Alex Clark
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And I use muscle testing.
So you either test strong or you test weak to a stressor.
And if you test weak, to me, your body's not adapting to that stressor.
Let's go after that and see what happens.
I say if you look at it from a neurological standpoint, because it really is a functional tool of neurology.
And if you look at it just as that of what can the body adapt to and what can't it adapt to, that's it.
Like that's really it.
And the thing I will say is just because someone muscle tests doesn't mean they're going to be the best doctor in the world for you.
Similar to you can teach a monkey to play piano, but they're really not going to be Mozart or Beethoven.
It's kind of the analogy is it's like a stethoscope, right?
The doctor has to use a stethoscope to listen to your heart, but it's the doctor that interprets it, not so much a better stethoscope.
And that's what muscle testing is.
It's just a medicinal tool.
And depending on who's using it really gets you the journey that you're looking for and the results you need.
Because veterans with PTSD are so multifactorial.
There's so much going on from inflammatory levels to emotional stress.
And it can really be a tough situation.
It's not an easy situation for PTSD veterans.
But at the same time, when you have a tool like that to communicate with the nervous system and you can use that to find what stressors are imbalancing the nervous system, you can really help a lot of people, especially veterans.
Everybody.