Craniopathy - Cranial Adjustments

If you can imagine yourself at a puppet show you will be able to understand Craniopathy. Very small strings attached to the puppets' arms, legs, and head are all attached to a wood block called a tressel, which the puppeteer holds in his hands and controls all the movements of the puppet.  Your body is the puppet and your skull is the tressel.  If there is a problem at the tressel (skull) no matter what the puppeteer (doctor) does to the puppet (body) and no matter how many times he untangles the strings, the problems (pain or dysfunction) will always recur until he repairs the problem at the tressel (skull)...

Both cranial and diaphragmatic respiration are controlled by a small body of nerve tissue that lies at the base of the brain known as the respiratory center.  The center functions as the "master control," keeping perfect timing between cranial and diaphragmatic respiration.  We breathe in with diaphragmatic respiration as the brain expands with cranial respiration and the cranial bones move outward to accommodate.  When we breathe out with diaphragmatic respiration, the brain contracts in a cranial respiration and the bones retract.  When one or more of these cranial bones are moving improperly it is known as a cranial fault.

Cranial faults can cause many symptoms from headaches to backaches or any malfunction of the body.  The most common cause of these faults is difficulty in the birth process.  The skull of the newborn baby is very pliable.  The use of forceps on the soft skull during the birth experience can be traumatic and may cause cranial faults.  Most severe cases of cranial faults develop before the age of seven.  However, people develop cranial faults later in life from traumatic accidents, i.e. car or blows to the head.  Emotional trauma is also a known cause of cranial faults and should not be overlooked. Severe emotional stress causes the body to adopt a defensive torking position in which the spine and skull receive as much punishment as if they had undergone physical trauma.  Continuing research will discover more about cranial faults.

Cranial adjustment - Dr. Terry holds the patient's head in a prescribed manner so that bones that are not meant to move are stabilized.  Then, he makes the correction by pressing on one of the cranial bones in a specific direction while the patient breathes in or out in a pattern that will assist the correction.  These adjustments are rarely painful. However, they can sometimes create emotional reactions, from a feeling of euphoria to depression.  These reactions are temporary.  Often, patients report having no reaction at all or a feeling of relief and a release of pressure.  Cranial adjustments by a craniopath have produced profound and dramatic results for many people.  These patients return to work and recreational activities that were long-abandoned and labeled painful.  Their lives are restored to them as quickly as if a magical wand had been waved over their heads.

Reference:
Goldberg, Barry Dr.  "A Powerful Approach to Wellness"  http://www.holisticresources.org/nss-folder/craniopathy/  (April 2009).