Diokine
Member
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2016
- Messages
- 624
The thread recently about facial deformity being related to maternal and/or intrauterine stress got me very interested in the topic, and I wanted to share some thoughts. I suspect I was under a lot of stress in the womb, and several deformations became apparent as I got older. My left elbow doesn’t fully extend, and I have some small degree of hip dysplasia in my left hip. I am also left handed, though I can write comfortably with both hands. Interestingly, the left side is the side most predominantly affected by these deformations. I was always a very anxious and cautious child, and I think this is a result of imprinted stress reactions from when I was developing. My contention is that it is the interplay between the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems that lead either directly or indirectly to these deformations.
I’ve spent the last year reprogramming my nervous systems and their response to stress, and I have seen serious physical changes in my body, that would probably be considered impossible by contemporary western medicine. My teeth have shifted considerably, my jaw is a different shape, my nose is different, and my spine is straighter. I’ve begun to feel a sort of energetic blockage in my left hip, and I’ve developed exercises that target it. I feel a connection between my brain and the nerve plexus located in my hip, and targeting this has given me incredible results. I am fully confident that my hip is physically restructuring itself to accommodate the new nervous tones being supplied by my brain.
I also wanted to make a comment about gynecomastia, as I’ve dealt with large amounts of embarrassing fat on my chest since I was about 10 years old. I was at, at one point in my life, around 300 pounds, and even though I’d lost a great deal of it was still present on my chest. It is now about 75% gone, and I would say the most important thing for this was my posture. The way I hold my chest and arms now is completely different than just a year ago. If you look at men with gynecomastia, there is usually very clear kyphosis and forward rounding of the shoulders, and I think this is very telling.
I’ve spent the last year reprogramming my nervous systems and their response to stress, and I have seen serious physical changes in my body, that would probably be considered impossible by contemporary western medicine. My teeth have shifted considerably, my jaw is a different shape, my nose is different, and my spine is straighter. I’ve begun to feel a sort of energetic blockage in my left hip, and I’ve developed exercises that target it. I feel a connection between my brain and the nerve plexus located in my hip, and targeting this has given me incredible results. I am fully confident that my hip is physically restructuring itself to accommodate the new nervous tones being supplied by my brain.
I also wanted to make a comment about gynecomastia, as I’ve dealt with large amounts of embarrassing fat on my chest since I was about 10 years old. I was at, at one point in my life, around 300 pounds, and even though I’d lost a great deal of it was still present on my chest. It is now about 75% gone, and I would say the most important thing for this was my posture. The way I hold my chest and arms now is completely different than just a year ago. If you look at men with gynecomastia, there is usually very clear kyphosis and forward rounding of the shoulders, and I think this is very telling.