Review
"I'd Like to Stop Hurting" (audiotape) and Spasm (book -- 175 pages)
Presented by -- John C. Lowe, D.C.
Audiotape and book sold as a set
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See pages xxx for information on how to order
One of my failings (one of many) is that I tend to be somewhat
verbose. As I write -- so do I speak. Someone asks me a question
and my answer becomes a speech. Get me started on the value of
chiropractic and the patient is stuck for the next hour. This
naturally has a way of driving a patient nuts and seriously
curtails the number of patients you have the time to see.
Maybe I just became entranced by my own voice or what I said, but
at one time I began to think of my office as a temple of talk. At
the same time I couldn't figure out why I could only fit in
nine or ten patients a day. My practice was literally being
strangled by my own rhetoric. It's for the proceeding reasons that
educational videotapes have been produced by and for the
chiropractic profession. These days, we must have either a patient
education area in our offices or lend tapes for patients to take home and
view.
Seldom, however, have we addressed the fact that some patients are
in too much discomfort to sit down in the office and view a tape,
and it takes an effort to set aside viewing time outside of the
office. Knowing how busy the professional is, a plethora of
excellent audiotapes has been developed so that the DC can be
driving along in his car and learn at the same time. But what
about the busy patient? Why shouldn't they too have access to
tapes that can conveniently be played almost anywhere?
Dr. John Lowe has developed an audiotape that more -- much more --
than fulfills the need. Armed with not only a chiropractic degree
but one in psychology as well, Dr. Lowe pulls out all the motivational
plugs, while providing the patient with more information and inspiration
than many hours' worth of patient lectures.
The tape begins with the facts about chiropractic and natural health
care, and its fight against the medical/pharmaceutical cartel. The
information is presented in an effective and forceful manner and
will certainly be an eye-opener for the majority of the public.
Afterwards, Lowe goes on to instruct the patient on the reasons why
compliance is so important in order to achieve long-range health
goals.
The tape is informative and entertaining. In fact, I found it hard
to stop listening to it. During the instructions, Lowe gives the
listener projects which reinforce his message.
Every reason for procrastinating is covered so that the listener is
literally rationalized into following the patterns of compliance
that are so carefully outlined by the tape.
As with most things that are good for the patient -- the tape is
also good for the doctor: it reminds us of the rationales for
treatment which may have been misplaced in the cobwebs of our
memories.
The fact that the philosophical persuasions within the profession
may viably use this tape is another attribute.
Every new patient should receive one of these tapes. Lowe is an
articulate spokesman on an important subject, and he speaks in an
interesting way for the good of all concerned. You should purchase
many tapes, for they are seeds that if planted during the right
season, will bare fruits to feed your practice for years to come.
To write a review of a text by Dr. John Lowe is at once a
delightful and yet difficult task. The delight comes from reading
the words of a chiropractic physician whom I have admired for a
long time. Words are words. Twenty-six letters which, when
arranged in a particular way, can inspire and inform. Dr. Lowe has
become a master of inspiration through information. This is the
art of a true teacher. The difficulty of my task therefore becomes
apparent: Can I do justice to the material I have the pleasure of
reviewing?
Before the book was published in 1983, Dr. Lowe was kind enough to
send me a draft for my perusal and review. It goes without saying
that I was impressed with the manuscript and wrote a statement to
that effect.
The book is written for the lay person but, as with some other
texts that I've read, it also serves to act as a reminder of what
we may have forgotten.
It is difficult to imagine that there are some in our profession
who do nothing but adjust the spine. They claim that this is
"true" chiropratic which is analagous to a surgeon performing a
major operation without using anesthesia. In spite of the
dogmatists in the healing arts, nothing is a panacea or works
alone.
Healing, especially natural healing, takes many things to create an
environment within the body to heal itself. Let's face it, if a patient
gets adjusted regularly by the world's best chiropractor but eats
nothing but candy bars all day long, the adjustments won't keep him from
getting sick.
Thus Dr. Lowe addresses the need for more than just the
adjustment. He reasons, quite correctly, that skeletal muscle is
attached to bone to move it, and that when muscle is hypertonic or
in spasm it will cause distortions and fixations of the
articulations indigenous to the involved structures.
Chiropractors may obtain longer lasting results if they ameliorate
the myofascial problems before performing specific adjustive
procedures on the patient.
After a wonderful foreward from our good professional friend, the late
Robert S. Mendelsohn, M.D., the book progresses to a unique open
letter to members of the healing arts. His candor is refreshing
and deftly presented. In fact, in the 18 chapters that follow, not
a comma, period, or colon is wasted.
Chapter one covers the chronic spasms, the hypertonic myofascial
problems that have been around for awhile, predisposing the body
to structural aberrations.
In the chapters that follow, the author covers the complications
caused by spasms, which can be extensive. It is this approach that
I like the most because it places the chiropractic physician out of
the realm of a technician. We are not therapists working on
musculoskeletal problems -- instead we are physicians working on the
neuromusculoskeletal system and as such may affect, either directly or
indirectly, the integrity of organic function.
One of Dr. Lowe's primary interests has been in the field of nutrition.
It's only natural then, that he devotes several chapters to the
correlation of nutrition to spastic muscle. In other chapters, he
eloquently dismisses the misuse of such therapeutic approaches as
surgery and prescription medication.
The conservative therapy he proposes centers around stretching
exercises, trigger point therapy, nutrition, physical therapy and
adjustive techniques.
The chapters are short and well written. They serve the patient and the
busy professional equally because of their brevity and valuable
information. Well presented and illustrated, the book should be read by
all the members of the healing arts who are interested in treating the
individual rather than just the baggage of afflictions they bring into
the office.
Thank you, Dr. Lowe -- you continue to impress.
RHT
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