S.E.L.F. WELLNESS EP.7 - Dr. Daniel Hulsey | Evolutionary Percussive Instrument Corrections
|
Time
Text
I'm gonna fill this box here and I'm gonna try to replicate the indoor environment that most people face anywhere in the world today.
The more energy efficient The more airtight that we make our houses, the more toxic it is for our environment.
Our technology is vibrating the air at a rate of speed.
Anything that is 0.001 microns or larger does not stand a chance in the presence of not only photocatalytic oxidation, but needlepoint negative ionization.
We're sending out a This is an ion wave that is going through walls, doors, floors, carpets, paddings, draperies, and it's synergistically vibrating the air and it's going to drop it down to the ground as a biologically inert substance.
Now this is where you're going to come in.
You can mop this matter, you can vacuum it, you can sweep it, but our technology is going to make sure that you're not continuously breathing this in.
Wonderful Wednesday to everybody.
Another episode of Sound Energy, Light, and Frequencies.
Guys, today we have a fantastic guest.
I'm going to be bringing in Dr.
Dan, and he's going to talk to you guys about not only the importance of chiropractic care, but 99% of you have probably never even heard of the technique.
Okay, 99.9% of you have never heard of the technique that we're going to be going over.
We're also going to dive a little bit into cold therapy and talk about some breath work.
So without further ado, Dr.
Dan, how are you?
Doing well, man.
Thanks for having me.
I appreciate it.
Fantastic.
So can we first dive into what separates your chiropractic clinic?
Now there are millions and millions of chiropractic adjustments that are administered every single day here in the United States.
We have over 70,000 chiropractors with active licenses just here in the United States alone.
What separates your technique from what every other chiropractor out there is doing?
That is a great question and the majority of reasons why patients travel from all over the world to get this treatment from us.
The biggest thing that separates us is we deliver a very non-invasive, powerful chiropractic adjustment via Soundwave.
Soundwave.
Soundwave.
Okay.
Absolutely.
Yeah, so sound waves carry mass.
We can get in a little more of the technicalities later, but the basic premise behind it is that you have these two bones that protect the brainstem, right?
It's called atlas and axis.
Okay.
There's a lot of different neurological components and vascular structures that are in very close proximity to that region.
Also, what we found when you look back at the anatomy books, it's a very different anatomical structure than the rest of the spine.
So like you've heard of bulging discs, herniated discs.
All these discs are between levels from C2 all the way down to the lower lumbar spine.
You don't have any of those discs up at that upper cervical level between that atlas and access and where the skull actually sits on that very first atlas bone.
There are no discs that help hold the bone in place from moving too far forward there.
It's just a bunch of different ligaments.
It also does not have facet joints.
So you can't use the logic that you would use your hands to move a bone back into place and expect to have the same amount of accuracy you would when you can control every step of the process by delivering a sound wave.
Wow.
We take out the human error.
Wow.
So this is a precise machine.
So this sound wave is not only controlled by you, but there's also a lot of software that goes into making sure that when you deliver this sound wave, it's done with an unbelievable amount of math.
Is that correct?
It's all based on spinal engineering software, exactly.
It's not the old school way of, you know, it's not logical for me to convince you that I can feel like you're a big guy through your neck with my middle finger and thumb and tell you exactly how a bone this big is rotationally misaligned and on what axis, I'd be bullshitting you.
There's no way you could have that level of precision, especially when we're looking at the data that shows, you know, over 50 to 60 percent of each individual's They have aberrancies.
They have asymmetries.
Our bones aren't Legos.
Correct.
So you have to have a way to properly analyze your customized coordinates based on all this math, which is the spinal engineering software allows us to get down to the hundredth of a degree to limit the amount of human error.
To me, that's just absolutely unbelievable.
Now, I know a lot of people that are chiropractic enthusiasts.
I know a lot of people kind of look at Palmer, right?
If you look at D.D. Palmer and B.J. Palmer, the pioneers of chiropractic, one of the things that I really, really never understood from a chiropractic standpoint is The original OG Palmer, he was an upper cervical guy through and through, correct?
DD Palmer, magnetic healer.
He did a lot of work with energy fields.
That's why he loved Tesla.
You got it.
His son BJ, he was the one that really coined that first phrase, a hole in one, and was working with the upper cervical spine.
And he had found that the most bang for the buck, if you will, happens at that level.
Because it's not only the bones that protect the brainstem, but even now we know through the data, the muscle is called inferior obliquus capitis.
It runs from the edge, the C1 transverse process, down to the back of the center, the C2 spinous process.
242 muscle spindles per gram of proprioceptive input that's coming into the brain, which is a fancy way for saying how your body takes in data.
Right.
242 muscle spindles per gram.
To put that in perspective, a thoracic or a lumbar muscle that's receiving data like that has about 30 to 40 muscle spindles per gram.
Wow.
So this region is taking in so much sensory input to determine How does my whole entire musculoskeletal frame balance?
How do I keep symmetry?
What's the input that's coming into the different cortices of the brain?
We're talking hormonal regulation.
You're talking organs.
You're talking blood pressure.
The pathways where this all comes from is right here at the base of the neck.
Wow, that's absolutely incredible.
Now, Dr.
Dan, I know this is not something that you guys promote, especially with this day and age where everybody holds you to every single thing that you say, but for our viewers on our podcast, I will tell you, I have heard from a multitude of people who have gone in and got this adjustment from Dr.
Dan, and one of the things that blew my mind the absolute most was people saying that their adjustment held longer than it ever has.
Not to put a time frame on it, but I know I've heard people five months, six months, a year later And again, I know you guys are working with a lot of athletes, people who were injured.
You guys work with a lot of veterans with PTSD and things like that.
But do you find from other chiropractors that you went to school with and obviously family members and loved ones that you've known over 20 years that have been in the chiropractic industry...
Are you finding out that your technique allows the patient to hold longer than just a manual manipulation of the C1 upper cervical adjustment versus your sound wave?
150%.
When you don't have the ability to properly monitor and be able to I don't want to say calibrate, but for you to be able to have some quality control or assurance that, hey, is my elbow at the exact right angle, on the exact right axis, and am I delivering the correct right amount of force?
There are so many variables when it comes into delivering a hand adjustment in that upper cervical region just due to the shape and the structure of the anatomy.
So it's never a conversation of, oh, no, these other chiropractors don't know what they're doing.
That is not it at all.
They are very skilled and very trained, and chiropractic does work.
However, when we have patients that are coming in and they say, you know, I got burnt out.
I couldn't keep going three times a week for six months.
To me, that screams lack of accuracy in an area that controls the entire body.
Now, that's not every chiropractor's focus, and there are a lot of different philosophies within chiropractic of how they attack these different diagnoses.
However, when you are really good at doing one thing, and that one thing happens to control the entire body, I sometimes feel like we're cheating.
I have buddies who have a playbook where if you come in with this, you do this.
Come in with this, you do this.
Right.
There's no playbook here.
It's like, hey, let's properly analyze the bones and the structures of how your upper cervical bones have developed, as well as misaligned through trauma.
Let's analyze that in a spinal engineering software program that tells me 23 different ways all those different epigenetic asymmetries have happened.
Program that into a sound wave with digital calibration, laser-guided.
There's just really no comparison when you're trying to compare it to someone who uses their hands for that region.
Correct.
And the amount of accuracy that's delivered with your sound wave is something that most humans just aren't going to be able to comprehend, you know, the absolute accuracy.
And I think it also goes back to like, you know, I look at chiropractors, you know, almost like general contractors, right?
Because if you're going to build a house, you have to have a solid foundation.
And anybody who studies, you know, how the human body works, I think it's incredible when you start to understand that the C1 is like the solid...
Ground of foundation that a house is built on, per se, right?
Because you have people that come in.
Derek was a great example.
He had unbelievable shoulder issues, and he was having a little bit of adjustment with the weather and the humidity here in Florida.
He had some sinus and breathing issues.
And the second that he had his adjustment with your sound wave technique, the very first thing he said, guys, was he said he felt like he could breathe better.
Right?
Like, how is a chiropractic adjustment going to help me breathe better?
That doesn't make sense.
But if the shoulder and everything that is causing pain in the body is because the C1 is out of alignment, I think that really blew my mind because I always thought, hey, if you go see a chiropractor, you have to be done from head to toe.
They've got to check your feet.
They've got to do all the x-rays.
They've got to look at which shoulder.
If you've got hip hike and all the other things that are associated...
To comprehend that that perfect sound wave adjustment of the C1 can kind of allow everything else to fall into place where it needs to be.
And again, I know that you guys have said time and time again that it is not a cure-all, but a vast majority of the healing starts with that one procedure that you guys do with that sound wave adjustment.
Absolutely.
We're all about self wellness, right?
We understand that if you don't take care of you, you can't take care of others.
What is it that was the driving factor that made you want to get into chiropractic?
Yeah, for sure.
It was my own journey, my family's journey.
I played sports since I was a little kid.
I remember getting headaches when I was 10 or 11 years old after football concussions.
And I was getting treatment from a chiropractor when I was, I think, 11, 12 years old for the very first time.
And one, I never will forget that very first time walking out of that.
I walked in with the worst migraine and left, and it was just slowly dissipating.
And it's like, man, what the hell was this?
This was something magical.
You know, then fast forward 10 more years.
I spent five years in the Army in a recon sniper platoon.
Came back with a lot of injuries after the deployment.
And the VA was trying to fix structural problems with chemical solutions.
And I was on six, seven different medications, tranquilizers for sleep, antidepressants, uppers, downers, pain pills.
And I just was a zombie.
I was just like kind of going through the motions.
Finally, I had herniated a disc lifting in the gym and I went to the VA and they're like, yeah, you got a pretty stiff neck.
And I'm like, yeah, no shit.
They gave me a shot of Tordol and a Valium.
And we took imaging and I said, hey, let me at least get that disc.
And they said, well, we'll give you a call in another week and let you know what we found.
Well, I took that disc that day to a chiropractor, Dr.
Michael Bernard.
This guy was a president of one of the chiropractic clubs at the school I ended up going to later on.
And he's like, hey, yeah, I see it in the machine right here, C5, C6 disc herniation.
Want me to fix it?
I was like, what do you mean?
Like, fix it.
He's like, it's going to hurt, but here we go.
I said, okay.
He does one adjustment, not with the sound wave, just traditional neck adjustment at the lower level.
And it hurt like hell.
Two days later, I was probably 70% better.
Five days later, at the end of the week, when I finally got that letter back from the VA telling me my diagnosis, I was probably 90% better.
I was just like, holy crap, there is a better way out here.
I started doing some work with him and then went back to chiro school.
When I very first started my journey there, I got hooked up with Dr.
Stan Pierce Jr.
out in Clearwater, Florida.
They had this new sound wave technique that utilized sound waves to accurately move bones within normal ranges of motion at the level of brainstem.
My dad had heard about it.
Migraine suffer for 30 years.
Went and got one sound wave treatment.
He held that adjustment for just under two and a half years.
To this day, it's six years later, he's not had any more migraines.
My mom, sciatica, she went down there.
Same kind of thing.
Analyzed the bones that control the brain stem, where they actually give off that neurological signal down the paraspinals.
They were uneven.
One side of her sacrum was crushing on that sciatic nerve.
One adjustment, lowered and balanced the musculature.
So Attica's gone.
She held her just under two years.
That's incredible.
But it was the accuracy of going to the source.
And something funny you brought up earlier about the foundation and the house.
You know, in chiropractic school, there's a big argument whether you start upstairs or downstairs, right?
Like, you do a low body first, you do upper body first.
One of these old professors that I had, he said, you can't hang someone by the sacrum.
Back in the olden days, if you were going to commit a crime, you go by the neck because that's where the power comes from.
Brain tells brainstem, brainstem organizes it, communicates it throughout the whole body.
Nothing happens from the sacrum.
I was just watching a...
I had a documentary just the other day, and it was on the painkillers.
It was on the opioid clinic, and it was Dr.
Clegett.
Dr.
Clegett was one of the largest pill mill operators in a certain region in Louisiana.
And I remember, I was like, man, I was like, karma is a biatch.
She had written so many prescriptions, like millions and millions of pills for OxyContin.
And when she was in a car accident, she had literally severed, and I think they actually call it like the hangman's neck.
It's the hangman fracture.
It's the part of the neck that breaks, and it was like almost a full fracture.
Like if it would have been a tiny bit more, she would have died instantly.
And it even changed her ability.
It affects the cognitive function.
I know that when people survive a noosing or a hanging, that they never regain some of their motor skills or even their ability to talk.
Well, think about this, man.
We're talking almost full dislocations, right?
Mm-hmm.
These partial and minor dislocations that we're able to search for in our office, they're not something that are medically diagnosable.
They're not looking for micro-subluxations of these two bones.
And it's not to say anything negatively against that profession.
It's two different scopes.
They don't teach that.
You have to go see your chiropractor to have them assess these different upper cervical type of subluxations.
And if anybody out there is consulting with a surgeon, whether it be orthopedic or whether it be an expert in any type of...
I'll say osteopathic doctor that's going to require surgery.
I recommend everybody go get a second opinion from a chiropractor because the reason why chiropractic is demonized in so many other industries is because of the fact that it works, right?
I'll never forget, I was sitting here on this podcast and Dr.
Group, who is the doctor who founded Global Healing, we have all of his supplements on our airwaterhealing.com website, I will never forget, Dr.
Group had told me that when he was completing his...
He went to school to be a heart surgeon.
And when he was making his rounds, there was a gentleman that was in severe discomfort.
And the part of the story was basically, uh, he had mentioned some type of discomfort to one of his surgeons.
And when the surgeon, um, had left the room, Dr. Group had snuck back in and he said to the patient, he goes, he goes, have you ever went and seen a chiropractor?
He goes, I think your C1 might, might need to get an adjustment.
You should go see a chiropractor.
And like a week or two later, the guy had come back in for a follow-up for a, I believe it was a secondary condition with the heart.
And he said, have you scheduled with the surgeon?
And he goes, no.
He goes, I went and saw a chiropractor.
He goes, who told you to do that?
And he goes, that guy.
And Dr.
Group got pulled aside and he got reamed out.
And that surgeon literally said, he goes, we don't ever send anybody to a chiropractic.
But Dr.
Group had already gone to school to become a DC. So he knew.
And I think that's one of the things that some people...
When they realize the correlation between your heart and your vagus nerve and the blood flow through the body, when you've got a nerve or you've got a disc that is not in place, it can cause a lot of pain.
And I think that a lot of times, like you were talking about that foundation, the surgeons are just so quick to recommend surgery.
Right.
And think about what happens when you go to surgery.
You have a greater chance of getting hooked on pharmaceuticals.
And more importantly, you have a greater chance of secondary or third things that start popping up from the surgery.
You end up going to the hospital.
Most times they need a secondary surgery themselves.
And not only that, but now you're exposing yourself to sepsis or staph infections.
And think about how many infections you get when you're at a hospital.
Right.
Well, here's the thing, man.
There is a time and a place for medicine.
I just don't believe that it should be the absolute first line of a defense.
And I'll agree.
You wake up in the low back and you're struggling to walk, I don't think you need surgery right away.
I think we need to assess what controls that area, check out the biomechanics, the ergonomics, and after all these T's get crossed or I's get dotted, whatever, Yes, there are times where we send for consults, and that is what the next step is.
But it shouldn't be the first line of defense with the vast amount of technologies that are out there at our disposal for an affordable price to be able to just get the technology out there.
That's a wonderful way to look at it.
And I think that the more and more people understand that you have anywhere in the United States, if you guys can't make it down to the West Palm Beach or Pompano area where Dr.
Dan is, most people in the United States, I would say 90% of the population is no more than 10 to 15 minutes away from a chiropractor.
You guys, I do not endorse a lot of these shows that I see on social media.
I think there was a big one they had that was featuring a doctor that was actually north of here in Palm Beach Gardens If you guys need to hop on a plane, it needs to be to come see a guy like Dr.
Dan because go to a chiropractor.
If you do not want to do the sound wave technique, by all means, go see an upper cervical doctor.
Go see a chiropractor that will see you.
And if you're in a lot of pain, call the chiropractor and ask them, do you guys take x-rays and adjust in the same day?
That's a very important thing because I think that, you know, somebody who wants immediate relief, the sooner you guys get that adjustment, you guys are going to start sleeping better.
You're going to start feeling better.
And again, this is something that I think most people are going to have a very hard time swallowing.
thing.
Can you dig a little bit into what I experienced with the cold plunge?
I think that a lot of people have heard about Wim Hof and they've heard about cold therapy.
I know that you as a chiropractor understand what it does and some of the breathing exercises.
I know that you go over this and people can consult you or talk to you about it in your clinic, but can you talk a little bit about what got you into doing cold therapy and the benefits of the body?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
So a big part of it, and we already kind of alluded to it earlier, was when you mentioned the blood flow to and from the brain and when we mentioned the vagus nerve.
Okay.
So first off, let's just connect this back to the atlas because those three anatomical structures we just talked about, they literally rest right on the front of that atlas vertebrae.
And it takes only the weight of a dime to cause nerve interference.
So when we see a lot of these neurological, these autonomic activity, you know, central nervous system type of disorders, the first thing I'm looking at is the brainstem because of how important that region is.
But now getting back into the vagus nerve and that stimulation, cold exposure, dude, I have nothing but good things to say about it.
I'm sure that many people that are watching this podcast have also watched all the different podcasts with Huberman and all these other guys that are out there talking about the benefits of cold exposure.
However, I think unless you actually are submitting yourself to do it, you can adhere to these things all you want.
You have to experience it.
I remember the first time I did, I sleep pretty well.
That night was the first night I had like dreams.
I slept so hard that night.
All day long, I was just full of energy.
I just felt like charged up and now after going back and seeing the research you know cold exposure after three minutes 200% increase in dopamine and then when you fall back down at a gradual pace you stay at your baseline threshold if you're taking in some sort of a stimulant cocaine heroin pill whatever you're gonna have that same 200 increase in dopamine but then you drop 200% below that's that crash and that withdrawal so the cold plunge It's just free, clean energy.
Not to mention, you're activating the cold shock proteins, which are stored in the liver.
The only time those ever even get released is when the body is in that sympathetic state, fully submerged in cold.
For us over at Hippocrates, when we teach that class, it's fire and ice.
So we mix it with a little bit of contrast therapy.
But that vasoconstriction, so when you get into the cold exposure, all of the blood in your body rushes to the organs to protect them.
Extremities, the blood kind of drains away, but now while that blood is in the organs trying to protect you, they're becoming oxygen rich with all the different nutrients.
So now as soon as you go to hop into the hot tub or the contrast therapy with it, it's now vasodilation.
Blood vessels are opening up and all that oxygen rich nutrients are flowing back to the extremities.
This back and forth creates a really nice lymphatic drainage, a pumping effect of opening, closing, opening, closing.
Helps with the toxin transport system.
Again, that's mixing cold exposure with contrast therapy and with, you know, heat therapy.
However, there's so many good benefits.
And I think anything you can do, you know, one of my good buddies, James Devilon in Pompano, Devilon Fitness, he talks about if you're ever going to change and grow and, you know, become stronger, like the body doesn't adapt unless you put it through stress.
Cold exposure, I think, is one of the best ways to give yourself a controlled environment to raise that autonomic activity index.
Make your body change and adapt to how it adapts to stress.
You have to raise that threshold to allow the body to be able to raise.
There was just a research article that came out about six weeks ago from the Czechoslovakian Army.
And they had their soldiers doing it.
I think it was five days a week for three minutes a day.
Don't quote me on those numbers, but I know that the findings were after six weeks, it was an 86% decrease in perceived anxiety.
And another study followed right out behind it with it was three minutes a day for four weeks.
And it was like an average of three and a half percent loss of abdominal body fat.
I just saw a podcast the other day, you know, cold exposure was like 19 times more than any sort of other like hit or type of exercise you could do for what it does with thermogenics and the actual body responding to being in that sympathetic state, that fight or flight state.
One of the things that I love about true cold exposure, whether you guys are able to do the fire and ice kind, go from hot to cold, hot to cold, but when you truly submerge, and not only submerge, but I think the other most powerful S is to submit.
Submit to the fact that you're going to do something.
Unless you've done it a multitude of times, the first couple times you do a cold plunge, you don't like it.
You like the benefits of it.
But I think just willing to get in and do it sometimes is the mind over matter and the fact that you're committing to doing it.
But one of the things that I love the most about cold exposure, and I don't know if it's something that you do, because a lot of times when you're teaching these classes, you spend more time talking than focusing on breathing.
But I love that it forces you To shut your brain down.
You are literally, you just focus on the breath work, right?
And one of the things that I thought was pretty incredible, I had heard it, you know, years ago, but you had brought it up to me, was when Wim Hof had injected himself or he had went to a place where they...
Radboud University.
Yeah, they injected him.
It was E. coli, right?
Yeah.
They injected him with E. coli and he was able to isolate it and with his breath work and his technique.
And they were like, yeah, but you're a freak of nature.
You can't do that.
And he's like, give me a handful of students and give me a couple weeks and I'll train them.
Ten students and he trained them for a week.
And they did the Wim Hof breath work followed by cold exposure every day.
And they had the same findings.
Wow.
That's absolutely incredible.
You'll notice it too, man.
We do three different rounds of that cold exposure, and I'll see people who only can get in for 30, 40 seconds.
And by the end of our third round, they've stayed in at the full three minutes with us.
And you quickly can see how quick your body can adapt as you keep increasing that threshold.
Right.
Which then that spills over into your day-to-day life.
Stress with the family, stress with work, stress with South Florida traffic.
Traffic anywhere.
That connects that study, though, right back to that 86% decrease in perceived anxiety.
You increase your threshold of where, when you're capped out with stress, you now have a little bit more room in the tank.
That's awesome.
So one of the things, too, that I love the most is, like you said, the very first time that you did it, you said you slept incredible.
I thought that there was nothing.
When you're a light sleeper and you've got a lot of stress and you're dealing with the weight of the world on your shoulders, when someone told me, they're like, you're going to have the best night of sleep that you've had in a long time or in your entire life, I was like, no way.
And I won't do pharmaceuticals.
I've had doctors tell me, oh, you should try Ambien.
And I'm like, not happening.
I just would try to have a healthy diet, exercise, you know, go for a bike ride.
When I put my head to that pillow that night, I remember very specifically having very vivid dreams.
And I woke up the next morning and it was like, oh my gosh.
Stress the nervous system.
That's the whole focus here, man.
All these other things work, but when you are able to have a foundation of an optimized nervous system, the sky's the limit, man.
The body knows how to heal.
It is a self-healing organism.
It has to have proper brain-body communication.
It has to have proper neurological instructions, optimized blood flow to help heal the tissues.
That's the sweet spot.
So I'm going to have everybody who watched this podcast, if you guys made it this far, and I hope you guys did, leave in the comment section, leave your email.
And if you guys would like Dr.
Dan to reach out to you guys and give you guys a little bit more information, or if you guys are here in South Florida, I highly recommend.
Dr.
Dan, can you go ahead and share your email address?
And then we're going to go ahead and put that.
I'll put that in the link as well.
What's a good way for people to reach out to you if they want to learn more about this?
First thing, if you want to learn more, go check out the website.
It talks about the technology.
You'll see patient testimonials, www.epicclinics.com.
You can select the Pompano Beach location.
You can email me always at dr.holsey, H-U-L-S-E-Y, at epicclinics.com.
The office number, 754-432-3653.
And if you call into the office, mention that you heard on Mike Dillon's podcast.
What did you say?
Self-wellness.
So if you guys are on the self-wellness podcast.
Thank you.
We'll go ahead and we'll give you guys a free neurological evaluation just to assess and see if our procedure will be able to help you or not.
Bring a friend, bring a family member.
It'll be blatantly obvious to everyone in the room if our procedure can help you.
If not, we'll refer you out and it won't cost you a dime.
So come in and get more information so you guys can make the right decision.
Guys, there's nothing cheaper than free.
You guys know where to reach Dr.
Dan.
Guys, send him an email.
Give the office a call.
We're going to put the email on the link as well.
We thank you so much, brother.
And what I like to do is if I get a chance, I always like to close in prayer, whether you're religious or not.
I just like to pray for everybody, especially when we get a chance to.
This is our platform.
This is our podcast, so we can do what we want.
We won't be shut down.
We won't be suppressed.
And again, if you guys want to support the podcast, if you guys go to airwaterhealing.com, you guys can get our fantastic Cardio Miracle or any of our doctor group supplements.
We've got the best air purifiers, best water air purifiers on the market.
Dear Heavenly Father, I thank you for this day.
I thank you for Dr.
Dan and Sam out there in the waiting room.
I thank you so much for what they're doing for their patients in Pompano.
And we look forward to hearing more and more from their clients that are receiving unbelievable treatments and being able to reverse pain.
I ask that you put a hedge of protection over their clinic and that the people who have the eyes to see and the ears to hear and the hearts to receive, that they will be able to receive this message, dear Heavenly Father.
And we ask that you bring the people who need the chiropractic care that they're able to offer that is so different from all the other chiropractors that are out there on the market.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen.
Thank you so much, brother.
Again, one more time, what's that website for everybody out there?