Healing Therapy, The Accident - As Of 10/10/25 Early AM Named "Clyde" (Short For Collide) Because It's Funny And I Deserve Mirth At Its Expense

Retraining Micro Tissues

As no therapy yet has addressed the overstretched support tissues surrounding my nerves and I am still denied boon of receiving help from neurology specialists, I have embarked upon my own form of torture therapy.

I have cushioned, rubber flip flops that are firm enough in the surface area of my thongs to rock my imbalance all over the place, causing my limb and torso muscles to shake and wuiver and my vertigo to swing extreme range.

Well…

Even though this alarmingly increases nerve compression and resultant referential numbness spreading, what else can I do while waiting and deadlines keep crushing?

Healing Therapy

B-12

Vitamin B12 had an antiapoptotic effect and possibly promoted nerve regeneration by inhibiting the apoptosis of damaged neurons and creating conditions for the recovery of nerve function. High-dose vitamin B12 promoted functional recovery of nerves (sciatic nerve) after peripheral nerve injury.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8294980/#:~:text=Vitamin%20B12%20had%20an%20antiapoptotic,the%20recovery%20of%20nerve%20function.&text=High%2Ddose%20vitamin%20B12%20promoted,nerve)%20after%20peripheral%20nerve%20injury.

Healing Therapy

Recovery

The main focus is repairing spinal alignment strength while avoiding compression triggers.

Restoration of the entire anterior vertebral muscle and nerve fascial tensile resilience is crucial, as well as hip, sacral, shoulder, and specific spinal zones needing extra anterior reinforcement.

Only then may strength while moving outside of structural alignment planes be rebuilt to resume contributing my healing therapies.

Healing Therapy, Stream of Thought

The Tree And Me

I checked on my rescue tree yesterday, and it was looking like that stressed and droopy fold was returning to its leaves.

I know this is its first summer of heat on its own after last year’s disruption of its roots.

If it is anything like me, it feels intimidated by the repeat of a pattern of heat where it gaspingly previously struggled.

So last night, I had to go that way again and only had about two 20-oz bottles worth of water with me, yet it was enough to dribble around its roots in a circular pattern for two completions.

Today when I drove by, it looked to have perked up – and in the warm breeze, it looked as if its now-brighter green leaves and brown branch fronds were waving more cheerfully at me.

Guess I’m back on summer patrol, again – at least until the weather returns to more reasonable!

Compositions, Healing Therapy

The “Letting Go Of Attachments” Process: A Healer’s Reflections

After experiencing a lifetime of various accidents and stressors to my physical systems, I became unable to stretch out my muscles. They just simply stopped responding to efforts of linear expansion.

I have since realized that muscle tension is often a result of shifting-angled compressions which group tightly along impact zones for structural strength reinforcement.

Thus, there is natural resistance to fibers easily unwinding along a straight plane of pulling because they are gripping along bones and each other to reinforce core joint and bone alignment stability.

Over time by this process compounding, muscles can get stuck to each other and onto and in between neighboring bones, which can significantly decrease elastic expansion and contraction adaptability.

This can result in reduced movement in essential zones such as the intercostals between ribs; large and small collaborating muscles along the spine and neck vertebrae; between forearm and lower legs rotation-flex bones of the ulna and radius and the tibia and fibula; and especially wherever muscles slide and glide against bones.

In my restoration and recovery therapy for clients, I am able to gently reactivate “frozen” muscle fibers and help get them responsive again by helping to restore open-access circulation and lymphatic flow through muscle micro channels.

However, because I am the creator of my version of “Rocking Compression,” it has been difficult to find another practitioner who I can teach to give me this therapy so that I may also experience its benefits.

Therefore, I have been applying my “Rocking Compression” concept to my workout routines where I focus at and along tissue attachment zones by gently rocking into them around joints and then stretch-decompressing in a pattern of spiraling movement opposite normal compression patterns.

This reactivates proprioceptors within locked down regions to allow muscle fibers to expand again and I am beginning to experience positive effects to where I am now able to partially stretch out my muscles again!

Meanwhile, I have been surprised to discover how much pain and discomfort gets trapped within bound and adhesed tissues due to oxygen deprivation and stagnant fluid pressure buildup.

Gently pulling apart the fibers while decompression-twisting reopens lymphatic channels to allow restoration rehydration by increasing circulation.

However, sometimes the after-healing process has these regions sore with minor inflammation swelling for several days because it is harder for me to perform integration techniques on myself because I cannot do so from proper angles.

I am also beginning to experiment with this process allowing me to recenter my bones into having better joint alignment, but I do not recommend these experiments to others without their further study of these concepts to ensure clear understanding of the delicate yet profound approach to these regions.

(Title play with words)