December 2004
Stress, dis‑stress, and vertebral subluxation
by Dr. Christopher Kent
Interest in the role
stress plays with the dynamics of health has resulted in a proliferation of
strategies designed to minimize or "manage" stress. To many people, the very
term "stress" elicits a negative response. Yet, the notion that stress is an
enemy we must resist or manage betrays a widespread misunderstanding of the
nature of stress and how it affects our lives.
Selye
Hans Selye pioneered
investigations of the biological effects of stress in 1936 with the
publication of his paper, "A syndrome produced by diverse noxious agents."
Since then, more than 100,000 articles and books have been written on the
subject.
Selye describes stress
as the nonspecific response to any demand. Experimental studies by Selye and
other investigators revealed that when physical, chemical, or emotional
demands were imposed on an animal, three stages could be identified which
characterize the response:
1. Alarm
reaction. The initial
reaction to the stressor.
2. Stage of
adaptation. The responses
following the initial reaction.
3. Stage of
exhaustion. When the limits
of adaptation are exceeded, and the animal can no longer appropriately
respond.
Dis‑stress and eu‑stress
Although many
individuals have concluded that stress is inevitably destructive, this view
is incorrect. As Selye noted, "Stress is not necessarily bad for you. It is
also the spice of life, for any emotion, any activity causes stress...the
same stress that makes one person sick is an invigorating experience for
another...Complete absence of stress is incompatible with life since only a
dead man makes no demand on his body or mind."
Selye described two
types of stress:
*** Dis‑stress ‑‑ from
the Latin "bad," as in dissonance.
*** Eu‑stress ‑‑ from
the Greek "true" or "good," as in eutonia.
Whether we experience a
pleasant or unpleasant result from an event depends upon how our nervous
system perceives, processes, and interprets that event. Selye wrote, "...the
endocrine glands and the nervous system ‑‑ help us both to adjust to the
constant changes which occur in and around us, and to navigate a steady
course toward whatever we consider a worthwhile goal."
Stress and vertebral
subluxation
More than 15 years
before Selye's historic publication, B.J. Palmer and J.H. Craven described a
similar concept: concussion of forces. This term refers to the meeting of
external invasive forces and internal resistive forces. Just as stress may
be destructive or beneficial, concussion of forces may produce or reduce
vertebral subluxation. The result is dis‑ease or ease.
Craven wrote: "That
which caused the normal cycle to become abnormal was a concussion of forces
centering at some point in the spinal column causing a subluxation...tissues
do not nor cannot express their normal function."
Palmer stated that in
the normal cycle, following Innate Intelligence is intellectual adaptation.
Palmer quotes Webster's definition of adaptation: "To make suitable; to fit;
or suit; to adjust; alter so as to fit for a new use." More than 60 years
later, Selye wrote, "Every living being has a certain innate amount of
adaptation energy or vitality."
When a concussion of
forces is corrective, Palmer noted the following changes: "Perversion
changed to verification; abuse to proper natural use; abnormal
interpretation to normal interpretation; distortion to healthful
manifestation; corruption to correction."
Although it is unlikely
that Selye was familiar with the writings of Palmer and Craven, the
similarities are striking: Stress and concussion of forces; eu‑stress and
ease; dis‑stress and disease.
Health
The practical
application of these concepts requires a working definition of health. The
World Health Organization (WHO) defines health as "A state of complete
physical, mental, and social well being and not merely the absence of
disease or infirmity."
In this context, Selye
wrote, "The secret of health and happiness lies in successful adjustment to
the ever‑changing conditions on this globe; the penalties for failure in
this great process of adaptation are disease and unhappiness."
A key aspect of
expressing our adaptive potential is keeping the nervous system free of
interference by adjusting vertebral subluxations.
The realization of this
objective is described in Palmer's vision for the year 2000:
"Did you ever think
what kind of a world this would be in a short time ‑‑ not later than 2000
A.D. ‑‑ if the development of Chiropractic should continue until that time
in proportion to the way it has developed during the last five years? By the
time mentioned, we would see a race of giants, physically and mentally.
There would be no chronic diseases of any kind; people would not know what
tuberculosis is, except from history; no insane hospitals where men and
women are confined as in a prison and made to suffer untold abuse...
"There would be no more
penitentiaries because no crime would be committed by a sane man or woman;
no poor houses because every man would be well and happy and have full
possession of his faculties...
"You are to prepare the
way for future generations to follow. You are to blaze the way, blast the
rocks, clear all rubbish of ignorance and prejudice, and open up the grand
highway of truth."
The solution to stress
is not its elimination or "management." It is expanding the scope of our
adaptability. As chiropractors, we enable people to broaden the range of
their human experience by transmuting dis‑stress into eu‑stress.
References
Selye, Hans: "The
Stress of Life." New York. McGraw Hill, Co. 1984.
Palmer, BJ; Craven, JH:
"The Philosophy of Chiropractic." Davenport, IA. Palmer School of
Chiropractic. 1920.
World Health
Organization. "The first ten years of the World Health Organization."
Geneva. 1958.
Palmer, BJ: "History
Repeats." Davenport, IA. Palmer School of Chiropractic. 1951
(WCA Vice President
Dr. Christopher Kent, president of the Council on Chiropractic Practice, is
a 1973 graduate of Palmer College of Chiropractic. The WCA's "Chiropractic
Researcher of the Year" in 1994, and recipient of that honor from the ICA in
1991, he was also named ICA "Chiropractor of the Year" in 1998. He is
director of research and a co‑founder of Chiropractic Leadership Alliance.
With Dr. Patrick Gentempo, Jr., Dr. Kent produces a monthly audio series,
"On Purpose," covering current events in science, politics and philosophy of
vital interest to the practicing chiropractor. For subscription information
call 800‑892‑6463.)