Manual manipulation vs. neuromuscular training

A basic understanding of muscle tone recognizes that the seat of control of muscles and movement is not muscles, but the brain, not "muscle memory" but "movement memory", not "posture" but habitual or learned movement patterns of varying degrees of comfort and efficiency.

Lasting changes in muscle tone require movement training at the neurological (i.e., brain) level, something that manual manipulation of muscles accomplishes, at best, slowly, but which can be achieve quickly by somatic education, a discipline that rapidly alters habitual posture, movement, and muscle tone through an internal learning process.

More at



in reference to: What is Neuromuscular Therapy? (view on Google Sidewiki)

Trigger Point Therapy

This writing will interest you if
  • You've had unsuccessful trigger point therapy.
  • You have chronic muscle tension.
  • You have mysterious pains that defy diagnosis.
The "new and entirely different" approach I describe here can dissolve trigger points permanently in minutes, restore your comfort of movement, and make you independent of therapy and therapists.

In this piece, I'll explain what causes trigger points, discuss the common therapeutic approaches used to eradicate trigger points, and present a newly available approach to trigger points that works quickly and decisively where other methods produce slow, partial, or temporary improvements.  Then, I'll show where you can get access to the newly available approach.

TRIGGER POINTS EXPLAINED
Trigger points are pressure points in muscles that are very tight and sufficiently sore to to trigger tension and pain in other muscles linked to them in patterns of coordination.  That's what makes them "trigger" points.  "Patterns of coordination" means complex movements (e.g., walking) that involve multiple muscles.  Simple enough?

The term, "trigger point", was coined by Dr. Janet Travell (physician to President John F. Kennedy, who had chronic back pain from an injury sustained during wartime on the boat, PT-109).  Dr. Travell did a masterful job of mapping out the relation of these points to pain felt at distant points in the body.  However, only in the past twenty years has a clinical approach been available that equalled Dr. Travells insights, and that approach has yet to become mainstream.

TECHNIQUES FOR ERADICATING TRIGGER POINTS
The common techniques for eradicating trigger points are based upon a mechanical view of the body and of muscles.  Muscles with trigger points are considered by therapists to be "stuck" and certain common therapeutic techniques used are said to "break" trigger points, generally by working on the muscles or trigger points, themselves.

This approach to trigger points fails to apply the basic facts of muscular control --  that the center of control of muscle tension (tone) is the brain (not muscles, themselves) -- and that muscle tone is learned and alterable by experience, and that once learned, becomes so automatic that it may seem to be permanently set.  However, it's understandable since, until relatively recently, no effective way existed to apply neurophysiological knowledge about muscular function to a therapeutic approach, and all that was available were more primitive approaches based upon massage techniques and drug therapy.

Common therapeutic approaches to trigger points operate as if the source of muscular tension is the muscle, itself; therapeutic approaches based on this view produce poor and unreliable therapeutic outcomes that lead to the need for repeated therapeutic interventions.

Here's the correct understanding of trigger points:  they are pressure points in habitually tight muscles -- caused to be tight by brain-conditioning (generally from injury or stress).  Trigger points are caused by brain conditioning, not by muscles, themselves.  So, muscles are not "stuck", but responding actively and in the moment to what the brain is telling them to do;  trigger points do not exist as a result of mechanical stuckness of muscles; they exist as habitual states of muscular overactivity.

A therapeutic approach based upon this understanding acts not upon the muscles, themselves, but upon the brain-level conditioning that causes chronic muscle tension and trigger points.  Such an approach produces decisively reliable results that typically do not require repeating.

Let's review the common therapeutic approaches to trigger points.

Therapeutic attempts to eradicate trigger points take two approaches:

  1. mechanical pressure
  2. injections of salt water (saline solution)
MECHANICAL PRESSURE
Therapists using the "mechanically stuck" model attempt to get trigger points to release by applying manual pressure to trigger points.  The idea is to deprive "triggered" muscles of blood flow, and by so doing, to get the muscles to a state of fatigue, so they let go and lose their trigger points.

Such an approach produces a temporary disappearance of a trigger point.  The trigger point re-appears soon thereafter (much as with ordinary massage) because no change of brain level conditioning has occurred.  (The one advantage of "trigger point therapy" over massage is the recognition of the relation between trigger points and pain at a distance from them.)

SALINE (SALT) SOLUTION INJECTIONS
Injections of this type produce heightened sensation in the involved muscles, which sends a signal to the brain that the muscle is more contracted than it really is.  The brain, which regulates muscle tension "by feel" (sensation), allows muscle tension to decrease to the level or intensity of sensation to which the brain has become accustomed.  At this lower level of tension, trigger points disappear.

For obvious reasons, the results of this approach are also temporary.

Both methods (manual pressure and injections) treat the muscle as the problem and the trigger point as the target of therapy; both overlook the fact that, since the basic function of muscles is to produce movement, a change of how the brain regulates movement is necessary to change how the brain regulates muscle tension.

The answer to trigger points may be an unexpected one, but it's obvious from a moment of consideration:  movement education.  Movement education teaches regulation of muscle tone (tension) and of coordination.

However, most methods of movement education are primitive and inadequate to decrease the conditioned level of muscle tone.  A more sophisticated approach is needed.

That's where somatic education comes in.

WHAT'S "SOMATIC"?  WHY "EDUCATION"?
The term, "somatic", derived from the Greek word, "soma" -- meaning "living body" -- means having to do with the living body, as experienced and controlled from within -- your experience of yourself, as you are to yourself.

"Education" means, "the process of developing our faculties or abilities".

So, "somatic education" means the process of developing our faculties as a living, self-aware embodied person.

Its special meaning, in the context of the discipline of clinical somatic education, has to do with gaining control of our own living processes, those otherwise treated with medicine or therapy.

The meaning of "somatic education" is different from a doctor or therapist "working upon" another or administering some treatment such as a drug, electrical stimulation, or injection, which are the methods of medicine and therapy.

Where trigger points are concerned, somatic education brings about improved self-control or self-regulation of our muscular system and movements.  The practical outcome is alleviation of conditioned (habitual) muscular contractions that create trigger points to begin with through gaining better control of our strength and movement.

THE TECHNIQUE
We learn control of muscles and movement, starting with learning to crawl and creep, stand and walk. 

The techniques of somatic education make use of this natural process of learning and to it, add techniques powerful enough to override and replace conditioning that keeps muscles tight and creates trigger points.   The process occurs far more quickly than the natural learning processes of movement -- and than the therapeutic approaches commonly applied to trigger points.

One of the major techniques involves an action pattern similar to yawning, but applied to varieties of movement and coordination. 

VIDEO


In the clinical techniques, a lasting shift of muscular control and relaxation of muscular tensions occurs in less than one minute, for any movement pattern addressed.  A few repetitions over a period of minutes can restore highly contracted muscles to comfortable, natural rest, comfort, and full strength without the usual methods of manual manipulation, injections, stretching or strengthening -- and the changes are durable and long lasting.

Examples of the clinical techniques can be found on YouTube.com, channel "Lawrence9Gold"; a specific example, used to alleviate back pain, can be seen here.




From here, nothing remains to be said, except, "The proof of the pudding is in the eating."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lawrence Gold has practiced clinical somatic education and trained new practitioners since 1990. His clientele have presented with a wide range of pain conditions. He offers a money-back satisfaction guarantee. Contact him at https://somatics.com/wordpress/contact.

True and False Teachings about Good Posture

While "good posture" is considered a sign of good movement health, there are true and false teachings about how to achieve it.

The popular view of good posture is that it is something you have to maintain; it's a "good" holding pattern.  The concepts, "neutral spine position" and "alignment", fall into this category.  "Shoulders back, chest up, stomach in" are typical instructions for maintaining good posture.

The popular view and the typical instructions I have described constitutes a false teaching about good posture -- and by false, I mean detrimental.

Here's why:  It adds strain to an already strained muscular system and unnaturally restrains movement.

The common teaching about good posture assumes that good posture is not the natural or free condition and that one must therefore do something to maintain it. This view may seem reasonable and inevitable; "If you don't do something to maintain good posture, you're left with the poor posture you had, already."

But an unrecognized truth underlies this assumption:  Most people are beset by habitual muscular tension patterns that drag them down from good posture, tension patterns of which they are unaware because they are so used to them, tension patterns formed at the time of injuries or of emotional stress (i.e., nervous tension).

In actuality, good posture is the easiest condition to maintain -- if you are free of habitual tension patterns.  If not, then you must do something to counteract those tension patterns, to restore good posture.  That's the condition most people are in.

This assertion may be hard to accept until you have experienced the reality of what happens when you get free of your habitual tension state.

Massage and bodywork typically seek to alleviate habitual tension, but with rare exception, they do not alter a person's postural set because to do so would require a second step:  to develop better coordination.

Coordination is the basis of good movement, good posture, good alignment.

Posture, viewed another way, results from moving into a certain shape and holding it.  It's a function of movement.

Most movements are developed by learning.  So is posture.

The difference is that injuries and stress change movement patterns in lasting ways that are commonly beyond the ability of people to change; these movement patterns persist on automatic.  That's why teachings about posture recommend counter-actions to those movement patterns.

So, what's the answer?  Are we forever destined to poor and worsening posture as we grow older?

The answer is, no.  But what is needed is a way to undo habitual muscular tensions formed by injuries and stress.  "Undo" means to eliminate or reverse, not to counteract them by some sort of opposition or ongoing counter-action (either through "good posture" disciplines or through strengthening of muscles).

Such a way exists.  The discipline of clinical somatic education teaches and employs exactly such a way.

PANDICULATION: The Action of Undoing

All animals with a backbone do a certain action instinctually upon arising from rest, as they become active.  This action, commonly mistaken for stretching, involves a strong muscular contraction followed by a leisurely relaxation; it's called, pandiculation.



"Pandiculation", refreshes the brain's body image and purges accumulated tension. Different animals have different patterns, but all do it in some form.  Birds do it by shrugging their wings back, reaching their legs back, one at a time, and then flapping their wings; cats and dogs do it by first bowing, arching their back, and then shaking.  Humans do it in the natural "yawn and morning stretch" (different in performance from the calf or hamstring stretches athletes do).

Clinical somatic education uses techniques that activate this genetically-present action behavior methodically and in a magnified way to free people from the grip of tension patterns formed by injury and stress. 

In the case of clinical somatic education, we apply the contraction/relaxation behavior to places where the person holds tension; with injuries and stress, these tensions always exist in patterns, so it's not a matter of "releasing muscles", but of releasing entire patterns via movements in those patterns. 

The result is a lasting release of muscular tension.  Then, we teach movement patterns that link muscle groups together in certain inherently well-organized patterns of coordination, to replace less well-organized, unhealthy, painful patterns.  

No longer is the person dragged down from good posture by habitual muscular tension.  (S)he is free to stand and move at her or his full stature and in the easy balance that free and well-coordinated movement permits.

The results of pandiculation distinguish the good posture of freedom from tension from the 'good posture' maintained by pitting one muscle group (used to maintain good posture) from other muscle groups (held tight by the lingering effects of injury and stress).

Easy balance is the natural state, whether at rest or in movement.  Good posture isn't something you maintain; it's nearly effortless, the product of good balance and good coordination.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lawrence Gold is a certified Hanna somatic educator who works to free clients from a variety of pain conditions that often have persisted despite therapy. He is one of the few practitioners who offers a money-back guarantee of satisfaction. Contact him at https://somatics.com/wordpress/contact.

Read a research article on pandiculation.

See examples of pandiculation in videos on YouTube channel "Lawrence9Gold".

Core Exercises -- What is Core?

A common misconception exists about core exercises or core workouts -- even, or particularly, among some athletic trainers.  The misunderstanding of which I speak is, "What is 'core'?"

Commonly the muscles of the abdominal wall are considered, "core".  This is incorrect.  Those muscles are surface, the way the skin of an apple is surface to the apple core.

The core muscles are the deepest muscles; they lie closest to the bone (or body center) and exert the greatest control of balance and coordination.  Among them, the psoas muscles, the quadratus lumborum, the diaphragm, in the the trunk, and the scalene muscles of the neck and the muscles of swallowing in the throat, as examples -- all of which affect spinal alignment, and thereby, balance.  Strength is not their primary contribution, and so the notion of "core strengthening" is inherently misguided.

What is sought through core strengthening is usually stability, but stability doesn't come from strength; it comes from balance.

Balance is a consequence of close coordination between opposing muscles and between muscles and their synergists (helpers).

When a person gets musclebound, as often happens in physical conditioning programs and in cases of injury, close coordination gets distorted, as one muscle or muscle group overpowers another.

Easy balance is impossible when one is in that condition; the person is inherently unstable and muscle tone must shift throughout the body to compensate for those imbalanced in a less-easy stability.

More than that, a person cannot strengthen what they cannot feel, and one can't feel the core if one muscle group overpowers the other.  The core can be sensed only when muscles are closely coordinated in a condition of easy, dynamic balance.

Even if core strengthening exercises give equal attention to strengthening all muscles in the (supposed) core group, they don't necessarily give attention to both freeing musclebound muscles and developing balanced (i.e., equal) control/coordination of all of those muscles.

More than that, if muscles of the peripheries of the body, e.g., legs, arms, neck, are musclebound or poorly coordinated, they cause unbalancing pulls from the peripheries of the body to the core.  They cause instability that cannot be corrected by core strengthening; they can be corrected only by restoring suppleness and balance among opposing muscles and among muscular synergists (mutual helpers).

So, approaches at core conditioning must have the following two elements present:
  • alleviating musclebound conditioning
  • developing balanced coordination
That said, I'd like to point you to an example of a core conditioning program that does just that: called, "The Five-Pointed Star", one of a number of programs people use to alleviate pain, to recover from injury, and to cultivate balance and suppleness.

Another program that has garnered special interest concerns the psoas muscles, Free Your Psoas, also has that effect.  Recognizing that the peripheries affect the core, this program presents a whole-body approach to freeing and integrating the psoas muscles.

Articles on psoas muscle functioning can be found at Somatics on the Web (somatics.com).  Other core-workout programs can be found there, as well.

RELEVANT ENTRIES:

Psoas Muscles | Core Integration | Free Somatic Exercise: The Dolphin, Part I

Psoas Muscles | Core Integration | The Dolphin, Part II

Freeing Tight Psoas Muscles | The Well-Tempered Psoas | The Inner Psoas

As it happens, it isn’t exactly rocket science to understand why the psoas muscles get tight. The answer is, "insults and injuries". When we get uptight, we get tight. 

To free psoas muscles, see the end of this piece.

            Insults and injuries form memory patterns.  We never completely forget.  Insults and injuries leave their mark in memory.

                The memory patterns aren't just psychological; they are psycho-physical. Muscular tensions are involved. The term, "uptight" is literal.  The memory of painful experiences is not just "inner" and "emotional", different from the body, but present as the felt state of the body:  patterns of tension and other stress-induced changes -- the physical sensations of the memory, carried all the way through to the core and experienced to a greater or lesser degree as physical changes that affect not just how we feel, but also how we move.

            The psoas muscles are involved because they are constantly involved in movement and in balance. When they tighten, our movements and balance change -- and, as core muscles, they're involved with all other muscles and muscle groups to different degrees.

            For that reason, single-muscle releases of the psoas muscles miss a lot of the tension pattern of which tight psoas muscles are a part.

           (For the clinicians out there, the tension is part of a larger pattern of psychomotor/ neuromuscular tension activated by stress and maintained as an activated memory pattern, and that kind of tension involves the body-core.)


            There’s more.

            In "An Essential Understanding of the Psoas Muscles", I use the term, “open core”.  I refer to a person’s “full stature”.  I talk about the nervous system’s centralized role in regulating muscular tension in arising from rest to sitting, standing, and walking; for each of those movements, a corresponding state of mind exists.  I’ll go into that shortly; as you’ll see, it’s pretty obvious, when pointed out.

MEMORY

Click to get started, for free with
Free Your Psoas self-renovation program
       Chronically tight psoas muscles indicate the existence of stuck movement-memory patterns. To free tight psoas muscles, we must release the trigger of the tension -- whether the memory of activity (movement), of a sensation (injury), or of emotional insult.

First, we release; then, we must integrate the movements of our psoas muscles into better coordination into the entire muscular system. That requirement also gets missed in common therapies -- which is one reason they work only as well as they do.

RELEASE

          "Release" doesn't necessarily mean catharsis. It means getting unstuck. Catharsis is the explosive uncorking of pent-up emotion when we release resistance to doing so suddenly.  Better, to regulate the resistance and the emotion, together, and do the releasing gracefully and essentially comfortably.

           A person stuck in a habit pattern is enclosed in the habit and to that degree, closed to new experience. There’s no space. All there is, is the repetitive replay of memory. Noise. The closed (or hard-) core condition.

           A deliberate, new action can modify a habit – but only if that new action first softens up the habit. Otherwise, the habit prevents change past a certain stage. That's another reason why common therapies work only as well as they do.

           The key to softening up a habit is to recover the intention that created it.

           One way to recover the intention that created it is to do, deliberately, what the habit does automatically until you can feel yourself doing it, rather than it happening to you.

            The saying is, "Whatever you are doing wrong, do it more, and then less. That action (done enough) melts the mold of a habit so that it can be remolded.

To hear his experience, click above.

            In that state of “melt”, you no longer feel trapped in (and by) that habit. Now, there's the space for change.

            So, to free tight psoas muscles, deliberately to do the movement actions of the tight psoas pattern (which involves many muscles and movement elements), and add energy to them.  When we do that, we feel those muscles "give in" and relax, as we relax.

            Of course, you need to know what that tight psoas muscle pattern is.

            Step-by-step instruction in a program such as Free Your Psoas, guides you into and through the tension/movement pattern, as it exists throughout the entire muscular system -- overcoming one of the shortcomings of common therapy.

HOW THE PSOAS MUSCLES ACT IN REST AND ACTIVITY

            The different states of activity are common states of mind.

    * REST/REPOSE:  no intention, unreadiness for action, no engagement with experience
Although sleep may seem the very definition of rest, sleep is no necessarily restful.  Ask anyone with insomnia.  Dream sleep involves emotional, mental, and subtle physical activity (e.g., REM -- Rapid Eye Movement sleep).  Deep, dreamless sleep is as close as most of us come, and generally, tense people stay tense even during sleep.  Waking repose is generally not full rest.
    * SITTING:  coming to some higher degree of activity; mental and emotional engagement

    * STANDING:  coming to a still higher level of activity; active mental, emotional and physical engagement

    * WALKING etc.:  coming to a still higher level of activity and engagement

            Any “hold” in any of these states is a limit on the responsiveness of the psoas/iliopsoas muscles, generally at some level of contraction that you can't affect by ordinary efforts.

  • If the psoas muscles are simply non-functional, they express a pattern of immaturity in which the person is either passive, relatively receptive like a child, without initiative, or without the capacity to formulate a deliberate intention and more concerned with outer appearances than with true intentions.  It's an arrested (ar-"rested") state of development.

  • If the psoas muscles are equally tight, left and right, but very tight, they express the stuck pattern of sitting and the mood of sitting -- limited action and actually a restraint upon standing up for action (taking a stand).  It's an arrested state of starting things.

  • If the psoas muscles are equally tight, but free enough to permit standing up without pain, they express a pattern of self-restriction (repressed action).

    In this state, we see and feel an arched spine.  The spinal muscles, which tighten as arousal level increases, arch the spine backward; the psoas muscles pull the top of the pelvis and lumbar spine forward, and contribute to the arching.  The person exists in a state of co-contraction, which involves low grade low back pain from back muscle fatigue.

  • If the psoas muscles are asymmetrically tight, they usually express a stuck pattern of action, as if stopped mid-step in a walking action.  It's an arrested state of follow-through and often the state of a prior leg or foot injury that triggered a cringe response and changed the walking pattern.

    Alternately, there may have been a hard fall or other pelvic injury that knocked the sacrum (central pelvic bone, in back) off center and triggered a psoas muscle response, in which the psoas is incorrectly identified as the center of the problem.

  • All cases of chronically tight psoas muscles prevent the ability to come to complete rest.
Both physical and emotional trauma can create a memory impression sufficiently gripping to create chronic muscular tensions of this type.

These memory impressions function as if the situation is still happening in present time – with the attendant emotional flavor and arousal state.

As I said in the other article, as a generality, people never experience deep rest; they/we are stuck at some level of activity, some level of tension, stuck in some pattern of memory, of arousal, of reactivity, of resistance to outer things and to things inside ourselves.

As the psoas muscles are involved in every state of arousal from rest to full activity, a person stuck at some state of activity has psoas muscles (and actually, the entire musculature, to some degree) stuck at some level of activity. This statement is, of course, an oversimplification, but as a generalization, it holds good.

To the degree that we are stuck in a memory at the physical level (memory of repetitive action, memory of injury), at the emotional level (memory of experience, memory of insult), or at the mental level (memory of worldview, memory of limitation), we are stuck in a closed/hard-core condition, unavailable to new information, new experience, change.

In general, we are held in a pattern and prevented from coming to our full stature, our best balance, our self-assurance, our freedom.

That means that psoas muscles don’t lengthen freely when coming from sitting to standing. We never get completely out of the crouch; we never elongate fully unless we apply extra effort (generally as an automatic action). We never come to our full stature.

And we are always held in a pattern. It’s just that the pattern may be long-term dysfunctional or short-term functional.

If it’s long-term dysfunctional, we are responding out of habit, maintaining our pattern with a sense of friction against some outer experience or in a state of conflict with our inner experience or preference, in a kind of chronic state of emergency.  

If it’s a short-term functional pattern, it's emerging and changing in the moment, playing out freely as a stream of experiences:  sensations, emotions, ideas arising without an effort to prevent or force them, a creative stream of new emergence by which we may bring something new (not memory-based or conforming to an existing memory mold). Psoas muscle tension in this case is, generally, subconscious, but can be felt from manual pressure on the psoas muscles or tendons.

IN THE ABSTRACT

In the abstract, an awakening or filling out of somatic awareness involves recognizing when we are stuck in stress-patterns (memories) and then progressively melting the mold of memory.

The mold of memory keeps us in patterns of tension, formed some time ago.  To melt the mold of memory permits us to continue to dissolve, and evolve, to reshape all the way through to the core.

As “melt” progresses (as in somatic education techniques), we elongate and straighten into looser movement and a more comfortable balance.  By melting, we surrender both to staying the same and changing. We let ourselves stay the same, and also let ourselves change -- the psychological dimension of physical changes.

Without that “melt”, attempts to free the psoas muscles and the core are limited.

AND CONCRETELY

Clinical Somatic education is a good place to start.  Here's where I present practical means for freeing tight psoas muscles

Put yourself together, better.  Know distinctly the difference between getting better and getting such small improvements that you have to take it on faith that improvements are happening.

The self-relief program linked below guides you through the process.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lawrence Gold is a certified Hanna somatic educator providing lasting relief for a range of pain conditions, including tight psoas muscles. He offers a money-back guarantee. Contact him at https://somatics.com/wordpress/contact.

Get started for free with the
Free Your Psoas self-renovation program

https://somatics.convertri.com/psoas-2017-6-13




































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EMERGENCY BACK SELF-CARE | FIRST AID FOR BACK PAIN | SOMATICS.COM

If you have back pain, then the first thing to consider is that you don't "have" back pain; back pain "has you" in its grip. That way of describing it would seem to be more true to your experience, wouldn't it? This video, below, shows how you can get control of the back pain that has you in its grip and then get rid of it, while recovering the comfortable and secure use of your back.

Although some people believe that standard procedures are "time-tested" and inherently more reliable, in this case, the opposite is true. Faster, more complete, and longer-lasting relief can be obtained with a less invasive, "high-touch" procedure that hits "the mark" than by standard procedures that miss "the mark". What is "the mark"? What to do, right now

This video shows what you can do to relieve your own back pain and restore freedom of movement. The procedure has helped thousands of people who have already had back surgery or other invasive procedures.



For a clear understanding of a new, more effective approach to back pain than stretching, strengthening, adjustments or massage, please see this page.

For chronic back pain, please see this page, which also contrasts conventional back pain methods (including spinal decompression devices) with an entirely new, more effective approach.














TMJ Syndrome/TMD/Bruxism Treatments

This entry is for you if you have bruxism, orofacial pain, earaches, TMJ headaches, or clench your teeth at night.

TMJ Syndrome | Clinical Somatic Education session

Oscar W. in Session for TMJ Dysfunction

Once again, I am drawn to address common practices used to alleviate common health conditions.  In this case, it's TMJ Dysfunction (or "TMD" or "TMJ Syndrome"), a condition that people commonly expect to take months or years to clear up, but which can be cleared up in weeks by oneself or faster with clinical somatic education sessions.




The Root of TMJ Dysfunction

Common dental practices overlook the root of the condition:  neuro-muscular conditioning caused by trauma (injury, previous dental work) or long-term emotional stress (particularly, anger).  "Neuro-muscular" means, muscles controlled by the brain. Another name for "neuro-muscular" is "muscle/movement memory" -- the state of tension we return to, automatically.

Even "neuromuscular dentistry" approaches the situation indirectly, by changing such things as a person's bite pattern, rather than changing muscular tension habits; the "neuromuscular" part exists in their minds, but not in their way of approaching the situation.

An article posted here gives the details.

Here are topics that give reasoning and details.
The common therapeutic means for addressing the condition address symptoms, rather than causes.

As a clinical somatic education practitioner, I've developed an effective and reliable self-relief program, which addresses exactly the underlying cause of TMJ Syndrome:  the reflexive muscular action in the muscles of biting a chewing that causes the complex array of symptoms associated with TMJ Syndrome.

INTRODUCTION TO THIS TMJ SELF-RELIEF PROGRAM




long version
TMJ Dysfunction (TMD) Corrected in Eighteen Minutes
with Hanna Somatic Education


MORE:
Free Preview of Self-Relief Program -- 5 Well-designed Somatic Exercises That You Can Use to Make Your Jaws Feel Better and Make Your Bite Better -- in about 2 Weeks

Instructions in Somatic Exercises to Free Your Own Jaws
Common Causes of TMJ Syndrome/TMD/Bruxism