Madison AL Chiropractors Talk About How Work Can Be Relaxing

By: Dr. Justin Walbom, DC and Dr. Greg Millar, DC CCEP
Millar Chiropractic - Madison Al


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Chiropractic Care and Stress Reduction
Stress is an unavoidable part of life.  Fortunately, the human body is well-designed to cope with stress, but sometimes these stress-coping mechanisms can go awry.  We have primitive built-in mechanisms to fight or flight in response to danger, but when the perceived dangers are chronic daily struggles, worries and other internal stressors, the fight or flight mechanism remains continually engaged. That is one reason why a brisk walk or short run can make a person feel so much better.  It's not just because endorphines are released, but also because exercise helps to reset the fight or flight mechanism and thereby lowers the person's stress level.
Although it is impossible to avoid all forms of stress, it is wise to minimize internal stress as much as possible. Chiropractic can help by  reducing or eliminating extra sources of stress in our bodies. According to Dr. Greg Millar and Dr. Justin Walbom of Millar Chiropractic Clinics in MadisonAlabama, improving spinal joint mobility can significantly reduce the physiologic stress and metabolic toxins in the muscles, ligaments and tendons that support the joints. When physiologic stress is not properly addressed, it leads to mental stress which then leads to even more muscle tension and pain. It becomes a vicious cycle.
By adjusting the spine and thereby reducing physiologic stress, chiropractic care helps the body work more efficiently and effectively.  Breaking the chronic stress cycle results in increased health, happiness and a greater sense of well-being.
If you ask the next person you see "Is your work relaxing?", you would probably receive a snicker or an incredulous stare. For most people, work involves a good deal of stress. If you're in retail or customer service, there is an endless stream of customers with problems that needed to be handled yesterday. For medical occupations is more and more patients and paperwork with less and less people to treat them. Workplace politics can add another layer of stress to the normal daily stress of the work you're supposed to be doing. If you work for yourself, there's the ongoing stress of lining up the next contract or client, even while we're dealing with the pressures involved in fulfilling the demands of the current project. It goes on and on.

If you work at a computer there are additional physiological stresses. Our bodies were not designed for prolonged sitting or for staring a computer screen for hours at a time. The highly complex and highly delicate structures of our forearms, wrists, and hands were not meant to be used for repetitive motions like typing on a keyboard or using a mouse all day. Anyone can type for 15 minutes - that's not a problem. But typing for most of the day, day after day, week after week - that's definitely a problem.

These are some common work scenarios, that no one would likely describe as relaxing. But this is the reality of life in the twenty-first century. How can we turn what might be thought of as "lemons" into lemonade? Are there tactics we can employ in an overall strategy of causing our lives to be healthy, meaningful, and satisfying, as well as relaxing and fun?

The answer is a resounding "yes". But there is effort involved. We need to be creative and willing to take action on our own behalf. First, it's important to acknowledge the conundrum each of us faces every day. We are required to work to obtain food, shelter, and clothing for ourselves and our families. But the work that we're doing may not be our first choice. Or the second choice. Or sometimes even the third. Still, there it is. We need to work. This is where the creativity comes in.

Our work environment and/or our work itself may never be relaxing. However, we can actively choose to be relaxed. This is an ongoing process which occurs in the moment. For example, you can affirm "I am relaxed. My work is fulfilling and satisfying." And then, pretty soon, something happens to which you respond with tension. As soon as you come back to yourself and remember that you want to be creating a relaxing environment, you reaffirm your intention to be relaxed. This is very much like Zen or other mindfulness practices which focus on centering. In Zen, the student is reminded to pay attention and to not take anything personally.

These powerful reminders can help us greatly in our intention to have our work be relaxing. The key is to take on the concept of practice. We are practicing centering. We are practicing self-awareness. We are practicing relaxing. And as we practice these things, our overall experience is one of being centered, relaxed, and self-aware, regardless of all the things that are going on around us.

Millar Chiropractic - Madison AL
1908 Slaughter Rd. 
Madison, Alabama 35758
(256) 430-2700
http://millarchiro.com/millarchiropractic-madisonal-chiropractor.html

1Chiesa A, Malinowski P: Mindfulness-based approaches: are they all the same? J Clin Psychol 67(4):404:424, 2011
2Zeidan F, et al: Brain mechanisms supporting the modulation of pain by mindfulness meditation. J Neurosci 31(14):5540-5548, 2011
3Ledesma D, Kumano H: Mindfulness-based stress reduction and cancer: a meta-analysis. Psychooncology 18(6):571-579, 2009

Rise and Shine!: Madison AL Chiropractors Talk About the Benefits of Waking Up Early

By: Dr. Justin Walbom, DC and Dr. Greg Millar, DC CCEP
Millar Chiropractic - Madison Al

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Natural Resources
A person needs energy in order to successfully get up early. Cells, tissues, organs glands all need to be doing their jobs. They all need to be communicating with each other effectively. Hormones and nutrients need to arrive on time and in the right quantities. Metabolic processes need to be in tune. New supplies of energy need to be manufactured and delivered and waste products need to be removed. All these intricate processes are under the direct control of your nervous system.
Dr. Greg Millar and Dr. Justin Walbom of Millar Chiropractic Clinics in  Madison, Alabama say that chiropractic care helps your nervous system function at peak efficiency. By restoring more normal mobility to your spinal column, chiropractic care directly optimizes activities within your nervous system. As a result, cells, tissues, organs and glands function more effectively and your body now has the energy it needs to wake up early - healthy, refreshed, and ready to go!
We all know people who get up with the first rays of the sun. Some people wake up even earlier, bouncing out of bed before there is even a glimmer of dawn in the eastern sky. In contrast, for many people leaving the confines of their comfortable bed is a daily exercise in frustration. They know they "should" get up, they know they should "be on time", but each day they find themselves pushing the Snooze Button "just once more". "Really, this is it," they declare to their spouses and children. "I'm getting up. Just ten more minutes."

What is the difference between those who are able and willing to throw off the covers at an early hour and those who struggle mightily to respond to the summons of the buzzing alarm clock? The nature and organization of your biorhythms - your body's set of internal timepieces - provide a large part of the answer.

The field of chronobiology - the study of biologic time - investigates various physiologic biorhythms. In animals these rhythms are associated with sleeping, eating, metabolic and hormonal regulation, cellular regeneration, and mating. In plants biorhythms are associated with photosynthesis and movements of leaves and stems. Circadian rhythms describe 24-hour cycles. Diurnal and nocturnal rhythms are active during the day and night, respectively.

There is good news for those who would appreciate the benefits of getting a head-start on the day's activities but nevertheless consistently get out of bed 30 minutes late, an hour late, or even later. Circadian rhythms can be changed. It takes commitment and effort, but it can be done. Good health is required in order to successfully cause a shift in one's basic functioning. Will power is not enough, as anyone who has tried to force themselves to get up earlier on a day-to-day basis can attest. A healthy diet and regular, vigorous exercise are key to making any long-lasting change in our biorhythms. Add a strong desire to the mix and long-term positive results can ensue.
What else can you do to reset your circadian rhythms? Managing your light exposure can help tremendously. Try taking a short walk outdoors early in the day - ideally every day.  And leave your sunglasses at home.  You want your eyes to receive and process the early sunlight which will help your pineal gland to get in sync with the natural rhythms of sun.
It is equally important to avoid bright light exposure in the evening, especially the blue light tones from computers and televisions. This will help prepare your body to fall asleep more easily, early enough so that you will feel rested in the morning when your alarm goes off. If you need to use your computer in the evening, you might want to try a free program called f.lux which reduces the blue light your monitor normally emits that can interfere with your sleep. Also, minimize the light in your home in the evening, and make sure your bedroom is as dark as possible, wearing an eye mask if you can't otherwise block out the light.
Ideally, you will start waking up naturally with the dawning sunlight, even before your alarm goes off. Some people use alarm clocks that mimic the sunrise, slowly increasing the light in your bedroom to awaken you gently before any alarm is sounded.
It is also important to resist the temptation to sleep in on the weekends. Keeping a consistent sleep schedule throughout the week is key to resetting your circadian rhythms.
Millar Chiropractic - Madison AL
1908 Slaughter Rd. 
Madison, Alabama 35758
(256) 430-2700
http://millarchiro.com/millarchiropractic-madisonal-chiropractor.html

1Priano L, et al: Non-linear recurrence analysis of NREM human sleep microstructure discloses deterministic oscillation patterns related to sleep stage transitions and sleep maintenance. Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Cos 1:4934-4937, 2010
2Kalsbeek A, et al: Hypothalamic control of energy metabolism via the autonomic nervous system. Ann NY Acad Sci 1212(1):114-129, 2010
3Eisenberg DP, et al: Seasonal effects on human striatal presynaptic dopamine synthesis. J Neurosci 30(44):14691-14694, 2010

Madison AL Chiropractors Talk About the Complexity of the Human Body

By: Dr. Justin Walbom, DC and Dr. Greg Millar, DC CCEP
Millar Chiropractic - Madison Al

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Your Partner in Good Health - Chiropractic Care
Good health rarely happens by accident. That is especially true these days, because the typical American diet and lifestyle stacks the odds against us. 
A very small number of fortunate people will enjoy good health no matter what they do. Perhaps you know one of these rare birds who do all the "wrong" things and in their advanced years, will tell anyone who will listen how they've never been sick a day even though they smoke, drank, ate fried foods etc.
But for the rest of us, we need to make healthy lifestyle choices in order to enjoy long-term health and wellness.
Perhaps our goal is simply to be consistently well enough that we can live an active life without chronic aches and pains interfering with it, or constantly worrying about our state of health and what might be going wrong.
Dr. Greg Millar and Dr. Justin Walbom of Millar Chiropractic Clinics in Madison, Alabama say that chiropractic care is an important component of healthy lifestyle. Regular chiropractic care can help ensure that we get the most value out of the other healthy lifestyle choices we make. Regular chiropractic care can help us achieve the long-lasting good health and wellness that allows us to get the most out of life.
The concept of complexity is a useful way of helping us better understand the world around us. Complexity theory is a scientific concept that has spread rapidly throughout the collective consciousness during the last several decades. Anyone who watches the television show "The Big Bang Theory" has heard various references to complex systems, chaos theory, and emergent phenomena. Perhaps surprisingly, these fascinating topics from the fields of mathematics, physics, biology, and chemistry also have special importance for human health and wellness.
Examples of chaos and complexity are prevalent in the natural world. Weather systems are a good example of complex systems, which is why the weather is so difficult to predict, even in the short-term. This is primarily because the basic structure of a weather pattern can change in an instant. The scientific understanding of chaos theory has been advanced by studying another natural phenomena - avalanches. Another example in the natural world is the flocking behavior of birds, which demonstrates the ever-variable outcomes of a great number of factors.
An emergent phenomenon is one that cannot be predicted from studying the various parts that make up the whole. Emergent phenomena include the flocking behavior of birds in flight, in which large flocks create beautiful, shifting, dynamic patterns as they fly; the structure of beehives; and the World Wide Web. Even human consciousness may, from a certain perspective, be considered an emergent phenomenon.
From an individual health perspective, the relative health and wellness of any particular person is also an emergent phenomenon. For example, fighting off the flu or a common cold is a dynamic process with many complex and chaotic interactions taking place in order to determine the outcome. The individual fighting off the flu or cold may be aware of how things are going in general, based upon how well or sick they are feeling, but they are not aware of each of the specific cellular and sub-cellular activities that are happening in their body.
Are our white blood cells working together effectively to keep us healthy?  Is their behavior organized? Do they know where they need to be in order to battle the invading forces? Or is their behavior uncoordinated and random causing us to end up sick as a result?
Consistent, long-term health and wellness emerge from a variety of prerequisites, including proper nutrition, sufficient rest and regular exercise. These activities are considered healthy lifestyle choices because they promote good health. Because the body's functions and the interactions with its environment are very complex, it is impossible to guarantee a specific outcome. But we can make an educated prediction based on historical data and analyzing the facts. It is clear that the outcomes we want - long-term health and wellness - are most likely to result from a set of healthy lifestyle choices that are made consistently over the long-term. 
Millar Chiropractic - Madison AL
1908 Slaughter Rd. 
Madison, Alabama 35758
(256) 430-2700
http://millarchiro.com/millarchiropractic-madisonal-chiropractor.html

1Koonin EV: Are there laws of genome evolution? PLoS Comput Biol Epub August 25, 2011
2Jayasinghe S: Conceptualising population health: from mechanistic thinking to complexity science. Emerg Themes Epidemiol 8(1):2, 2011

Madison AL Chiropractors Tell You How to Take Care of Your Body

By: Dr. Justin Walbom, DC and Dr. Greg Millar, DC CCEP
Millar Chiropractic - Madison Al

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Chiropractic Care and Total Health
You may have noticed that chiropractic care is extremely efficient. By addressing your spinal health and the health of your nerve system with chiropractic care, many of your body's other systems are also positively affected, indirectly.
Your central nerve system - your brain and spinal cord - is your body's master system controlling every part of your body. Every other organ, tissue, and cell receives instructions on when and how to do its job from the nerve system, via spinal nerves and smaller nerve branches. Simply put, when your nerve system is not functioning properly your body as a whole will not function properly. You may have pain. You may have symptoms of specific diseases. It is important to address these symptoms. But to really correct the problem, it is also critically important to address possible causes which lie within the nerve system.
Using gentle correction of spinal misalignments, chiropractic care helps optimize the functioning of your nerve system. A healthy nerve system helps ensure good health in your cardiopulmonary, gastrointestinal, and endocrine systems, as well as other body systems.
Wouldn't it be wonderful if you were born with an owner's manual for your body? Ideally you would find out the best ways to care for this most precious possession. By finding out how to use your body optimally, you could ensure a lifetime of maximum health and vitality and top performance. You could keep your originally perfect physical vehicle from systematically breaking down.
By developing the most effective practices and techniques now and making them a habit, you could be spared the common experience of many years of avoidable physical discomfort, which often also includes significant emotional/mental suffering.
The good news is that it's never too late to make an effort to improve and optimize your health. The sooner you begin, the quicker you will begin experiencing the rewards.
Imagine the table of contents of your body's owner's manual. What subjects would it cover? Ideally, the manual would cover the usual suspects - good posture, exercise, nutrition, and proper rest - four important requirements for health, that almost everyone knows about but hardly anyone actually puts into practice. One of the best things about having your body's own personal owner's manual would be that you'd automatically know what works best for your body without having to go through a long drawn out process of figuring out what works and what doesn't work. Even more importantly, you would have the knowledge and ability to take proper care of your body - keeping yourself healthy from the start rather than trying to regain your health.
What can a person do to reclaim and maintain their optimal health? Since people aren't born with an owner's manual, and most also never had coaches or teachers who are very knowledgeable, they usually just struggle along. Their posture gets progressively worse, their muscles get progressively tighter as they begin to experience joint problems, and eventually they start to notice various aches and pains that quickly become long-term and unrelenting.
Fortunately our bodies have amazing resilience and recuperative powers. Once we find someone who can guide us to improve our posture and participate in exercise that is appropriate for us, we begin to find that it really is possible to feel better.
A doctor of chiropractic is an excellent choice because these physicians are very familiar with the musculoskeletal system and natural health strategies, and are therefore a good choice to help you figure out the secrets to your own body. Dr. Greg Millar or Dr. Justin Walbom of Millar Chiropractic Clinics in Madison, Alabama can help you get all the benefits of having an owner's manual without having to suffer through the trial and error yourself.
Take posture for example.Dr. Greg and Dr. Justin can share with you the same secrets that most high level competitive athletes, dancers and gymnasts learn from coaches and other mentors. You can be taught about your center of gravity, and how to balance the majority of your weight over the front part of your feet rather than your heels. You can be taught to stand tall and straight without tensing your muscles. You can learn how to breathe deeply and freely - opening your chest while relaxing your chest muscles - so that your lungs can take in all the oxygen you need to function optimally. You can be taught to keep your shoulder muscles relaxed, as you sit with your spine lengthened and your and back and neck muscles relaxed. You can be taught to properly strengthen and engage your core abdominal muscles, to provide a strong foundation for your lower back and throughout all of your daily activities.
Our chiropractors at Millar Chiropractic Clinics are experts of the nerve and musculoskeletal systems, and has extensive knowledge of how your posture and the health and integrity of your spine affects how you feel, as well as what you need to do to take care of your precious body.
If you want to take the best care of your body, as if you had your own personal owner's manual, contact your Millar chiropractor and get started on the path to optimal health and wellness today!

Millar Chiropractic - Madison AL
1908 Slaughter Rd. 
Madison, Alabama 35758
(256) 430-2700
http://millarchiro.com/millarchiropractic-madisonal-chiropractor.html

1Vidal J, et al: Effects of Postural Education on Daily Habits in Children. Int J Sports Med March 4th, 2011 (Epub ahead of print)
2Eriksson MK, et al: Quality of life and cost-effectiveness of a 3-year trial of lifestyle intervention in primary health care. Arch Intern Med 170(16):1470, 1479, 2010
3Huffman DM: Exercise as a calorie restriction mimetic: implications for improving healthy aging and longevity. Interdiscip Top  Gerontol 37:157-174, 2010

Madison AL Chiropractors Tell You How to Take Care of Your Brain

By: Dr. Justin Walbom, DC and Dr. Greg Millar, DC CCEP
Millar Chiropractic - Madison Al

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Complex Carbohydrates
Sugar is sugar, right? From a physiological viewpoint, blood glucose is blood glucose, right? Wrong. The source of the glucose is what counts and has everything to do with your ability to use food for energy.

Complex carbohydrates - found in vegetables, fruits and whole-grains - are digested and broken-down into glucose - the body's usable form of sugar. This process of digestion takes time and the glucose produced is slowly released into the bloodstream, where it is transported to cells for use as an energy source.

When you eat simple sugars - a teaspoon of sugar in your coffee, donuts, cookies etc. - you're ingesting ready-made glucose. No digestion is necessary - the glucose is already in its simplest form and goes directly into the bloodstream. Such rapidly available glucose is probably not immediately needed for energy and therefore is stored as fat. Also, the rapid surge of blood glucose stimulates the pancreas to release insulin, setting off a whole cascade of responses.
The high-fructose corn syrup used to sweeten most sodas and other products is even worse in this regard and should be avoided at all costs.  Artificial sweeteners also have a host of negative side effects and are not a healthy substitute for sugar.

Bottom line - consuming a lot of simple sugars causes your body to store fat and ultimately impairs the functioning of the pancreas, possibly leading to diabetes. Consuming complex carbohydrates provides glucose for energy and, when combined with healthy fats and protein, is part of the natural pathway to good health.
You are the lucky owner of a magnificent piece of biological machinery - the human brain. More powerful than the most advanced computer, your brain is always on, performs lightning-fast calculations, and is a whiz at making connections between seemingly unrelated factors and observations. The only downside is that, unlike your computer, your brain didn't come with an owner's manual.

Fortunately, your brain has no moving parts to wear out.  And, your brain is always available. It will do whatever you tell it to do. All you have to do is take care of it properly - provide it with energy, take it out for a walk, get proper rest and make sure it's connected.

The energy part could be easy, but most of us fall down on the job. Our bodies require high-quality nutrition, but mostly what they get is a poor substitute. Fresh organic fruits and vegetables, whole-grains; complete protein and healthy fats from organic whole milk and yogurt, cheese, pastured eggs and butter, fish (especially salmon), grassfed beef, chicken, turkey; and plenty of water cover daily requirements for optimum functioning.
If you're a vegetarian, make sure you get complete protein from dairy products - rice and beans do not provide complete protein!  Also consider your blood type.  If your blood is type O, you will not likely thrive as a long-term vegetarian.
A balanced food plan provides your brain with all the energy it needs - and it needs plenty of energy! Glucose is the primary source of energy for your brain - complex carbohydrates like vegetables and whole grains make it all happen.

Going for a walk - a metaphor for all kinds of vigorous physical activity - not only helps keep you in top shape but is also one of the best things you can do for your brain. So many recent scientific studies have shown that peak brain function and levels of exercise are strongly related.

Physical activity causes new areas of your brain to "light up" and builds connections between areas of your brain that weren't connected before. So, when you exercise, your brain is getting smarter at the same time that your body is getting healthier! That's a pretty good deal.

Finally, it's very important to make sure that all the parts of your body are talking to each other in the right way and at the right time. Your brain needs to receive the information it's supposed to receive to make good decisions, and your body needs to receive the information it needs from your brain to get all the jobs done that need to be done.
Dr. Greg Millar and Dr. Justin Walbom of Millar Chiropractic Clinics in Madison, Alabama say that regular chiropractic care helps make sure these things are happening. Regular chiropractic care helps balance the flow of information in your nervous system, taking care of you and your brain, and making sure all the important nerve signals get to where they are supposed to be going.
Millar Chiropractic - Madison AL
1908 Slaughter Rd. 
Madison, Alabama 35758
(256) 430-2700
http://millarchiro.com/millarchiropractic-madisonal-chiropractor.html

 1Rosales FJ, Zelsel Sh: Perspectives from the symposium: The Role of Nutrition in Infant and Toddler Brain and Behavioral Development. Nutr Neurosci 11(3):135-143, 2008
2Christie BR, et al: Exercising our brains: how physical activity impacts synaptic plasticity in the dentate gyrus. Neuromolecular Med 10(2):47-58, 2008
3Lange-Asschenfeldt C, Kojda G: Alzheimer's disease, cerebrovascular dysfunction and the benefits of exercise: From vessels to neurons. Exp Gerontol 43(6):499-504, 2008

Madison AL Chiropractors Tell You How to Strengthen Your Lower Back

By: Dr. Justin Walbom, DC and Dr. Greg Millar, DC CCEP
Millar Chiropractic - Madison Al

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Don't Forget to Stretch
Exercise includes three important aspects : stretching, exercising, and abdominal strengthening. Stretching is done first to prepare you for the work of exercise, and then even more extensively at the end of your workout when your muscles are nice and warm.
You may be tighter than usual on a particular day. This is not important - you should never try to stretch to where "you think you should be". Just stretch slowly and gently, making sure to pay attention to what you're doing. It's easy to injure a muscle if you're thinking about something else, or if you're rushing, trying to squeeze in some stretching before dashing off to the gym.
It is important to breathe slowly and deeply while you stretch. This will help your body and your muscles relax as much as possible, giving you the best results.
You never know until you hurt it how much you use your lower back all day long. When your lower back is injured, every movement becomes painful. Simple actions, such as getting out of a bed or chair, getting out of your car, or bending over the sink, become excruciating, and your daily routine becomes difficult and frustrating.
Back pain affects 60 to 80 percent of U.S. adults at some time during their lives, and up to 50 percent have back pain within a given year. Some of these problems are easily treated and never return, but in five to ten percent of patients low back pain becomes chronic and the person continues to have recurrences and exacerbations.
Effective treatment of uncomplicated lower back pain involves treatment in a chiropractor's office and beginning and continuing an exercise program. A recent study conducted by the Medical Research Council, a research organization based in the United Kingdom, has found that patients given a combination of spinal manipulation and exercise experienced greater improvement in back function and greater reduction in pain compared to those treated with spinal manipulation or exercise only.
Most mechanical lower back pain is associated with tight leg muscles and weak abdominal muscles. To avoid recurrences of lower back pain, leg muscles need to be stretched and abdominal muscles need to be strengthened. People are generally not aware of the relationship between back pain and the leg and abdominal muscles. You may know you "should be exercising", but you may be unaware of the importance of stretching and abdominal strengthening.
Abdominal strengthening helps support the lower back. Spinal muscles are not designed to carry your body weight. If your abdominal muscles are weak, then your back muscles will be used to carry your body weight, and eventually you'll have a lower back injury. Abdominal strengthening not only helps keep your lower back healthy, but also helps maintain good posture. There are many benefits to good posture, including an easy, relaxed gait; muscles that are long and supple, rather than short and tight; and an open chest that allows for easy, smooth breathing. Everything's connected. A lower back problem affects many other areas, ultimately. By making sure to stretch regularly and by including abdominal exercises in your gym routine, you can help ensure having a lower back that works.
Dr. Greg Millar or Dr. Justin Walbom of Millar Chiropractic Clinics in Madison, Alabama can advise you on the best ways to stretch and strengthen the muscles that support your lower back.






























































Millar Chiropractic - Madison AL
1908 Slaughter Rd. 
Madison, Alabama 35758
(256) 430-2700
http://millarchiro.com/millarchiropractic-madisonal-chiropractor.html

1BMJ 2004; 329: 1377

Madison AL Chiropractors Talk About Spinal Decompression

By: Dr. Justin Walbom, DC and Dr. Greg Millar, DC CCEP
Millar Chiropractic - Madison Al

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Chiropractic Care Can Help Improve Your Coordination, Balance and Flexibility
Coordination, balance and flexibility are innate human functions which give grace and beauty to our physical actions.
Even if you are not a professional athlete, you can still enjoy functioning at the peak of your own individual capabilities.
Dr. Greg Millar, Dr. Ken Randolph, and Dr. Jessica Davis of Millar Chiropractic Clinics in Madison, Alabama say that chiropractic can help you achieve this by making sure that your central mechanism of coordination balance and flexibility (your spinal column and related musculature) is functioning at maximum efficiency.
Chiropractic care can help you achieve your best performance - improving your overall health, enhancing your creativity and optimizing your physical abilities.
Your spinal column has intervertebral discs (IVDs) that make up a quarter of this segmented structure's entire length. That works out to a total combined height, of all your spinal discs, that is about six or seven inches. As time goes on, the IVDs start to lose more of their water content, causing the discs to shrink. This is usually one of the reasons people lose some height as they age.
The majority of jobs today require an abundance of sitting. For many jobs, workers sit virtually all day long, five days a week. When you're sitting or standing in an unchanging position, gravity bears down on your spine at a constant rate of 32 ft/s2. Over time, this unrelenting force will compress the spine making each disc thinner.

It is important to do what we can to reverse the trend of disc compression and expand our discs back up instead - restoring our spinal discs, improving our posture, and regaining any lost stature. We can do this by engaging in activities that decompress the spine and help restore fluids to our IVDs.

Yoga is one such activity that can provide a multitude of health benefits, which also includes decompressing the spine. When done correctly, all yoga postures create a lengthening effect in the spine, particularly when you make each posture active - focusing on lengthening the muscles of your core during each pose.

Even taking a yoga class just once each week can result in noticeable benefits, which often includes a sense of being taller. The spinal decompression that results from regular yoga practice will help increase your coordination, balance, and flexibility. Yoga can also be done easily in your own home. You will only need a small amount of space and a rubber mat to get started. Many people enjoy following along to specially produced yoga workouts on DVD.  If you're just starting out, choose one that is designed for beginners, and be careful not to overdo it. Beginners will especially benefit from taking at least a few classes with a good teacher though, because they can correct your form and help you to learn how each posture is supposed to feel.  Regular, long-term yoga practice can be very beneficial, especially to your spine.
As wonderful as yoga practice can be though, it is not for everyone. If you already have a significant amount of disc compression and are having any neck or back pain, or pain radiating into any of your extremities, it is vital to have a full chiropractic evaluation first.  If you have a herniated disc or other significant spinal problems, your doctor may recommend a sequence of decompression traction, which is very effective in helping to restore the compressed and herniated discs in many cases.
Millar Chiropractic - Madison AL
1908 Slaughter Rd. 
Madison, Alabama 35758
(256) 430-2700
http://millarchiro.com/millarchiropractic-madisonal-chiropractor.html

1Jeng CM, et al: Yoga and disc degenerative disease in cervical and lumbar spine: an MR imaging-based case control study. Eur J Spine 20(3):408-413, 2011
2Williams K, et al: Evaluation of the effectiveness and efficacy of Iyengar yoga therapy on chronic low back pain. Spine 34(19):2066-2076, 2009

Madison AL Chiropractors Talk About Aging Parents

By: Dr. Justin Walbom, DC and Dr. Greg Millar, DC CCEP
Millar Chiropractic - Madison Al

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Essential Nutrients
for Baby Boomers
It is important to ensure we are getting all the nutrients necessary for optimal health and wellness, especially as the years advance. Some of the common concerns of Baby Boomers include maintaining strong bones, an agile mind, a strong immune system and good nerve function throughout the body.           
Various vitamins and minerals can help to support these goals. Vitamins C and D helps to strengthen the immune system, protecting against colds and flu. Vitamins C and E are powerful antioxidants, which help to protect against a variety of serious diseases and disorders, including heart disease and cancer. 
Another nutrient - Astaxanthin - is one of the most powerful antioxidants available.  It's not a vitamin though.  Astaxanthin is the natural carotenoid that gives salmon its pink color.  It is a free-radical scavenger that can help protect your skin, joints, muscles, brain and nervous system.

B-complex vitamins are important to support nerve system function. B-vitamin deficiencies can lead to memory problems and other neurological disorders.

Calcium and vitamin D are important for strong, healthy bones. In combination with regular weight-bearing exercise, these vitamins and minerals can help prevent or minimize decreased bone mass.

For optimal health and nutrition, choose healthy, whole foods (organic as much as possible) and make sure you are getting the nutrients you need.                              
The average age of Americans has been increasing each year. There were approximately 77 million live births between the years of 1946 and 1964 in the United States - the generation referred to as the "baby boomers". In 2012, the oldest baby boomers will turn 66, with an average lifespan of 83. Many will live well into their 90s. Typically, people continue the habits throughout their lives that they developed in their youth. Unfortunately, for the majority of Americans, this includes a sedentary lifestyle, poor nutrition, and a lack of regular exercise.

As we age, our bad habits seem to catch up with us.  The sugar, simple carbohydrates and fast foods we regularly indulged in as teenagers and young adults now seem to add additional pounds with each passing year. The lack of regular exercise which seemed inconsequential, now predisposes us to heart disease, high blood pressure and weakened immune systems. Mature adults who resist the importance of regular exercise and proper nutrition are also missing the joy of having a vibrantly healthy body and the positive mental and emotional states that result. It's never too late to start. Even older adults can become wonderfully fit, or at least achieve a significant improvement, perhaps feeling more youthful than they have in decades.

If you are a younger adult with aging parents, consider setting a good example for fitness. Helping your parents become more fit is one of the greatest gifts you can give them.
Regular exercise is the first example and probably the most important. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recommends 30 minutes of exercise five times per week.  Sadly, the majority of American adults do not exercise at all. Help your parents get into a routine of regular exercise by inviting them to go for walks or show them a few basic exercises that can be done at home.
Exercise DVDs produced specifically for seniors can be a good option to get older adults exercising.  It is always wise to get a doctor's approval before beginning an exercise program.  This is especially true when one has been very sedentary and hasn't exercised in a long time, or if there are any health problems involved.  But if they have been given the green light and have an interest in working out in the privacy of their own home, here are some exercise DVDs for seniors which may be a good way to get them started.
Getting started is key. Encourage your parents by helping them to see how it will add fun and joy to their lives.  It's best to present it an enjoyable choice they might like to make, rather than nagging them about what they "should" be doing.
You can also set a good example with nutrition. Invite your parents over for a healthy dinner, or take them out to a healthy place. You can talk to them about eating smaller portions, and avoiding fried and processed foods.  Restaurant portions are usually at least twice the size of appropriate servings. If your parents tend to overeat, set an example by boxing up half of your entree at the start of your meal, or by sharing an entree with your spouse.
One of the easiest changes to make is to stop drinking sodas and other sweet drinks - including artificially sweetened drinks which are even worse than sugar-laden choices.  Sweet drinks are filled with empty calories which can wreak havoc with your blood sugar and add extra pounds each year. 
As a person ages, they typically produce smaller amounts of the enzymes needed for digestion. To compensate, it is usually helpful to avoid drinking liquids during meals as much as possible to prevent diluting the digestive enzymes.  Instead, try drinking a glass of water 20 to 30 minutes before a meal and avoiding drinking anything at meal time, except perhaps a small glass of red wine which offers some health benefits and doesn't interfere with digestion.
For most people, changing their eating habits late in life can be especially challenging. Help your parents learn how to take small steps in the direction of improved nutritional habits, rather than attempting to change everything at once. As with exercise, try to make better eating habits a positive choice.
It helps if we actually walk the talk rather than just tell other people about what they should be doing differently. Hopefully our loved ones will mimic the positive changes they see us making. We can enjoy making health-promoting choices, with the awareness that we're giving our extended family a good example to follow.
Dr. Greg Millar and Dr. Justin Walbom of Millar Chiropractic Clinics in Madison, Alabama are experts in using nutrition and exercise as a means of achieving and maintaining good health. They will be happy to provide valuable information on both of these topics for you and your whole family.
Millar Chiropractic - Madison AL
1908 Slaughter Rd. 
Madison, Alabama 35758
(256) 430-2700
http://millarchiro.com/millarchiropractic-madisonal-chiropractor.html

1MetLife Demographic Profile. MetLife Mature Market Institute, New York, NY, 2006

Madison AL Chiropractors Talk About Exercising Outdoors

By: Dr. Justin Walbom, DC and Dr. Greg Millar, DC CCEP
Millar Chiropractic - Madison Al


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Chiropractic Care and Green Exercise
Chiropractic care is the perfect complement to any regular exercise program. Vigorous exercise makes numerous demands on the body, and many people will quickly come up against various physical limitations they didn't know they had.
We want our exercise time to not only be productive, but also fun. We want to have the experience of time well spent. Exercise is definitely not fun if it is regularly followed by aches and pains. "No pain, no gain" is an outmoded, inaccurate, false notion that unfortunately has made its way into the collective unconscious of many people, athletes and non-athletes alike.
Chiropractic care helps ensure that you get the most out of your investment in exercise. According to Dr. Greg Millar and Dr. Justin Walbom of Millar Chiropractics in Huntsville, Alabama, 
it helps ensure that your musculoskeletal system is working properly. When your body is working effectively, exercise helps you get healthier and fitter. You're able to train with maximum effort and get the most out of your exercise time.
Dining in the open air is often much more fun than having a meal indoors. The same may be said for exercise - whenever you have a choice, exercising outside is often much more enjoyable. Exercising outdoors is more rewarding for many people and also provides a wide range of unexpected benefits.
According to Federal agencies, the average American spends about 90% of her time indoors. Coupled with this assessment is the fact that three-quarters of Americans and one billion people worldwide have deficiencies in Vitamin D, a prime life-supporting and health-enhancing nutrient. Vitamin D is one of the most important nutrients needed to prevent many common diseases, and it is produced by the body in response to the UVB rays in sunlight. Exercising outdoors for 30 minutes in the midday sun several times per week will assist your body in manufacturing more sufficient quantities of this important vitamin. See the Vitamin D Council's recommendations for maximizing Vitamin D production with sunlight exposure.
Additionally, spending time outside helps improve both physical and mental health. Regular exercise is associated with helping to prevent numerous health disorders, including obesity, diabetes, colon cancer, hip fracture, high blood pressure, cardiovascular conditions, and inflammatory conditions such as arthritis.

Sunlight tends to improve a person's mood, so being outdoors is a natural boost to one's frame of mind. Adding exercise to the mix naturally enhances this psychologically elevated state. Since 2005 researchers at the University of Essex in the United Kingdom have focused on the benefits of "green exercise". In one study, participants engaging in a green outdoor walk described improvements in self-esteem, overall mood, and vigor. Confusion, fatigue, anger, and tension were all substantially reduced.

Even viewing green and rural environments reduced blood pressure measurements by almost 9% in 100 treadmillers compared to those viewing blank screens or viewing urban images. If viewing green spaces is beneficial, actually being out-of-doors is likely to provide even greater benefit.
The bottom line? Being outdoors will enhance the value of most exercise activities. Green exercise will often positively impact a person's life in many unexpected ways.
In the Tennessee Valley, we are very fortunate to be blessed with mild winters and wonderfully long spring and fall seasons, which makes this area particularly enjoyable for outdoor exercisers. 
If you're out of shape, haven't exercised for a while, and/or have any health problems - be sure to get your doctor's approval before starting any exercise program. And if you need to, you can start off slowly with just a short walk around your neighborhood. 
As you increase your stamina, you may enjoy increasingly challenging hikes in some of the local parks and greenways. The Creekwood Park Greenway is a favorite among those who work in Research park and also offers a Disk Golf Course. LocalHikes.com is a great resource for local hiking trails, with maps and reviews.  It lists two local trails that are rated "easy" - the Burritt Nature Trail which is 1 mile, and the Monte Sano North Plateau Loop which is 1.5 miles. Another terrific resource for local hiking is the Land Trust of North Alabama which hosts various guided hikes at different ability levels, such as their Wildflower Stroll on Rainbow Mountain in Madison. Check out the Huntsville Parks and Recreation page for some more suggestions.
What if you would love to go hiking or biking in the great outdoors, but don't have anyone to share the experience with and don't want to do it alone?   The Tennessee Valley Adventure Group on Meetup.com has over one thousand local members who enjoy various outdoor activities, including hiking, biking, climbing, paddling, and swimming among other more adventurous pursuits.
Whatever you do, get outside and enjoy this beautiful North Alabama weather!

Millar Chiropractic - Madison AL
1908 Slaughter Rd. 
Madison, Alabama 35758
(256) 430-2700

http://millarchiro.com/millarchiropractic-madisonal-chiropractor.html

1Martins RA, et al: Effects of aerobic and strength-based training on metabolic health indicators in older adults. Lipids Health Dis 9(1):76, 2010 [Epub ahead of print]
2Donges CE, et al: Effects of resistance or aerobic exercise training on interleukin-6, C-reactive protein, and body composition. Med Sci Sports Exerc 42(2):304-313, 2010
3Barton J, Pretty J. Urban ecology and human health and well-being. In Gaston K, et al. (eds): Urban Ecology. British Ecological Society and Cambridge University Press, 2010