identifies which specific segments are restricted—not the ones that move too easily. The adjustment is targeted to that specific segment, with precise direction and angle. **At Absolute Rehabilitation and Wellness, we take this further:** Before adjusting a restricted segment, we first loosen the soft tissues surrounding the joint—the muscles, fascia, and connective tissue that may be guarding or limiting motion. **This preparation means:** - Less force is needed to restore movement - The adjustment is more comfortable - Results are more effective and longer-lasting When the right segment is adjusted and surrounding tissues are properly prepared, you get restored function—not just temporary relief. --- **The Risks of Habitual Self-Manipulation** **Risk 1: Ligament Laxity** Every time you force a joint past its normal range, you stress the ligaments. Over time, this creates permanent laxity. The joint becomes unstable. Paradoxically, this instability creates MORE stiffness—because muscles must work overtime to stabilize what ligaments can't. **Risk 2: Masking Real Problems** When you can crack your way to temporary relief, you never address the underlying cause. That disc issue, joint dysfunction, or postural problem keeps getting worse while you keep hitting the reset button. --- **How to Break the Cycle** **Step 1: Understand What You're Feeling** The sensation of needing to crack isn't bones out of place. It's likely muscle tension, joint restriction, and nervous system sensitivity. The urge is your body asking for something—but cracking isn't the answer. **Step 2: Address the Restriction Properly** Get assessed. Find out which segments are actually restricted and why. **Step 3: Build Stability** The antidote to hypermobility is stability. Targeted core work, motor control training, and postural correction strengthen the muscles that control hypermobile segments. **Step 4: Improve Mobility in the Right Places** If your thoracic spine is stiff, your neck and lower back compensate. Targeted mobility work—CARs and active stretching—restores motion where it's actually needed. **Step 5: Break the Habit** Every time you feel the urge to crack, do something else: gentle range of motion, a mobility exercise, a deep breath. The urge will pass. --- **Your Challenge This Week** Stop self-adjusting for one week. Notice what happens. Notice where the stiffness really is. Notice how your body feels without the constant reset button. If you can't stop—if the stiffness becomes unbearable—that's important information. It means something needs to be addressed. --- **The Myth-Busting Takeaway** Self-cracking feels good because it triggers a temporary neurological reset—not because it's fixing anything. You're usually mobilizing the wrong segments, creating dependency, and potentially causing long-term instability. Professional adjustment is targeted, specific, and addresses the actual restriction. Self-adjustment is random, repetitive, and reinforces dysfunction. If you can't go a day without cracking your back or neck, that's not a quirk. That's a sign something needs real attention. --- **SEO ...
まだレビューはありません